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American Colonization Society

The American Colonization Society (ACS), initially the Society for the Colonization of Free People of Color of America until 1837, was an American organization founded in 1816 by Robert Finley to encourage and support the migration of freeborn blacks and emancipated slaves to the continent of Africa.

Robert Finley founded the American Colonization Society.

The American Colonization Society was established to address the prevailing view that free people of color could not integrate into U.S. society; their population had grown steadily following the American Revolutionary War, from 60,000 in 1790 to 300,000 by 1830.[1]: 26  Slaveowners feared that these free Blacks might help their slaves to escape or rebel. In addition, many white Americans believed that African Americans were an inferior race, and, therefore, should be relocated to a place where they could live in peace, a place where they would not encounter prejudice, a place where they could be citizens.[2]

The African American community and the abolitionist movement overwhelmingly opposed the project. In most cases, African Americans' families had lived in the United States for generations, and their prevailing sentiment was that they were no more African than white Americans were European. Contrary to claims that their emigration was voluntary, many African Americans, both free and enslaved, were pressured into emigrating.[3]: 343  Indeed, enslavers, like Zephaniah Kingsley,[4] sometimes manumitted (freed) their slaves on condition that the freedmen leave the country immediately.[5][6]

According to historian Marc Leepson, "Colonization proved to be a giant failure, doing nothing to stem the forces that brought the nation to Civil War."[7] Between 1821 and 1847, only a few thousand African Americans, out of millions, emigrated to what would become Liberia. By 1833, the Society had transported 2,769 individuals out of the U.S., while the increase in Black population in the U.S. during those same years was about 500,000.[8] According to Zephaniah Kingsley, the cost of transporting the Black population of the United States to Africa would exceed the annual revenues of the country.[9]: 73  Mortality was the highest since accurate record-keeping began: close to half the arrivals in Liberia died from tropical diseases, especially malaria; during the early years, 22% of immigrants died within one year.[9]: 55 n. 24  Moreover, the provisioning and transportation of requisite tools and supplies proved very expensive.[10]

Starting in the 1830s, the society was met with great hostility from white abolitionists, led by Gerrit Smith, who had supported the society financially, and William Lloyd Garrison, author of Thoughts on African Colonization (1832), in which he proclaimed the society a fraud. According to Garrison and his many followers, the society was not a solution to the problem of American slavery—it actually was helping, and was intended to help, to preserve it.[11]

Background

Growth of slavery in the South

After the invention of the cotton gin in the 1790s, the growth and export of cotton became a highly profitable business. Central to the business was the setting up of plantations, staffed by enslaved laborers. Due to the increased demand, imports of African slaves grew until legal importation was barred in 1808, after which time Maryland and Virginia openly bred slaves, "producing" children for sale "South", through brokers such as Franklin and Armfield, to plantation owners. This resulted in the forcible relocation of about one million enslaved people to the Deep South. The Africans and African Americans became well established and had children, and the total number of the enslaved reached four million by the mid-19th century.[12]

Growth in the number of free black people

Due in part to manumission efforts sparked by revolutionary ideals, Protestant preachers, and the abolitionist movement, there was an expansion in the number of free blacks, many of them born free. Even in the North, where slavery was being abolished, discrimination against free blacks was rampant and often legal. Few states extended citizenship rights to free blacks prior to the 1860s and the Federal government, largely controlled by Slave Power, never showed any inclination to challenge the racial status quo. Even in the North, free blacks were often seen as unwelcome immigrants, taking jobs away because they would work for cheap.[13]

Some slave owners decided to support emigration following an aborted slave rebellion headed by Gabriel Prosser in 1800, and a rapid increase in the number of free African Americans in the United States in the first two decades after the Revolutionary War, which they perceived as threatening. Although the ratio of whites to blacks overall was 4:1 between 1790 and 1800, in some Southern counties blacks were the majority. Slaveholders feared that free blacks destabilized their slave society and created a political threat. From 1790 to 1800, the number of free blacks increased from 59,467 to 108,398, and by 1810 there were 186,446 free blacks.[14]

Early colonization in Africa

In 1786, a British organization, the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor, launched its efforts to establish the Sierra Leone Province of Freedom, a colony in West Africa for London's "black poor." This enterprise gained the support of the British government,[15] which also offered relocation to Black Loyalists who had been resettled in Nova Scotia, where they were subject to harsh weather and discrimination from some white Nova Scotians.[16][17] Jamaica maroons were also deported to the colony,[18] alongside former slaves freed by the Royal Navy after the Atlantic slave trade was abolished by Britain in 1807.[19][20]

Paul Cuffe

 
Drawing of Paul Cuffe (1812)

Paul Cuffe or Cuffee (1759–1817) was a successful Quaker ship owner and activist in Boston. His parents were of Ashanti (African) and Wampanoag (Native American) heritage. He advocated settling freed American slaves in Africa and gained support from the British government, free Black leaders in the United States, and members of Congress to take emigrants to the British colony of Sierra Leone.[21] In 1815, he financed a trip himself. The following year, Cuffe took 38 American blacks to Freetown, Sierra Leone.[22] He died in 1817 before undertaking other voyages. Cuffe laid the groundwork for the American Colonization Society.[23]

Efforts to relocate free black people other than to Africa

Although little remembered as ultimately nothing came of them, there were a number of other proposals for relocating former slaves to somewhere much closer. One option discussed was settling them in the new, sparsely-populated Western territories acquired with the Louisiana Purchase, or on the Pacific coast: creating a Black reservation, similar to an Indian reservation. Haiti was open to them, and there was an unsuccessful attempt to create an agricultural community of former American slaves on Île-à-Vache, Haiti. Abraham Lincoln's plan was to settle them in what is today Panama (see Linconia). Even Florida Governor Napoleon Bonaparte Broward proposed, in 1907, sending Blacks to a land the federal government would purchase, there to live permanently, in isolation from whites.[24]

Early history of the ACS

Founding

The ACS had its origins in 1816, when Charles Fenton Mercer, a Federalist member of the Virginia General Assembly, discovered accounts of earlier legislative debates on black colonization in the wake of Gabriel Prosser's rebellion. Mercer pushed the state to support the idea. One of his political contacts in Washington City, John Caldwell, in turn contacted the Reverend Robert Finley, his brother-in-law and a Presbyterian minister, who endorsed the plan.[25]

Four early organizers of the American Society for Colonizing the Free People of Color of the United States.[26][13][27][28]

On December 21, 1816, the society was officially established at the Davis Hotel in Washington, D.C. Among the Society's supporters were Charles Fenton Mercer (from Virginia), Henry Clay (Kentucky), John Randolph (Virginia), Richard Bland Lee (Virginia), and Bushrod Washington (Virginia).[13][26][27][28][29] Slaveholders in the Virginia Piedmont region in the 1820s and 1830s comprised many of its most prominent members; slave-owning United States presidents Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, and James Madison were among its supporters. Madison served as the Society's president in the early 1830s.[30]

At the inaugural meeting of the Society, Reverend Finley suggested that a colony be established in Africa to take free people of color, most of whom had been born free, away from the United States. Finley meant to colonize "(with their consent) the free people of color residing in our country, in Africa, or such other place as Congress may deem most expedient". The organization established branches throughout the United States, mostly in Southern states. It was instrumental in establishing the colony of Liberia.[31]

The ACS was founded by groups otherwise opposed to each other on the issue of slavery. Slaveholders, such as those in the Maryland branch and elsewhere, believed that so-called repatriation was a way to remove free blacks from slave societies and avoid slave rebellions.[13][a] Free blacks, many of whom had been in the United States for generations, also encouraged and assisted slaves to escape, and depressing their value. ("Every attempt by the South to aid the Colonization Society, to send free colored people to Africa, enhances the value of the slave left on the soil."[33]: 51 ) The Society appeared to hold contradictory ideas: free blacks should be removed because they could not benefit America; on the other hand, free blacks would prosper and thrive under their own leadership in another land.[34][b]

On the other hand, a coalition made up mostly of evangelicals, Quakers, philanthropists, and abolitionists supported abolition of slavery.[13][32] They wanted slaves to be free and believed blacks would face better chances for freedom in Africa than in the United States, since they were not welcome in the South or North.[13][32][c] The two opposed groups found common ground in support of what they called "repatriation".[13]

Leadership

The presidents of the ACS tended to be Southerners. The first president was Bushrod Washington, the nephew of U.S. President George Washington and an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States.[28][40] From 1836 to 1849 the statesman Henry Clay of Kentucky, a planter and slaveholder, was ACS president. John H. B. Latrobe served as president of the ACS from 1853 until his death in 1891.[41]

Goals

The colonization project, which had multiple American Colonization Society chapters in every state, had three goals. One was to provide a place for former slaves, freedmen, and their descendants to live, where they would be free and not subject to racism. Another goal was to ensure that the colony had what it needed to succeed, such as fertile soil to grow crops.[42] A third goal was to suppress attempts to engage in the Atlantic slave trade, such as by monitoring ship traffic on the coast.[42] Presbyterian clergyman Lyman Beecher proposed another goal: the Christianization of Africa.[43][d]

Fundraising

 
Membership certificate of Rev. Samuel Rose Ely, dated March 1840. Henry Clay's signature as president of the Society is visible at the bottom.

