Captain Bill Pinkney presents the True Amistad Story...

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Embodying the soul of a sailor

Captain Bill Pinkney

Ex-executive now master of Amistad replica

BY BO PETERSEN The Post and Courier

The old sea captain is a man in love. Bill Pinkney strides down the dock, grabbing the newly arrived crew one by one in a massive bear hug. His eyes come back to the Freedom Schooner Amistad, its Douglas fir masts, its graceful, dark lines of iroko and angelique wood from Africa, live oak from South Carolina This is his.

"I was with this boat when it was logs from places like Sierra Leone, up in Washington state, Lagos. The wood that came from Surinam. The keel came Guyana," he says. "I have splinters still
in me somewhere from it."

The Amistad is a replica of the famous 19th century sailing ship commandeered in 1839 by captive Africans en route to being sold as slaves in Cuba. They would win their freedom in the United States and eventually return home to Sierra Leone.

It's in Charleston for Harbor Fest 2008 this weekend and will stay to take part in Spoleto Festival USA 2008 at the end of the month,
during which an opera about the original Amistad odyssey will be performed. Pinkney is here with it.

He is "a 73-year-old ex-limbo dancer," he says playfully. He was the first captain of the replica when it was launched in 2000; today he is its master, its storyteller. He is descended from captured west Africans like the rice farmers who pulled loose a spike on that trade boat 180 years ago and pried off their shackles...