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Back-to-Africa movement

The back-to-Africa movement was a political movement in the 19th and 20th centuries advocating for a return of the descendants of African American slaves to the African continent. The movement originated from a widespread belief among some European Americans in the 18th and 19th century United States that African Americans would want to return to the continent of Africa.[citation needed] In general, the political movement was an overwhelming failure; very few former slaves wanted to move to Africa. The small number of freed slaves who did settle in Africa—some under duress—initially faced brutal conditions, due to diseases to which they no longer had biological resistance.[1] As the failure became known in the United States in the 1820s, it spawned and energized the radical abolitionist movement. In the 20th century, the Jamaican political activist and black nationalist Marcus Garvey, members of the Rastafari movement, and other African Americans supported the concept, but few actually left the United States.

Back-to-Africa movement
Departure of African Americans to Liberia, 1896
LocationAtlantic world
ParticipantsColonization societies
OutcomeCreation and settlement of Sierra Leone and Liberia

In the late 18th century, thousands of Black Loyalists joined British military forces during the American Revolutionary War.[2] In 1787, the British Crown founded a settlement in Sierra Leone in what was called the "Province of Freedom", beginning a long process of settlement of formerly enslaved African Americans in Sierra Leone. During these same years, some African Americans launched their own initiatives to return to Africa, and by 1811, Paul Cuffee, a wealthy New England African-American/Native-American shipper, had transported some members of the group known as the "Free African Society" to Liberia. During these years, some free African Americans also relocated to Haiti, where a slave revolution had effected a free black state by 1800.[3] On 18 November 1803, Haiti became the first nation ever to successfully gain independence through a slave revolt. In the following years, Liberia was founded by free Africans from the United States. The emigration of African Americans both free and recently emancipated was funded and organized by the American Colonization Society (ACS), which hoped that slavery could be ended as an institution, without releasing millions of former slaves into American society.[1] The mortality rate of these settlers was high.[4][5] Of the 4,571 emigrants who arrived in Liberia between 1820 and 1843, only 1,819 survived.[6][7]

Background edit

The question of where free black people of American birth should reside was not much discussed by white writers, and by some black thinkers, in the 18th century: "At the time of the American Revolution, there had been few free blacks anywhere in the country."[8]: 19  In 1776, slavery was legal everywhere in the Thirteen Colonies that became the United States through the American Revolutionary War. There were a small number of free black people. Pressures for ending slavery began small but steadily increased. Various philosophical and religious condemnations of slavery, especially by Quakers, were published. Slavery became illegal in England in 1772 by court decision (see Somerset v Stewart), and in the British Empire by statute in 1833. In France, slavery was illegal at least since the 16th century. As part of the French Revolution, it was abolished in French colonies in 1794, although it was restored from 1802 to 1848. Starting in 1791, the enslaved of Saint-Domingue revolted, gaining their freedom, and establishing the free black country of Haiti. Starting with Pennsylvania and Massachusetts in 1780, slavery was gradually abolished in all the Northern states, although this did not mean that existing slaves were always freed. Vermont, which at the time was not part of the United States, abolished adult slavery in its foundational document, of 1777. In the 1840 census, there were still hundreds of slaves in the North and millions more in the South. By the 1850 census, there weren't any slaves in the free states. In the South, sometimes influenced by appeals from preachers—abolitionism in the United States had a strong religious component—some individuals freed their slaves or left instructions in their will, to free them upon the owner's death.

The number of free black people in the new United States skyrocketed and the question of "what to do with them" steadily grew in importance. Even when free, nowhere in the United States did they have the same rights as white people. They were not citizens, as the Dred Scott decision made clear. Usually seen as racially inferior, few whites believed them a desirable or even possible part of American society. They were prohibited from living in some areas and there was much completely legal discrimination. Black passengers on river boats were not allowed in the cabin but had to stay on deck, whatever the weather. In Florida, each free black man had to have a white man who could be sued for the Negro's misdeeds, if any, since black people could neither sue nor be sued. The Quaker Zephaniah Kingsley, who believed that the amalgamation of the races was desirable, was forced to leave Florida for Haiti. In the South, until it was forbidden, free black people learned to read and write, and often came into contact with the widely circulated abolitionist writings. The slave owners who controlled the Southern states saw these free black people as a threat to the stability of the economy and society, and made no secret of their desire to be rid of them.