The Society raised money by selling memberships.[44] The Society's members pressured Congress and the President for support. In 1819, they received $100,000 from Congress, and on February 6, 1820, the first ship, the Elizabeth, sailed from New York for West Africa with three white ACS agents and 88 African-American emigrants aboard.[45] The approaches for selecting people and funding travel to Africa varied by state.[46]

Opposition to colonization

According to Benjamin Quarles, the colonization movement "originated abolitionism", by arousing the free Blacks and other opponents of slavery.[47]

Originally, colonization "had been pushed with diligence and paraded as the cure for the evils of slavery, and its benevolence was assumed on all hands. Everybody of consequence belonged to it."[citation needed] The following summary by Judge James Hall, editor of the Cincinnati-based Western Monthly Magazine, is from May 1834:

The plan of colonizing free blacks, has been justly considered one of the noblest devices of Christian benevolence and enlightened patriotism, grand in its object, and most happily adapted to enlist the combined influence, and harmonious cooperation, of different classes of society. It reconciles, and brings together some discordant interests, which could not in any other plan be brought to meet in harmony. The Christian and the statesman here act together, and persons having entirely different views from each other in reference to some collateral points connected with the great subject, are moved towards the same point by a diversity of motives. It is a splendid conception, around which are gathered the hopes of the nation, the wishes of the patriot, the prayers of the Christian, and we trust, the approbation of Heaven.[48]

(As Hall refused to publish Theodore Weld's lengthy reply, he did so in the Cincinnati Journal. It became known nationally because Garrison devoted almost the entire front page of the June 14 issue of The Liberator to it.[49])

Opposition from blacks

From the beginning, "the majority of black Americans regarded the Society [with] enormous disdain",[50]: 143  a "fixed hatred".[8] Black activist James Forten immediately rejected the ACS, writing in 1817 that "we have no wish to separate from our present homes for any purpose whatever".[51] As soon as they heard about it, 3,000 blacks packed a church in Philadelphia, "the bellwether city for free blacks," and "bitterly and unanimously" denounced it.[1]: 261 

Now—after the Colonization Society has been formed without the consent of the colored people[,] after the enterprise has been violently pushed, against their reiterated protests, tor seventeen years—after its friends acknowledged that coercion has been used in getting away its victims—and so long as they would persuade us that this is not the native country of colored Americans; and that we ought not to let them remain here—what is it better than gross mockery to talk about consent?[8]

Frederick Douglass condemned colonization: "Shame upon the guilty wretches that dare propose, and all that countenance such a proposition. We live here—have lived here—have a right to live here, and mean to live here."[52] Martin Delany, who believed that Black Americans deserved "a new country, a new beginning", called Liberia a "miserable mockery" of an independent republic, a "racist scheme of the ACS to rid the United States of free blacks." He proposed instead Central and South America as "the ultimate destination and future home of the colored race on this continent" (see Linconia).[53] A recent (2014) writer on Connecticut African Americans summarizes the attitude amongst them:[54]

African Americans viewed colonization as a means of defrauding them of the rights of citizenship and a way of tightening the grip of slavery. ...The tragedy was that African Americans began to view their ancestral home with disdain. They dropped the use of "African" in names of their organizations...and used instead [of African American] "The Colored American."

While claiming to aid African Americans, in some cases, to stimulate emigration, it made conditions for them worse. For example, "the Society assumed the task of resuscitating the Ohio Black Codes of 1804 and 1807. ...Between 1,000 and 1,200 free blacks were forced from Cincinnati."[1]: 262  A meeting was held in Cincinnati on January 17, 1832, to discuss colonization, which resulted in a series of resolutions. First, they had a right to freedom and equality. They felt honor-bound to protect the country, the "land of their birth", and the Constitution. They were not familiar with Africa, and should have the right to make their own decisions about where they lived. They recommended that if black people wish to leave the United States, they consider Canada or Mexico, where they would have civil rights and a climate that is similar to what they are accustomed to. The United States was large enough to accommodate a colony, and would be much cheaper to implement. They question the motives of ACS members who cite Christianity as a reason for removing blacks from America. Since there were no attempts to improve the conditions of black people who lived in the United States, it is unlikely that white people would watch out for their interests thousands of miles away.[55]

Opposition from whites

William Lloyd Garrison

William Lloyd Garrison began publication of his abolitionist newspaper, The Liberator, in 1831, followed in 1832 by his Thoughts on African Colonization. According to President Lincoln, it was “the logic and moral power of Garrison and the antislavery people of the country” that put emancipation on the country’s political agenda.[56] Garrison himself joined it in good faith."[57]: 63  All the important white future abolitionists supported the Society: besides Garrison, Gerrit Smith, the Tappans, and many others, as can be seen in the pages of the Society's magazine, the African Repository. Garrison objected to the colonization scheme because rather than eliminating slavery, its key goal, as he saw it, was to remove free black people from America, thereby avoiding slave rebellions. Besides not improving the lot of enslaved Africans, the colonization had made enemies of native people of Africa. Both he and Gerrit Smith were horrified when they learned that alcohol was being sold in Liberia.[58]: 178–179 [59]: 230 [3]: 351  He questioned the wisdom of sending African Americans, along with white missionaries and agents, to such an unhealthy place. In addition, it meant that fewer slaves achieved their freedom: "it hinders the manumission of slaves by throwing their emancipation upon its own scheme, which in fifteen years has occasioned the manumission of less than four hundred slaves, while before its existence and operations during a less time thousands were set free."[60]

In the second number of The Liberator, Garrison reprinted this commentary from the Boston Statesman:[61]

We were, however, rather surprised to see the proposal of sending the free negroes to Africa as returning them to their native land. It would be as well at least to talk of sending these reverend gentlemen back to England as their native land. The negro is just as much a native here as are these reverend gentlemen themselves.—Here the negro was born, here bred, here are his earliest and pleasantest associations—here is all that binds him to earth and makes life valuable. If the welfare of the negro, and not a new scheme for begging, be really the object in view, we desire the reverend gentlemen to step forward and vindicate the rights of the negroes trampled upon by their brethren in Park Street. If they would really promote the happiness of the negro, let their efforts be directed to raise the oppressed black in the scale of moral elevation here. Let them admit him to more rights in the social world;—but unless they desire to be laughed at by all sincere and thinking men, they had better abandon the Quixotic plan of colonizing the Southern negroes at the cost of the North, until we can free our own borders from poverty, ignorance and distress.

Gerrit Smith

The philanthropist and public intellectual Gerrit Smith, the wealthiest man in New York State, had been "among the most munificent patrons of this Society," as put by Society Vice-President Henry Clay.[62]

This support changed to furious and bitter rejection when he realized, in the early 1830s, that the society was "quite as much an Anti-Abolition, as Colonization Society".[63] "This Colonization Society had, by an invisible process, half conscious, half unconscious, been transformed into a serviceable organ and member of the Slave Power." It was "an extreme case of sham reform".[57]: 63  In November 1835, he sent the Society a letter with a check, to conclude his existing commitments, and said there would not be any more from him, because:

The Society is now, and has been for some time, far more interested in the question of slavery, than in the work of Colonization—in the demolition of the Anti-Slavery Society, than in the building up of its Colony. I need not go beyond the matter and spirit of the last few numbers of its periodical for the justification of this remark. Were a stranger to form his opinion by these numbers, it would be, that the Society issuing them was quite as much an Anti-Abolition, as Colonization Society. ...It has come to this, however, that a member of the Colonization Society cannot advocate the deliverance of his enslaved fellow men, without subjecting himself to such charges of inconsistency, as the public prints abundantly cast on me, for being at the same time a member of that Society and an Abolitionist. ...Since the late alarming attacks, in the persons of its members, on the right of discussion, (and astonishing as it is, some of the suggestions for invading this right are impliedly countenanced in the African Repository,) I have looked to it, as being also the rallying point of the friends of this right. To that Society yours is hostile.[63]

Nathaniel Paul

In the meeting of forming British African Colonization Society held in London in July 1833, Nathaniel Paul, an abolitionist in support of William Lloyd Garrison's "Thoughts on African Colonization," argued that a significant number of opponents, including Black Americans in prominent cities of America, found inequality towards the Society because according to him, they were the ones who had remarkably contributed and fought to protect this country as their home through a historical period of generations.[64] However, this Society was then trying to forcefully send them back to their ancestors' lands as, by that time, they were considered at risk for rebellion in the name of emancipation. In contrast, the new Europeans who had not been part of this country in such events were instead welcomed to settle here.[64]  

Support of free black emigration

From 1850 to 1858, according to Martin Delany, a supporter of African Americans' emigration from the United States to other regions, the creation of a republic was a significant movement to gain independence for the free Black people in America, in contrast to the ideology of staying and fighting for the equality of civil rights of Frederick Douglass. He believed the transition was to exit the rising of slavery and racism toward African Americans in the US. Other destinations he suggested were Central America, the West Indies, or Mexico, where Black people could be more likely to thrive and emphasize their freedom against the influence of White people.[65]  

