Mendi Bible

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The Mendi Bible is a Bible presented to former President of the United States and then-current United States Representative John Quincy Adams in 1841 by a group of freed African slaves who had mutinied on the schooner La Amistad[1][2]. It was presented to Quincy Adams as a gift in thanks for his representation of them before the US Supreme Court[3][4], which resulted in their freedom. The freed slaves were Mende people; this Bible derives its name from their tribal name.

The Mendi Bible was presented to Quincy Adams, along with a letter of thanks which read in part:

We are about to go home to Africa. We go to Sierra Leone first, and then we reach Mendi very quick. When we get to Mendi we will tell the people of your great kindness. Good missionary will go with us. We shall take the Bible with us. It has been a precious book in prison, and we love to read it now we are free! Mr. Adams, we want to make you a present of a beautiful Bible! Will you please to accept it, and when you look at it or read it, remember your poor and grateful clients?... For the Mendi people. CINQUE, KINNA, KALE. Boston, Nov. 6, 1841.[5].

The Mendi Bible is currently curated in the Stone Library at the Adams National Historical Park in Quincy, Massachusetts[6][7].

The book was discovered stolen from the Adams site in November of 1996[8][9] and subsequently recovered by the FBI in a gym locker in Portsmouth, New Hampshire in January of 1997[10].

Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick, the state's first African-American governor, took his oath of office on the Mendi Bible on January 4, 2007[11].

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