The emergence of the back-to-Africa movement edit

Much of the African-American population was freed people seeking opportunity. Many Southern freed blacks migrated to the industrial North to seek employment, while others moved to surrounding Southern states.[9] No one anywhere wanted them; they were seen as perpetual foreigners who, by working for less, took jobs from citizens. Whites were not used to sharing space with blacks in a context outside of chattel slavery. Many did not believe that free blacks had a place in America.[10]

In the North, many whites believed that blacks could not achieve equality in the United States and therefore pushed for their emigration to Africa,[11] even though most had been born in the U.S. and had never seen Africa.

Such sentiment was not exclusive to Northerners. One proponent of the colonization movement, Solomon Parker of Hampshire County, Virginia, was quoted as having said: "I am not willing that the Man or any of my Blacks shall ever be freed to remain in the United States.... Am opposed to slavery and also opposed to freeing blacks to stay in our Country and do sincerely hope that the time is approaching when our Land shall be rid of them."[12]

Riots swept the free states in waves, usually in urban areas where there had been recent immigration of blacks from the South. The height of these riots was in 1819, with 25 riots recorded, resulting in many injuries and fatalities,[13] although riots continued up through the 1830s (see anti-abolitionism in the North). The back-to-Africa movement was seen as the solution to these problems by both groups, with more support from the white population than the black population. Blacks often viewed the project with skepticism, particularly among the middle-class, who feared that the Colonization movement was a ploy to deport freed African Americans to restrict their efforts against slavery. Shortly after the foundation of the American Colonization Society, 3,000 free blacks gathered in a church in Philadelphia and issued forth a declaration stating that they "will never separate ourselves voluntarily from the slave population of the country."[14]: 261  Similarly, black leaders, such as James Forten, who had previously supported the Colonization Movement, changed their minds as a result of widespread black resistance to the idea.[15]

Religious motivations for colonization edit

Following the Great Awakening, in which America was swept by a wave of religious fervor, many enslaved African Americans converted to Christianity. At the same time, many religious people in America struggled to reconcile slavery with their beliefs. Quakers in particular found difficulty in continued support for the enslavement of their brothers in Christ.[15] For example, Reverend Moses Tichnell and Reverend Samuel R. Houston freed slaves and sent them to Liberia in 1855 and 1856 respectively.[12] These two men, believing that they were morally obligated to finance such voyages, played an important role in the colonization movement.

American Colonization Society edit

The American Colonization Society (ACS) was an early advocate of the idea of resettling American-born blacks in Africa. Founded in 1816 by Dr. Robert Finley, it was composed of two core groups: abolitionists and slave owners. Abolitionist members believed in freeing African slaves, along with their descendants, and providing them with the opportunity to return to Africa. Slave owning members believed free blacks endangered the system of slavery and sought to expel them from America by means of migration.[16][self-published source?]

The American Colonization Society came under attack from American abolitionists, who insisted that the removal of freed slaves from the United States reinforced the institution of slavery.[17]

Since its inception, the American Colonization Society struggled to garner support from within free black communities. During the late 1840s and early 1850s, the creation of an independent Liberian state splintered the nearly uniform voice against colonization. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 provided the United States government ample power to recapture fugitive slaves. Following its passage, many black leaders promoted emigration and colonization to a nation that would provide and protect their rights.[18]

In spite of this, several black critics were outspoken against the back-to-Africa movement and the activities of the American Colonization Society. A report from a free black political conference in New York warned: "all kinds of chicanery and stratagem will be employed to allure the people [to the colony]...the independence of its inhabitants; the enjoyment and privileges of its citizens, will be pictured forth in glowing colors, to deceive you."[18]

According to the Encyclopedia of Georgia History and Culture, "as early as 1820, black Americans had begun to return to their ancestral homeland through the auspices of the American Colonization Society." By 1847, the American Colonization Society founded Liberia, a land to be settled by black people returning from the United States of America.[19] Between 1822 and the American Civil War, the American Colonization Society had migrated approximately 15,000 free blacks back to Africa.[20]

Notable members of the American Colonization Society included Thomas Buchanan, Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, Abraham Lincoln, James Madison, Daniel Webster, John Marshall, and Francis Scott Key.[21]

Other pre-Civil War attempts edit

In 1811, Paul Cuffe, "a black man who was a wealthy man of property, a petitioner for equal rights for blacks",[22] began to explore the idea of Black people returning to their native land; convinced that "opportunities for the advancement of black people were limited in America, and he became interested in African colonization."[23] With the help of Quakers in Philadelphia, he was able to transport 38 blacks to Freetown, Sierra Leone in 1815.[24]

Martin Delany, an African American, in 1854 led the National Emigration Convention in Cleveland, Ohio.[25] He visited Liberia and made plans, largely unrealized, to assist Blacks in relocating there.