Colony of Liberia

In 1821, Lt. Robert Stockton had pointed a pistol to the head of King Peter, which allowed Stockton to persuade King Peter to sell Cape Montserrado (or Mesurado) and to establish Monrovia.[66] In 1825 and 1826, Jehudi Ashmun, Stockton's successor, took steps to lease, annex, or buy tribal lands in Africa along the coast and along major rivers leading inland in Africa to establish an American colony. Stockton's actions inspired Ashmun to use aggressive tactics in his negotiations with King Peter and in May 1825, King Peter and other native kings agreed to a treaty with Ashmun. The treaty negotiated land to Ashmun and in return, the natives received three barrels of rum, five casks of powder, five umbrellas, ten pairs of shoes, ten iron posts, and 500 bars of tobacco, as well as other items.[67]

Of the 4,571 emigrants who arrived in Liberia between 1820 and 1843, only 1,819—40%—were alive in 1843.[68][69] The ACS knew of the high death rate, but continued to send more people to the colony.[68]

It is an oversimplication to say simply that the American Colonization Society founded Liberia. Much of what would become Liberia was a collection of settlements sponsored by state colonization societies: Mississippi in Africa, Kentucky in Africa, the Republic of Maryland, and several others. The most developed of these, the Republic of Maryland, had its own constitution, statutes,[70] and flag. These separate colonies were eventually united into Liberia, but the process was not completed until 1857.

Publications

Beginning in 1825, the Society published the African Repository and Colonial Journal. Ralph Randolph Gurley (1797–1872), who headed the Society until 1844, edited the journal, which in 1850 simplified its title to African Repository. The journal promoted both colonization and Liberia. Included were articles about Africa, lists of donors, letters of praise, information about emigrants, and official dispatches that espoused the prosperity and continued growth of the colony.[71] After 1919, the society essentially ended, but it did not formally dissolve until 1964, when it transferred its papers to the Library of Congress.[72]

Civil War and emancipation

Since the 1840s, Lincoln, an admirer of Clay, had been an advocate of the ACS program of colonizing blacks in Liberia.[citation needed] Early in his presidency, Abraham Lincoln tried repeatedly to arrange resettlement of the kind the ACS supported, but each arrangement failed.[73]

The ACS continued to operate during the American Civil War, and colonized 168 blacks during the conflict. It sent 2,492 people of African descent to Liberia in the five years following the war. The federal government provided a small amount of support for these operations through the Freedmen's Bureau.[74]

Some scholars believe that Lincoln abandoned the idea by 1863, following the use of black troops. Biographer Stephen B. Oates has observed that Lincoln thought it immoral to ask black soldiers to fight for the U.S. and then to remove them to Africa after their military service. Others, such as the historian Michael Lind, believe that as late as 1864, Lincoln continued to hold out hope for colonization, noting that he allegedly asked Attorney General Edward Bates if the Reverend James Mitchell could stay on as "your assistant or aid in the matter of executing the several acts of Congress relating to the emigration or colonizing of the freed Blacks".[75] Mitchell, a former state director of the ACS in Indiana, had been appointed by Lincoln in 1862 to oversee the government's colonization programs.[citation needed]

By late into his first term as president, Lincoln had publicly abandoned the idea of colonization after speaking about it with Frederick Douglass,[76] who objected harshly to it. On April 11, 1865, with the war drawing to a close, Lincoln gave a public speech at the White House supporting suffrage for blacks, a speech that led actor John Wilkes Booth, who was vigorously opposed to emancipation and black suffrage, to assassinate him.[77]

Decline and dissolution

Colonizing proved expensive; under the leadership of Henry Clay the ACS spent many years unsuccessfully trying to persuade the U.S. Congress to fund emigration. The ACS did have some success, in the 1850s, with state legislatures, such as those of Virginia, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. In 1850, the state of Virginia set aside $30,000 annually for five years to aid and support emigration. The Society, in its Thirty-fourth Annual Report, acclaimed the news as "a great Moral demonstration of the propriety and necessity of state action!"[78][46] During the 1850s, the Society also received several thousand dollars from the New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Missouri, and Maryland legislatures. Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Mississippi set up their own state societies and colonies on the coast next to Liberia.[78] However, the funds that ACS took in were inadequate to meet the Society's stated goals. "For the fourteen years preceding 1834, the receipts of that society, needing millions for its proposed operations, had averaged only about twenty-one thousand dollars a year. It had never obtained the confidence of the American people".[79]

Three of the reasons the movement never became very successful were lack of interest by free blacks, opposition by some abolitionists,[80] and the scale and costs of moving many people (there were 4 million freedmen in the South after the Civil War).[81] There were millions of black slaves in the United States, but colonization only transported a few thousand free blacks.[13]

Following the outbreak of the First World War, the ACS sent a cablegram to President Daniel Howard of Liberia, warning him that any involvement in the war could lead to Liberia's territorial integrity being violated regardless of which side might come out on top.[82]

In 1913, and again at its formal dissolution in 1964, the Society donated its records to the U.S. Library of Congress. The donated materials contain a wealth of information about the founding of the society, its role in establishing Liberia, efforts to manage and defend the colony, fundraising, recruitment of settlers, conditions for black citizens of the American South, and the way in which black settlers built and led the new nation.[83]

In Liberia, the Society maintained offices at the junction of Ashmun and Buchanan Streets at the heart of Monrovia's commercial district, next to the True Whig Party headquarters in the Edward J. Roye Building. Its offices at the site closed in 1956 when the government demolished all the buildings at the intersection for the purpose of constructing new public buildings there. Nevertheless, the land officially remained the property of the Society into the 1980s, amassing large amounts of back taxes because the Ministry of Finance could not find an address to which to send property tax bills.[84]

Viewed through the perspective of racism

In the 1950s, racism was an increasingly important issue and by the late 1960s and 1970s, it had been forced to the forefront of public consciousness by the civil rights movement. The prevalence of racism invited a re-evaluation of the Society's motives, prompting historians to examine the ACS in terms of racism more than its stance on slavery.[85] By the 1980s and 1990s, historians were going even further in reimagining the ACS. Not only were they focusing on the racist rhetoric of the Society's members and publications, but some of them also depicted the Society as a proslavery organization.[86] Recently however, some scholars have stopped depicting the ACS as a proslavery organization, and some of them have characterized it as an antislavery organization again.[87]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Although Randolph believed that the removal of free blacks would "materially tend to secure" slave property, the vast majority of early members wanted to free African slaves and their descendants and provide them with the opportunity to "return" to Africa.[32]
  2. ^ Henry Clay thought that deportation of free blacks was preferable to trying to integrate them in America, believing that:
    "unconquerable prejudice resulting from their color, they never could amalgamate with the free whites of this country. It was desirable, therefore, as it respected them, and the residue of the population of the country, to drain them off."[35]
  3. ^ In the north, for instance, there were negative beliefs about African Americans. One was that some northerners felt that African Americans had a natural tendency toward criminality. "Massachusetts politician Edward Everett spoke for many Northern colonizationists when he supported colonizing free blacks, whom he described as vagabonds, criminals, and a drain on Northern society."[36] Another belief was that African Americans could not be educated or become citizens since they were believed to be mentally inferior to whites, and thus unfit for citizenship. As formulated by racist author Thomas Dixon Jr., "The negro is a human donkey. You can train him, but you can't make of him a horse."[37] Some Society members were openly racist and frequently argued that free blacks would be unable to assimilate into the white society of the United States. John Randolph, a Virginia politician and major slaveholder, said that free blacks were "promoters of mischief".[38] The proposed solution was to have free Blacks deported from the United States "back to Africa".[39]
  4. ^ Presbyterian clergyman Lyman Beecher said of the goal to Christianize Africa:

    It is not necessary that the Colonization Society should be or claim to be an adequate remedy for slavery. Her great and primary object, is the emancipation of Africa, while she anticipated as an incidental result, the emancipation of the colored race at home. But if time has disclosed what she could not foresee, she may bow submissively to the providential will of heaven.[43]

