The E. A. Rawlins was an American barque of the 1850s that some suspected was used in the transatlantic slave trade, which by then had been illegal under the United States law for 50 years. However, rising slave prices had made this limitation controversial in some parts of the U.S. South, where there was a nascent movement to reopen the transatlantic slave trade. In August 1858, an American diplomat in Cuba wrote Secretary of State Lewis Cass that the E. A. Rawlins was likely to have landed 658 Africans, possibly taken from the Congo Basin region, at Puerta de la Teja, Cuba.[1]
Rufus W. Clark in his 1860 tract The African Slave-Trade wrote:
It was strongly suspected that Charles Lamar, who had been involved in illegal human trafficking in the Wanderer case, was running multiple ships of similar purpose and that some part (or all) of the human cargo of Lamar's ships had been intended for the "Cotton States" of America.[2] Former governor of South Carolina D. C. Heyward, writing in the 1920s, argued that in addition to the Wanderer, Lamar had most likely imported slaves from Africa to the United States on the E. A. Rawlins and Richard Cobden.[3]