museum director lonnie bunch and curator paul gargiulo talked with american history tv about the saga of the ship called "sal jose." >> paul gargiulo, take us back to december 27th, 1794, camps bay off of south africa in the final hours of the sal jose. >> on december 27th, in 1794, a ship that was heading from mozambique island in mozambique around the cape of good hope heading toward brazil, northeast brazil, came close to cape town, south africa. cape town was often a landing point for ships before they made their way across the long atlantic voyage. and this ship came too close to shore, got caught in swells in a storm and struck rocks about 100 yard s 350 feet or so from shor. the captain was captaining the ship called the "san jose." tried to salvage what he could from the crew. they attempted a rescue from ship to shore. he rescued himself. he rescued along with the crew, he rescued about half of the 400 enslaved mozambiquens aboard. the other half who had been captured from the interior of africa and brought on board the sal jose in early december perished in those waves that