References

  1. ^ a b c Irvine, Russell W.; Dunkerton, Donna Zani (Winter 1998). "The Noyes Academy, 1834–35: The Road to the Oberlin Collegiate Institute and the Higher Education of African-Americans in the Nineteenth Century". Western Journal of Black Studies. 22 (4): 260–273.
  2. ^ Nicholas Guyatt, “The American Colonization Society: 200 Years of the “Colonizing Trick”, Black Perspectives, African American Intellectual History Society, December 22, 2016; Nicholas Guyatt, “The American Colonization Society’s plans for abolishing slavery,” Oxford University Press’s Academic Insights for the Thinking World, December 22, 2016, /.
  3. ^ a b Goodell, William (1852). Slavery and anti-slavery; a history of the great struggle in both hemispheres; with a view of the slavery question in the United States. New York: William Harned.
  4. ^ Fleszar, Mark J. (December 2012). "'My Laborers in Haiti Are Not Slaves': Proslavery Fictions and a Black Colonization Experiment on the Northern Coast, 1835–1846". Journal of the Civil War Era. 2 (4): 478–512, at p. 478. doi:10.1353/cwe.2012.0084. JSTOR 26070274. S2CID 161344657.
  5. ^ Power-Greene, Ousmane (2014). Against Wind and Tide: The African American Struggle Against the Colonization Movement. New York: New York University Press. pp. 1–10. ISBN 9781479823178.
  6. ^ Key, Francis Scott (November 1836). "Mr. Key on the Colonization Society". African Repository and Colonial Journal. 12 (11): 339–351, at pp. 346–347 and 350–351. Neither he nor the Colonization Society called for the abolition of slavery; their mission instead focused solely on sending freed blacks to Africa. This was one of the reasons that few abolitionists had any use for the society.
  7. ^ Leepson, Marc (2014). What So Proudly We Hailed: Francis Scott Key, A Life. New York: Palgrave MacMillan. p. xiii. ISBN 9781137278289.
  8. ^ a b c Murray, Orson S. (June 23, 1834). "Jeremiah Hubbard's letter". Middlebury Free Press. Middlebury, Vermont. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
  9. ^ a b Kingsley, Zephaniah (2000). "A Treatise on the Patriarchal, or Co-operative System of Society (1828–1[8]34)". In Stowell, Daniel W. (ed.). Balancing Evils Judiciously. The Proslavery Writings of Zephaniah Kingsley. University Press of Florida. pp. 39–75. ISBN 0813017335.
  10. ^ "The American Colonization Society". WHHA (en-US). Retrieved November 9, 2022.
  11. ^ Garrison, Wm. Lloyd (1832). Thoughts on African Colonization. Boston: Garrison and Knapp. pp. 11–13.
  12. ^ Introduction – Social Aspects of the Civil War July 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h "Background on conflict in Liberia", Friends Committee on National Legislation, July 30, 2003 February 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Barton (1850), p. 9.
  15. ^ "Death on the Grain Coast". The Guardian. August 31, 2005. ISSN 0261-3077. from the original on July 8, 2021. Retrieved March 8, 2020.
  16. ^ "A difficult life for Black Loyalists". Remembering Black Loyalists. Nova Scotia Museum. 2001. from the original on November 30, 2020. Retrieved March 8, 2020.
  17. ^ "Departure for Sierra Leone". Remembering Black Loyalists. Nova Scotia Museum. 2001. from the original on February 3, 2020. Retrieved March 8, 2020.
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  85. ^ George M. Fredrickson. The Black Image in the White Mind: The Debate on Afro-American Character and Destiny, 1817–1914. New York: Harper & Row, Publishers. 1971; Floyd J. Miller, The Search for a Black Nationality: Black Emigration and Colonization 1781–1863, Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1975; Edwin S. Redkey, Black Exodus: Black Nationalist and Back-to-Africa Movements, 1890–1910, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969; P. J. Staudenraus, The African Colonization Movement 1816–1865, New York: Columbia University Press. (1961).
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Sources

  •   This article incorporates public domain material from the Library of Congress. Retrieved April 28, 2012.
  • Barton, Seth, "Remarks on the colonization of the western coast of Africa", Cornell University Library, 1850.
  • Boley, G.E. Saigbe, "Liberia: The Rise and Fall of the First Republic", Macmillan Publishers, London, 1983.
  • Burin, Eric. Slavery and the Peculiar Solution: A History of the American Colonization Society. University Press of Florida, 2005.
  • Cassell, Dr. C. Abayomi, "Liberia: History of the First African Republic", Fountainhead Publishers Inc., New York, 1970.
  • Egerton, Douglas R. Charles Fenton Mercer and the Trial of National Conservatism. University Press of Mississippi, 1989.
  • Finley, Rev. Robert, "Thoughts on the Colonization of Free Blacks" March 4, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, Washington D.C., 1816 (Rev. Finley's founding document).
  • Jenkins, David, "Black Zion: The Return of Afro-Americans and West Indians to Africa", Wildwood House, London, 1975.
  • Johnson, Charles S., "Bitter Canaan: The Story of the Negro Republic", Transaction Books, New Brunswick, NJ, 1987.
  • Liebenow, J. Gus, "Liberia: The Evolution of Privilege", Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY, 1969.
  • Miller, Floyd J., "The Search for a Black Nationality: Black Emigration and Colonization, 1787–1863", University of Illinois Press, Urbana, Illinois, 1975.
  • Newman, Richard S, "Freedom's prophet", NYU Press, New York, 2008.
  • Oubre, Claude F. Forty Acres and a Mule: The Freedmen's Bureau and Black Land Ownership. Louisiana State University Press, 1978.
  • Power-Green, Ousmane, "Against Wind and Tide: The African American Struggle against the Colonization Movement," New York University Press, 2014.
  • Thomas, Lamont D. Paul Cuffe: Black Entrepreneur and Pan-Africanist (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1988)
  • Tomek, Beverly C. "Colonization and Its Discontents: Emancipation, Emigration and Antislavery in Antebellum Pennsylvania," (New York: New York University Press, 2011).
  • West, Richard, "Back to Africa", Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, Inc., New York, 1970.
  • Yarema, Allan E., "American Colonization Society: an avenue to freedom?", University Press of America, 2006.

Further reading

  • "American Colonization Society". Newcastle Weekly Courant (Newcastle upon Tyne, England). Reprinted from the Anti-Slavery Reporter. December 15, 1832. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • "Emancipation". Vermont Chronicle (Bellows Falls, Vermont). March 22, 1833. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
  • Clarkson, Thomas (1833). British opinions of the American Colonization Society. Printed by Garrison & Knapp, at the office of The Liberator.
  • Clericus, pseud. of George Smith (1833). Facts designed to exhibit the real character and tendency of the American Colonization Society. Liverpool, England: Egerton Smith & Co.
  • Falola, Toyin, and Raphael Chijioke Njoku. "President James Monroe and the Colonization Society: From Monrovia to Liberia." in United States and Africa Relations, 1400s to the Present (Yale University Press, 2020) pp. 84–104.
  • Smith, Gerrit (1835). "Mr. Gerrit Smith on Colonization". African Repository. Vol. 40. pp. 65–76, 105–119.

Primary sources

american, colonization, society, confused, with, colonization, movement, also, abolitionism, united, states, initially, society, colonization, free, people, color, america, until, 1837, american, organization, founded, 1816, robert, finley, encourage, support,. Not to be confused with Colonization movement See also Abolitionism in the United States The American Colonization Society ACS initially the Society for the Colonization of Free People of Color of America until 1837 was an American organization founded in 1816 by Robert Finley to encourage and support the migration of freeborn blacks and emancipated slaves to the continent of Africa Robert Finley founded the American Colonization Society The American Colonization Society was established to address the prevailing view that free people of color could not integrate into U S society their population had grown steadily following the American Revolutionary War from 60 000 in 1790 to 300 000 by 1830 1 26 Slaveowners feared that these free Blacks might help their slaves to escape or rebel In addition many white Americans believed that African Americans were an inferior race and therefore should be relocated to a place where they could live in peace a place where they would not encounter prejudice a place where they could be citizens 2 The African American community and the abolitionist movement overwhelmingly opposed the project In most cases African Americans families had lived in the United States for generations and their prevailing sentiment was that they were no more African than white Americans were European Contrary to claims that their emigration was voluntary many African Americans both free and enslaved were pressured into emigrating 3 343 Indeed enslavers like Zephaniah Kingsley 4 sometimes manumitted freed their slaves on condition that the freedmen leave the country immediately 5 6 According to historian Marc Leepson Colonization proved to be a giant failure doing nothing to stem the forces that brought the nation to Civil War 7 Between 1821 and 1847 only a few thousand African Americans out of millions emigrated to what would become Liberia By 1833 the Society had transported 2 769 individuals out of the U S while the increase in Black population in the U S during those same years was about 500 000 8 According to Zephaniah Kingsley the cost of transporting the Black population of the United States to Africa would exceed the annual revenues of the country 9 73 Mortality was the highest since accurate record keeping began close to half the arrivals in Liberia died from tropical diseases especially malaria during the early years 22 of immigrants died within one year 9 55 n 24 Moreover the provisioning and transportation of requisite tools and supplies proved very expensive 10 Starting in the 1830s the society was met with great hostility from white abolitionists led by Gerrit Smith who had supported the society financially and William Lloyd Garrison author of Thoughts on African Colonization 1832 in which he proclaimed the society a fraud According to Garrison and his many followers the society was not a solution to the problem of American slavery it actually was helping and was intended to help to preserve it 11 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Growth of slavery in the South 1 2 Growth in the number of free black people 1 3 Early colonization in Africa 1 4 Paul Cuffe 2 Efforts to relocate free black people other than to Africa 3 Early history of the ACS 3 1 Founding 3 2 Leadership 3 3 Goals 3 4 Fundraising 4 Opposition to colonization 4 1 Opposition from blacks 4 2 Opposition from whites 4 2 1 William Lloyd Garrison 4 2 2 Gerrit Smith 5 Support of free black emigration 6 Colony of Liberia 7 Publications 8 Civil War and emancipation 9 Decline and dissolution 10 Viewed through the perspective of racism 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Sources 15 Further reading 15 1 Primary sourcesBackground EditFurther information Slavery in the United States and Abolitionism in the United States Growth of slavery in the South Edit Further information King CottonAfter the invention of the cotton gin in the 1790s the growth and export of cotton became a highly profitable business Central to the business was the setting up of plantations staffed by enslaved laborers Due to the increased demand imports of African slaves grew until legal importation was barred in 1808 after which time Maryland and Virginia openly bred slaves producing children for sale South through brokers such as Franklin and Armfield to plantation owners This resulted in the forcible relocation of about one million enslaved people to the Deep South The Africans and African Americans became well established and had children and the total number of the enslaved reached four million by the mid 19th century 12 Growth in the number of free black people Edit Due in part to manumission efforts sparked by revolutionary ideals Protestant preachers and the abolitionist movement there was an expansion in the number of free blacks many of them born free Even in the North where slavery was being abolished discrimination against free blacks was rampant and often legal Few states extended citizenship rights to free blacks prior to the 1860s and the Federal government largely controlled by Slave Power never showed any inclination to challenge the racial status quo Even in the North free blacks were often seen as unwelcome immigrants taking jobs away because they would work for cheap 13 Some slave owners decided to support emigration following an aborted slave rebellion headed by Gabriel Prosser in 1800 and a rapid increase in the number of free African Americans in the United States in the first two decades after the Revolutionary War which they perceived as threatening Although the ratio of whites to blacks overall was 4 1 between 1790 and 1800 in some Southern counties blacks were the majority Slaveholders feared that free blacks destabilized their slave society and created a political threat From 1790 to 1800 the number of free blacks increased from 59 467 to 108 398 and by 1810 there were 186 446 free blacks 14 Early colonization in Africa Edit Further information Sierra Leone Company and African Institution In 1786 a British organization the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor launched its efforts to establish the Sierra Leone Province of Freedom a colony in West Africa for London s black poor This enterprise gained the support of the British government 15 which also offered relocation to Black Loyalists who had been resettled in Nova Scotia where they were subject to harsh weather and discrimination from some white Nova Scotians 16 17 Jamaica maroons were also deported to the colony 18 alongside former slaves freed by the Royal Navy after the Atlantic slave trade was abolished by Britain in 1807 19 20 Paul Cuffe Edit Drawing of Paul Cuffe 1812 Paul Cuffe or Cuffee 1759 1817 was a successful Quaker ship owner and activist in Boston His parents were of Ashanti African and Wampanoag Native American heritage He advocated settling freed American slaves in Africa and gained support from the British government free Black leaders in the United States and members of Congress to take emigrants to the British colony of Sierra Leone 21 In 1815 he financed a trip himself The following year Cuffe took 38 American blacks to Freetown Sierra Leone 22 He died in 1817 before undertaking other voyages Cuffe laid the groundwork for the American Colonization Society 23 Efforts to relocate free black people other than to Africa EditAlthough little remembered as ultimately nothing came of them there were a number of other proposals for relocating former slaves to somewhere much closer One option discussed was settling them in the new sparsely populated Western territories acquired with the Louisiana Purchase or on the Pacific coast creating a Black reservation similar to an Indian reservation Haiti was open to them and there was an unsuccessful attempt to create an agricultural community of former American slaves on Ile a Vache Haiti Abraham Lincoln s plan was to settle them in what is today Panama see Linconia Even Florida Governor Napoleon Bonaparte Broward proposed in 1907 sending Blacks to a land the federal government would purchase there to live permanently in isolation from whites 24 Early history of the ACS EditFounding Edit The ACS had its origins in 1816 when Charles Fenton Mercer a Federalist member of the Virginia General Assembly discovered accounts of earlier legislative debates on black colonization in the wake of Gabriel Prosser s rebellion Mercer pushed the state to support the idea One of his political contacts in Washington City John Caldwell in turn contacted the Reverend Robert Finley his brother in law and a Presbyterian minister who endorsed the plan 25 John Randolph Henry Clay Richard Bland Lee Bushrod WashingtonFour early organizers of the American Society for Colonizing the Free People of Color of the United States 26 13 27 28 On December 21 1816 the society was officially established at the Davis Hotel in Washington D C Among the Society s supporters were Charles Fenton Mercer from Virginia Henry Clay Kentucky John Randolph Virginia Richard Bland Lee Virginia and Bushrod Washington Virginia 13 26 27 28 29 Slaveholders in the Virginia Piedmont region in the 1820s and 1830s comprised many of its most prominent members slave owning United States presidents Thomas Jefferson James Monroe and James Madison were among its supporters Madison served as the Society s president in the early 1830s 30 At the inaugural meeting of the Society Reverend Finley suggested that a colony be established in Africa to take free people of color most of whom had been born free away from the United States Finley meant to colonize with their consent the free people of color residing in our country in Africa or such other place as Congress may deem most expedient The organization established branches throughout the United States mostly in Southern states It was instrumental in establishing the colony of Liberia 31 The ACS was founded by groups otherwise opposed to each other on the issue of slavery Slaveholders such as those in the Maryland branch and elsewhere believed that so called repatriation was a way to remove free blacks from slave societies and avoid slave rebellions 13 a Free blacks many of whom had been in the United States for generations also encouraged and assisted slaves to escape and depressing their value Every attempt by the South to aid the Colonization Society to send free colored people to Africa enhances the value of the slave left on the soil 33 51 The Society appeared to hold contradictory ideas free blacks should be removed because they could not benefit America on the other hand free blacks would prosper and thrive under their own leadership in another land 34 b On the other hand a coalition made up mostly of evangelicals Quakers philanthropists and abolitionists supported abolition of slavery 13 32 They wanted slaves to be free and believed blacks would face better chances for freedom in Africa than in the United States since they were not welcome in the South or North 13 32 c The two opposed groups found common ground in support of what they called repatriation 13 Leadership Edit The presidents of the ACS tended to be Southerners The first president was Bushrod Washington the nephew of U S President George Washington and an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 28 40 From 1836 to 1849 the statesman Henry Clay of Kentucky a planter and slaveholder was ACS president John H B Latrobe served as president of the ACS from 1853 until his death in 1891 41 Goals Edit The colonization project which had multiple American Colonization Society chapters in every state had three goals One was to provide a place for former slaves freedmen and their descendants to live where they would be free and not subject to racism Another goal was to ensure that the colony had what it needed to succeed such as fertile soil to grow crops 42 A third goal was to suppress attempts to engage in the Atlantic slave trade such as by monitoring ship traffic on the coast 42 Presbyterian clergyman Lyman Beecher proposed another goal the Christianization of Africa 43 d Fundraising Edit Membership certificate of Rev Samuel Rose Ely dated March 1840 Henry Clay s signature as president of the Society is visible at the bottom The Society raised money by selling memberships 44 The Society s members pressured Congress and the President for support In 1819 they received 100 000 from Congress and on February 6 1820 the first ship the Elizabeth sailed from New York for West Africa with three white ACS agents and 88 African American emigrants aboard 45 The approaches for selecting people and funding travel to Africa varied by state 46 Opposition to colonization EditAccording to Benjamin Quarles the colonization movement originated abolitionism by arousing the free Blacks and other opponents of slavery 47 Originally colonization had been pushed with diligence and paraded as the cure for the evils of slavery and its benevolence was assumed on all hands Everybody of consequence belonged to it citation needed The following summary by Judge James Hall editor of the Cincinnati based Western Monthly Magazine is from May 1834 The plan of colonizing free blacks has been justly considered one of the noblest devices of Christian benevolence and enlightened patriotism grand in its object and most happily adapted to enlist the combined influence and harmonious cooperation of different classes of society It reconciles and brings together some discordant interests which could not in any other plan be brought to meet in harmony The Christian and the statesman here act together and persons having entirely different views from each other in reference to some collateral points connected with the great subject are moved towards the same point by a diversity of motives It is a splendid conception around which are gathered the hopes of the nation the wishes of the patriot the prayers of the Christian and we trust the approbation of Heaven 48 As Hall refused to publish Theodore Weld s lengthy reply he did so in the Cincinnati Journal It became known nationally because Garrison devoted almost the entire front page of the June 14 issue of The Liberator to it 49 Opposition from blacks Edit From the beginning the majority of black Americans regarded the Society with enormous disdain 50 143 a fixed hatred 8 Black activist James Forten immediately rejected the ACS writing in 1817 that we have no wish to separate from our present homes for any purpose whatever 51 As soon as they heard about it 3 000 blacks packed a church in Philadelphia the bellwether city for free blacks and bitterly and unanimously denounced it 1 261 Now after the Colonization Society has been formed without the consent of the colored people after the enterprise has been violently pushed against their reiterated protests tor seventeen years after its friends acknowledged that coercion has been used in getting away its victims and so long as they would persuade us that this is not the native country of colored Americans and that we ought not to let them remain here what is it better than gross mockery to talk about consent 8 Frederick Douglass condemned colonization Shame upon the guilty wretches that dare propose and all that countenance such a proposition We live here have lived here have a right to live here and mean to live here 52 Martin Delany who believed that Black Americans deserved a new country a new beginning called Liberia a miserable mockery of an independent republic a racist scheme of the ACS to rid the United States of free blacks He proposed instead Central and South America as the ultimate destination and future home of the colored race on this continent see Linconia 53 A recent 2014 writer on Connecticut African Americans summarizes the attitude amongst them 54 African Americans viewed colonization as a means of defrauding them of the rights of citizenship and a way of tightening the grip of slavery The tragedy was that African Americans began to view their ancestral home with disdain They dropped the use of African in names of their organizations and used instead of African American The Colored American While claiming to aid African Americans in some cases to stimulate emigration it made conditions for them worse For example the Society assumed the task of resuscitating the Ohio Black Codes of 1804 and 1807 Between 1 000 and 1 200 free blacks were forced from Cincinnati 1 262 A meeting was held in Cincinnati on January 17 1832 to discuss colonization which resulted in a series of resolutions First they had a right to freedom and equality They felt honor bound to protect the country the land of their birth and the Constitution They were not familiar with Africa and should have the right to make their own decisions about where they lived They recommended that if black people wish to leave the United States they consider Canada or Mexico where they would have civil rights and a climate that is similar to what they are accustomed to The United States was large enough to accommodate a colony and would be much cheaper to implement They question the motives of ACS members who cite Christianity as a reason for removing blacks from America Since there were no attempts to improve the conditions of black people who lived in the United States it is unlikely that white people would watch out for their interests thousands of miles away 55 Opposition from whites Edit William Lloyd Garrison Edit William Lloyd Garrison began publication of his abolitionist newspaper The Liberator in 1831 followed in 1832 by his Thoughts on African Colonization According to President Lincoln it was the logic and moral power of Garrison and the antislavery people of the country that put emancipation on the country s political agenda 56 Garrison himself joined it in good faith 57 63 All the important white future abolitionists supported the Society besides Garrison Gerrit Smith the Tappans and many others as can be seen in the pages of the Society s magazine the African Repository Garrison objected to the colonization scheme because rather than eliminating slavery its key goal as he saw it was to remove free black people from America thereby avoiding slave rebellions Besides not improving the lot of enslaved Africans the colonization had made enemies of native people of Africa Both he and Gerrit Smith were horrified when they learned that alcohol was being sold in Liberia 58 178 179 59 230 3 351 He questioned the wisdom of sending African Americans along with white missionaries and agents to such an unhealthy place In addition it meant that fewer slaves achieved their freedom it hinders the manumission of slaves by throwing their emancipation upon its own scheme which in fifteen years has occasioned the manumission of less than four hundred slaves while before its existence and operations during a less time thousands were set free 60 In the second number of The Liberator Garrison reprinted this commentary from the Boston Statesman 61 We were however rather surprised to see the proposal of sending the free negroes to Africa as returning them to their native land It would be as well at least to talk of sending these reverend gentlemen back to England as their native land The negro is just as much a native here as are these reverend gentlemen themselves Here the negro was born here bred here are his earliest and pleasantest associations here is all that binds him to earth and makes life valuable If the welfare of the negro and not a new scheme for begging be really the object in view we desire the reverend gentlemen to step forward and vindicate the rights of the negroes trampled upon by their brethren in Park Street If they would really promote the happiness of the negro let their efforts be directed to raise the oppressed black in the scale of moral elevation here Let them admit him to more rights in the social world but unless they desire to be laughed at by all sincere and thinking men they had better abandon the Quixotic plan of colonizing the Southern negroes at the cost of the North until we can free our own borders from poverty ignorance and distress Gerrit Smith Edit The philanthropist and public intellectual Gerrit Smith the wealthiest man in New York State had been among the most munificent patrons of this Society as put by Society Vice President Henry Clay 62 This support changed to furious and bitter rejection when he realized in the early 1830s that the society was quite as much an Anti Abolition as Colonization Society 63 This Colonization Society had by an invisible process half conscious half unconscious been transformed into a serviceable organ and member of the Slave Power It was an extreme case of sham reform 57 63 In November 1835 he sent the Society a letter with a check to conclude his existing commitments and said there would not be any more from him because The Society is now and has been for some time far more interested in the question of slavery than in the work of Colonization in the demolition of the Anti Slavery Society than in the building up of its Colony I need not go beyond the matter and spirit of the last few numbers of its periodical for the justification of this remark Were a stranger to form his opinion by these numbers it would be that the Society issuing them was quite as much an Anti Abolition as Colonization Society It has come to this however that a member of the Colonization Society cannot advocate the deliverance of his enslaved fellow men without subjecting himself to such charges of inconsistency as the public prints abundantly cast on me for being at the same time a member of that Society and an Abolitionist Since the late alarming attacks in the persons of its members on the right of discussion and astonishing as it is some of the suggestions for invading this right are impliedly countenanced in the African Repository I have looked to it as being also the rallying point of the friends of this right To that Society yours is hostile 63 Nathaniel PaulIn the meeting of forming British African Colonization Society held in London in July 1833 Nathaniel Paul an abolitionist in support of William Lloyd Garrison s Thoughts on African Colonization argued that a significant number of opponents including Black Americans in prominent cities of America found inequality towards the Society because according to him they were the ones who had remarkably contributed and fought to protect this country as their home through a historical period of generations 64 However this Society was then trying to forcefully send them back to their ancestors lands as by that time they were considered at risk for rebellion in the name of emancipation In contrast the new Europeans who had not been part of this country in such events were instead welcomed to settle here 64 Support of free black emigration EditFrom 1850 to 1858 according to Martin Delany a supporter of African Americans emigration from the United States to other regions the creation of a republic was a significant movement to gain independence for the free Black people in America in contrast to the ideology of staying and fighting for the equality of civil rights of Frederick Douglass He believed the transition was to exit the rising of slavery and racism toward African Americans in the US Other destinations he suggested were Central America the West Indies or Mexico where Black people could be more likely to thrive and emphasize their freedom against the influence of White people 65 Colony of Liberia EditMain article Colony of Liberia In 1821 Lt Robert Stockton had pointed a pistol to the head of King Peter which allowed Stockton to persuade King Peter to sell Cape Montserrado or Mesurado and to establish Monrovia 66 In 1825 and 1826 Jehudi Ashmun Stockton s successor took steps to lease annex or buy tribal lands in Africa along the coast and along major rivers leading inland in Africa to establish an American colony Stockton s actions inspired Ashmun to use aggressive tactics in his negotiations with King Peter and in May 1825 King Peter and other native kings agreed to a treaty with Ashmun The treaty negotiated land to Ashmun and in return the natives received three barrels of rum five casks of powder five umbrellas ten pairs of shoes ten iron posts and 500 bars of tobacco as well as other items 67 Of the 4 571 emigrants who arrived in Liberia between 1820 and 1843 only 1 819 40 were alive in 1843 68 69 The ACS knew of the high death rate but continued to send more people to the colony 68 It is an oversimplication to say simply that the American Colonization Society founded Liberia Much of what would become Liberia was a collection of settlements sponsored by state colonization societies Mississippi in Africa Kentucky in Africa the Republic of Maryland and several others The most developed of these the Republic of Maryland had its own constitution statutes 70 and flag These separate colonies were eventually united into Liberia but the process was not completed until 1857 Publications EditBeginning in 1825 the Society published the African Repository and Colonial Journal Ralph Randolph Gurley 1797 1872 who headed the Society until 1844 edited the journal which in 1850 simplified its title to African Repository The journal promoted both colonization and Liberia Included were articles about Africa lists of donors letters of praise information about emigrants and official dispatches that espoused the prosperity and continued growth of the colony 71 After 1919 the society essentially ended but it did not formally dissolve until 1964 when it transferred its papers to the Library of Congress 72 Civil War and emancipation EditMain article Abraham Lincoln and slavery Colonization Since the 1840s Lincoln an admirer of Clay had been an advocate of the ACS program of colonizing blacks in Liberia citation needed Early in his presidency Abraham Lincoln tried repeatedly to arrange resettlement of the kind the ACS supported but each arrangement failed 73 The ACS continued to operate during the American Civil War and colonized 168 blacks during the conflict It sent 2 492 people of African descent to Liberia in the five years following the war The federal government provided a small amount of support for these operations through the Freedmen s Bureau 74 Some scholars believe that Lincoln abandoned the idea by 1863 following the use of black troops Biographer Stephen B Oates has observed that Lincoln thought it immoral to ask black soldiers to fight for the U S and then to remove them to Africa after their military service Others such as the historian Michael Lind believe that as late as 1864 Lincoln continued to hold out hope for colonization noting that he allegedly asked Attorney General Edward Bates if the Reverend James Mitchell could stay on as your assistant or aid in the matter of executing the several acts of Congress relating to the emigration or colonizing of the freed Blacks 75 Mitchell a former state director of the ACS in Indiana had been appointed by Lincoln in 1862 to oversee the government s colonization programs citation needed By late into his first term as president Lincoln had publicly abandoned the idea of colonization after speaking about it with Frederick Douglass 76 who objected harshly to it On April 11 1865 with the war drawing to a close Lincoln gave a public speech at the White House supporting suffrage for blacks a speech that led actor John Wilkes Booth who was vigorously opposed to emancipation and black suffrage to assassinate him 77 Decline and dissolution EditColonizing proved expensive under the leadership of Henry Clay the ACS spent many years unsuccessfully trying to persuade the U S Congress to fund emigration The ACS did have some success in the 1850s with state legislatures such as those of Virginia Pennsylvania and New Jersey In 1850 the state of Virginia set aside 30 000 annually for five years to aid and support emigration The Society in its Thirty fourth Annual Report acclaimed the news as a great Moral demonstration of the propriety and necessity of state action 78 46 During the 1850s the Society also received several thousand dollars from the New Jersey Pennsylvania Missouri and Maryland legislatures Pennsylvania Maryland and Mississippi set up their own state societies and colonies on the coast next to Liberia 78 However the funds that ACS took in were inadequate to meet the Society s stated goals For the fourteen years preceding 1834 the receipts of that society needing millions for its proposed operations had averaged only about twenty one thousand dollars a year It had never obtained the confidence of the American people 79 Three of the reasons the movement never became very successful were lack of interest by free blacks opposition by some abolitionists 80 and the scale and costs of moving many people there were 4 million freedmen in the South after the Civil War 81 There were millions of black slaves in the United States but colonization only transported a few thousand free blacks 13 Following the outbreak of the First World War the ACS sent a cablegram to President Daniel Howard of Liberia warning him that any involvement in the war could lead to Liberia s territorial integrity being violated regardless of which side might come out on top 82 In 1913 and again at its formal dissolution in 1964 the Society donated its records to the U S Library of Congress The donated materials contain a wealth of information about the founding of the society its role in establishing Liberia efforts to manage and defend the colony fundraising recruitment of settlers conditions for black citizens of the American South and the way in which black settlers built and led the new nation 83 In Liberia the Society maintained offices at the junction of Ashmun and Buchanan Streets at the heart of Monrovia s commercial district next to the True Whig Party headquarters in the Edward J Roye Building Its offices at the site closed in 1956 when the government demolished all the buildings at the intersection for the purpose of constructing new public buildings there Nevertheless the land officially remained the property of the Society into the 1980s amassing large amounts of back taxes because the Ministry of Finance could not find an address to which to send property tax bills 84 Viewed through the perspective of racism EditIn the 1950s racism was an increasingly important issue and by the late 1960s and 1970s it had been forced to the forefront of public consciousness by the civil rights movement The prevalence of racism invited a re evaluation of the Society s motives prompting historians to examine the ACS in terms of racism more than its stance on slavery 85 By the 1980s and 1990s historians were going even further in reimagining the ACS Not only were they focusing on the racist rhetoric of the Society s members and publications but some of them also depicted the Society as a proslavery organization 86 Recently however some scholars have stopped depicting the ACS as a proslavery organization and some of them have characterized it as an antislavery organization again 87 See also Edit United States portal Liberia portalBack to Africa movement Linconia Remigration Abolitionism in the United States African Civilization Society African Repository and Colonial Journal Colonization Societies Haitian emigration Samana Americans History of Liberia Kentucky in Africa Loring D Dewey an agent of the ACS who promoted free blacks emigration to Haiti in the 1820s Lott Carey of Richmond Virginia the first American missionary to Liberia Maryland State Colonization Society Mississippi in Africa Nova Scotian Settlers of the Freetown Colony in what is now Sierra Leone Republic of Maryland Samuel Wilkeson in 1838 he became general agent of the SocietyNotes Edit Although Randolph believed that the removal of free blacks would materially tend to secure slave property the vast majority of early members wanted to free African slaves and their descendants and provide them with the opportunity to return to Africa 32 Henry Clay thought that deportation of free blacks was preferable to trying to integrate them in America believing that unconquerable prejudice resulting from their color they never could amalgamate with the free whites of this country It was desirable therefore as it respected them and the residue of the population of the country to drain them off 35 In the north for instance there were negative beliefs about African Americans One was that some northerners felt that African Americans had a natural tendency toward criminality Massachusetts politician Edward Everett spoke for many Northern colonizationists when he supported colonizing free blacks whom he described as vagabonds criminals and a drain on Northern society 36 Another belief was that African Americans could not be educated or become citizens since they were believed to be mentally inferior to whites and thus unfit for citizenship As formulated by racist author Thomas Dixon Jr The negro is a human donkey You can train him but you can t make of him a horse 37 Some Society members were openly racist and frequently argued that free blacks would be unable to assimilate into the white society of the United States John Randolph a Virginia politician and major slaveholder said that free blacks were promoters of mischief 38 The proposed solution was to have free Blacks deported from the United States back to Africa 39 Presbyterian clergyman Lyman Beecher said of the goal to Christianize Africa It is not necessary that the Colonization Society should be or claim to be an adequate remedy for slavery Her great and primary object is the emancipation of Africa while she anticipated as an incidental result the emancipation of the colored race at home But if time has disclosed what she could not foresee she may bow submissively to the providential will of heaven 43 References Edit a b c Irvine Russell W Dunkerton Donna Zani Winter 1998 The Noyes Academy 1834 35 The Road to the Oberlin Collegiate Institute and the Higher Education of African Americans in the Nineteenth Century Western Journal of Black Studies 22 4 260 273 Nicholas Guyatt The American Colonization Society 200 Years of the Colonizing Trick Black Perspectives African American Intellectual History Society December 22 2016 Nicholas Guyatt The American Colonization Society s plans for abolishing slavery Oxford University Press s Academic Insights for the Thinking World December 22 2016 a b Goodell William 1852 Slavery and anti slavery a history of the great struggle in both hemispheres with a view of the slavery question in the United States New York William Harned Fleszar Mark J December 2012 My Laborers in Haiti Are Not Slaves Proslavery Fictions and a Black Colonization Experiment on the Northern Coast 1835 1846 Journal of the Civil War Era 2 4 478 512 at p 478 doi 10 1353 cwe 2012 0084 JSTOR 26070274 S2CID 161344657 Power Greene Ousmane 2014 Against Wind and Tide The African American Struggle Against the Colonization Movement New York New York University Press pp 1 10 ISBN 9781479823178 Key Francis Scott November 1836 Mr Key on the Colonization Society African Repository and Colonial Journal 12 11 339 351 at pp 346 347 and 350 351 Neither he nor the Colonization Society called for the abolition of slavery their mission instead focused solely on sending freed blacks to Africa This was one of the reasons that few abolitionists had any use for the society Leepson Marc 2014 What So Proudly We Hailed Francis Scott Key A Life New York Palgrave MacMillan p xiii ISBN 9781137278289 a b c Murray Orson S June 23 1834 Jeremiah Hubbard s letter Middlebury Free Press Middlebury Vermont p 1 via newspapers com a b Kingsley Zephaniah 2000 A Treatise on the Patriarchal or Co operative System of Society 1828 1 8 34 In Stowell Daniel W ed Balancing Evils Judiciously The Proslavery Writings of Zephaniah Kingsley 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who migrated to northern states Starr Frederick 1913 Liberia description history problems Chicage Frederick Starr p 9 ISBN 9780598450234 OCLC 6791808 Archived from the original on July 8 2021 Retrieved November 28 2015 At Google Books Semmes John E October 1917 Chapter 6 African Colonization John H B Latrobe and His Times Baltimore Maryland The Norman Remington Company p 167 LCCN 18002814 OCLC 262462816 Archived from the original on March 7 2021 Retrieved March 22 2019 via HathiTrust Digital Library a b Auxiliary Societies Colonization African Repository and Colonial Journal From the Carlisle Pennsylvania Expositor March 1834 pp 219 220 Archived from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved February 11 2020 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a CS1 maint others link a b Beecher Lyman November 1834 Dr Beecher s Address African Repository and Colonial Journal From the Cincinnati Journal June 13 1834 Archived from the original on May 31 2017 Society 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156 doi 10 1353 cwh 1997 0099 Archived from the original on July 24 2019 Retrieved July 24 2019 via Project MUSE Wesley Dorothy Porter 1995 Early Negro Writing 1760 1837 Black Classic Press p 250 ISBN 978 0 933121 59 1 Archived from the original on August 19 2020 Retrieved March 8 2020 Leavenworth Jesse May 22 2003 Re Creating 1834 Debates on Abolition Hartford Courant Archived from the original on January 27 2020 Retrieved January 28 2020 Jackson Holly 2019 American Radicals How Nineteenth Century Protest Shaped the Nation New York Crown p 173 ISBN 978 0525573098 Harris Katherine J 2014 Colonization and Abolition in Connecticut In Normen Elizabeth J Harris Katherine J Close Stacey K Mitchell Wm Frank White Olivia eds African American Connecticut Explored Wesleyan University Press p 64 ISBN 978 0 8195 7398 8 Archived from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved March 3 2020 via Project MUSE A Voice from Ohio The Liberator Boston Massachusetts February 4 1832 p 2 Archived from the original on October 17 2019 Retrieved September 13 2019 via newspapers com Sinha Manisha July 5 2019 The Politics of Abolishing Slavery The New York Times p A20 Archived from the original on December 9 2019 Retrieved December 9 2019 a b Chapman John Jay 1913 William Lloyd Garrison New York Moffat Yard and Company Henry Stuart C 1973 Unvanquished Puritan a portrait of Lyman Beecher Grand Rapids Michigan W B Eerdmans Pub Co ISBN 9780802834263 OCLC 0802834264 Tappan Lewis 1870 The Life of Arthur Tappan New York Hurd and Houghton Wright Jr E lizur January 5 1833 Letter to the editor The Liberator Boston Massachusetts p 2 Archived from the original on September 5 2019 Retrieved September 5 2019 via newspapers com Colonization The Liberator Boston Massachusetts January 8 1831 p 2 Archived from the original on July 8 2021 Retrieved November 18 2020 via newspapers com Clay Henry 1836 Address to the Annual Meeting of the American Colonization Society December 15 1835 African Repository Vol 12 American colonization society pp 9 11 a b Smith Gerrit 1836 Letter to R alph R andolph Gurley Secretary of the American Colonization Society November 24 1835 African Repository 12 35 37 a b Blackett Richard J M January 1 2002 Building an Antislavery Wall Black Americans in the Atlantic Abolitionist Movement 1830 1860 LSU Press pp 65 66 ISBN 978 0 8071 2797 1 Ousmane K Power Greene Against Wind and Tide The African American Struggle Against the Colonization Movement NYU Press 2014 EBSCOhost https search ebscohost com ezproxy pstcc edu 3443 login aspx direct true amp db nlebk amp AN 816589 amp scope site Map of Liberia West Africa www wdl org January 1 1830 Archived from the original on May 18 2020 Retrieved November 30 2015 Paul Cuffee Jehudi Ashmun Society American Colonization July 23 2010 Colonization The African American Mosaic Exhibition Exhibitions Library of Congress www loc gov Archived from the original on February 26 2011 Retrieved November 30 2015 a b Shick Tom W January 1971 A quantitative analysis of Liberian colonization from 1820 to 1843 with special reference to mortality The Journal of African History 12 1 45 59 doi 10 1017 S0021853700000062 JSTOR 180566 PMID 11632218 S2CID 31153316 permanent dead link Shick Tom W 1980 Behold the Promised Land A History of Afro American Settler Society in Nineteenth century Liberia Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0801823091 Constitution and Laws of Maryland in Liberia With an Appendix of Precedents 2nd ed Baltimore Maryland State Colonization Society 1847 Colonization African American Mosaic Exhibition Library of Congress www 4uth gov ua Archived from the original on December 11 2015 Retrieved December 8 2015 Cuffee Paul Ashmun Jehudi Society American Colonization July 23 2010 Colonization The African American Mosaic Exhibition Exhibitions Library of Congress www loc gov Archived from the original on February 26 2011 Retrieved September 4 2019 Kendi Ibram X 2016 Stamped from the Beginning The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America New York NY Bold Type Books pp 225 226 ISBN 978 1 56858 598 7 Oubre Forty Acres and a Mule 1978 p 6 Bates to Lincoln November 30 1864 Library of Congress Archived from the original on February 24 2021 Retrieved September 4 2019 Foner Eric December 31 2012 The Emancipation of Abraham Lincoln The New York Times New York Archived from the original on April 19 2015 Retrieved April 5 2015 The proclamation was immediate not gradual contained no mention of compensation for owners and made no reference to colonization In it Lincoln addressed blacks directly not as property subject to the will of others but as men and women whose loyalty the Union must earn For the first time he welcomed black soldiers into the Union Army over the next two years some 200 000 black men would serve in the Army and Navy playing a critical role in achieving Union victory And Lincoln urged freed slaves to go to work for reasonable wages in the United States He never again mentioned colonization in public Lincoln Abraham April 11 1865 Last public address Washington D C Archived from the original on March 18 2014 Retrieved March 27 2014 a b Colonization The African American Mosaic Exhibition Exhibitions Library of Congress www loc gov July 23 2010 Archived from the original on February 26 2011 Retrieved December 8 2015 Birney William 1884 Sketch of the life of James G Birney Chicago National ChristianAssociation p 13 Clipping from The Liberator The Liberator Boston Massachusetts June 20 1856 p 3 Archived from the original on September 4 2019 Retrieved September 4 2019 Reconstruction HISTORY Archived from the original on May 28 2020 Retrieved May 27 2020 Akingbade Harrison March 1 1978 Liberia and the First World War 1914 1926 A Current Bibliography on African Affairs 10 3 243 258 doi 10 1177 001132557801000303 ISSN 0011 3255 S2CID 162781839 West Africa s Past October 2010 Library of Congress Information Bulletin www loc gov Archived from the original on May 5 2017 Retrieved December 8 2015 American Colonization Society Still Owns Land in Liberia Monrovia SunTimes 1985 07 03 12 George M Fredrickson The Black Image in the White Mind The Debate on Afro American Character and Destiny 1817 1914 New York Harper amp Row Publishers 1971 Floyd J Miller The Search for a Black Nationality Black Emigration and Colonization 1781 1863 Chicago University of Illinois Press 1975 Edwin S Redkey Black Exodus Black Nationalist and Back to Africa Movements 1890 1910 New Haven Yale University Press 1969 P J Staudenraus The African Colonization Movement 1816 1865 New York Columbia University Press 1961 Amos J Beyan The American Colonization Society and the Creation of the Liberian State A Historical Perspective New York University Press of America 1991 Douglas R Egerton Its Origin Is Not a Little Curious A New Look at the American Colonization Society Journal of the Early Republic 5 no 4 1985 463 80 Yekutiel Gershoni Black Colonialism The Americo Liberian Scramble for the Hinterland Boulder Westview Press 1985 Eric Burin Slavery and the Peculiar Solution A History of the American Colonization Society Gainesville University of Florida Press 2005 Claude A Clegg The Price of Liberty African Americans and the Making of Liberia Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2004 Douglas R Egerton Averting a Crisis The Proslavery Critique of the American Colonization Society in Rebels Reformers amp Revolutionaries Collected Essays and Second Thoughts New York Routledge 2002 Sources Edit This article incorporates public domain material from the Library of Congress Retrieved April 28 2012 Barton Seth Remarks on the colonization of the western coast of Africa Cornell University Library 1850 Boley G E Saigbe Liberia The Rise and Fall of the First Republic Macmillan Publishers London 1983 Burin Eric Slavery and the Peculiar Solution A History of the American Colonization Society University Press of Florida 2005 Cassell Dr C Abayomi Liberia History of the First African Republic Fountainhead Publishers Inc New York 1970 Egerton Douglas R Charles Fenton Mercer and the Trial of National Conservatism University Press of Mississippi 1989 Finley Rev Robert Thoughts on the Colonization of Free Blacks Archived March 4 2020 at the Wayback Machine Washington D C 1816 Rev Finley s founding document Jenkins David Black Zion The Return of Afro Americans and West Indians to Africa Wildwood House London 1975 Johnson Charles S Bitter Canaan The Story of the Negro Republic Transaction Books New Brunswick NJ 1987 Liebenow J Gus Liberia The Evolution of Privilege Cornell University Press Ithaca NY 1969 Miller Floyd J The Search for a Black Nationality Black Emigration and Colonization 1787 1863 University of Illinois Press Urbana Illinois 1975 Newman Richard S Freedom s prophet NYU Press New York 2008 Oubre Claude F Forty Acres and a Mule The Freedmen s Bureau and Black Land Ownership Louisiana State University Press 1978 Power Green Ousmane Against Wind and Tide The African American Struggle against the Colonization Movement New York University Press 2014 Thomas Lamont D Paul Cuffe Black Entrepreneur and Pan Africanist Urbana and Chicago University of Illinois Press 1988 Tomek Beverly C Colonization and Its Discontents Emancipation Emigration and Antislavery in Antebellum Pennsylvania New York New York University Press 2011 West Richard Back to Africa Holt Rinehart and Winston Inc New York 1970 Yarema Allan E American Colonization Society an avenue to freedom University Press of America 2006 Further reading Edit American Colonization Society Newcastle Weekly Courant Newcastle upon Tyne England Reprinted from the Anti Slavery Reporter December 15 1832 p 1 via newspapers com a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint others link Emancipation Vermont Chronicle Bellows Falls Vermont March 22 1833 p 2 via newspapers com Clarkson Thomas 1833 British opinions of the American Colonization Society Printed by Garrison amp Knapp at the office of The Liberator Clericus pseud of George Smith 1833 Facts designed to exhibit the real character and tendency of the American Colonization Society Liverpool England Egerton Smith amp Co Falola Toyin and Raphael Chijioke Njoku President James Monroe and the Colonization Society From Monrovia to Liberia in United States and Africa Relations 1400s to the Present Yale University Press 2020 pp 84 104 Smith Gerrit 1835 Mr Gerrit Smith on Colonization African Repository Vol 40 pp 65 76 105 119 Primary sources Edit Birney James Gillespie 1838 Letter on colonization addressed to the Rev Thornton J Mills corresponding secretary of the Kentucky Colonization Society First published in 1834 New York American Anti Slavery Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Colonization Society amp oldid 1130650072, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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