Post-Emancipation edit

The back-to-Africa movement eventually began to decline but would see a revival again in 1877 at the end of the Reconstruction era, as many blacks in the South faced violence from groups such as the Ku Klux Klan.[26] Interest among the South's black population in African emigration peaked during the 1890s, a time when racism reached its peak and the greatest number of lynchings in American history took place.[27] The continued experience of segregation, discrimination, and the belief that they would never achieve true equality attracted many blacks to a Pan-African emancipation in their motherland.

The movement declined again following many hoaxes and fraudulent activities associated with the movement. According to Crumrin, however, the most important reason for the decline in the back-to-Africa movement was that the "vast majority of those who were meant to colonize did not wish to leave. Most free blacks simply did not want to go "home" to a place from which they were generations removed. America, not Africa, was their home, and they had little desire to migrate to a strange and forbidding land not their own."[28] They often said that they were no more African than white Americans were British.

Florida Governor Napoleon Bonaparte Broward (1905–1909) called for blacks to be permanently moved to land the federal government would purchase, either foreign or domestic. After buying their respective properties, a territory would be established in which blacks could not leave, and whites could not enter.

Early 20th century attempts at resettlement were made, such as those by Chief Alfred Sam between 1913 and 1915.[29] The eventual disillusionment of those who migrated to the North and the frustrations of struggling to cope with urban life set the scene for the back-to-Africa movement of the 1920s, established by Marcus Garvey.[30] Garvey contemporaneously served as a major inspiration for a number of 1920s activists and preachers, such as James E. Lewis, whose Los Angeles congregation help to finance the construction of a passenger ship.[31] Many of those who migrated to the Northern States from the South found that, although they were financially better off, they remained at the bottom both economically and socially.[32] Garvey supported a proposal by Torrey George McCallum that passed the Mississippi State Senate in 1922, though it was widely rejected and ridiculed by the Black press.[33]

The movement picked up steam once again in the decade or so preceding the Second World War. Activists in the Peace Movement of Ethiopia organisation were committed to black emigration to West Africa in order to escape from the torrid social conditions which they were experiencing in the United States due to the Depression.[34] They harboured an almost utopian vision of Liberia, created from a simultaneous vision of Pan-Africanism and a belief that the Americanisation they would provide would heal Liberia's social and economic troubles.[35] This reflects the imperialist assumption of the PME and other back-to-Africa proponents that African-Americans had the right to return to and determine Africa's future.[36] Others were unaware or ignored that Liberia had been crippled by the Depression and instead viewed it as prosperous. Mittie Maude Lena Gordon, the founder of the PME, was essential to this campaign as she acquired the support of Earnest Sevier Cox, a white nationalist from Richmond, Virginia. She convinced him to support their cause by using her gender in order to appear submissive and thus appeal to Cox's masculinity, as well as by playing on their mutual goal of racial separatism. Cox provided influential connections that the movement had previously lacked, and he gave the issue of black emigration political exposure when he managed to convince members of the Virginia General Assembly to recommend the US Congress provide financial aid for this in 1936. Despite Cox's racial beliefs, the PME retained support amongst black communities because Gordon described him as a necessary, Moses-like figure.[35]

His support soon began to diminish so Gordon looked elsewhere, once again finding an unlikely ally on the opposite side of the moral compass in Senator Theodore G. Bilbo. An ardent white nationalist, Bilbo had been campaigning for racial separatism within the government for a while. He proposed an amendment to the House Joint Resolution 679—a work relief bill—in 1938, that would have "repatriated" African-American volunteers to Liberia, providing them with financial assistance. This amendment was endorsed by Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association at the Eight International UNIA convention.[34] This amendment provided the precedent for the movement to progress; Bilbo had the political capital which he needed in order to get the issue of black repatriation into wide-scale political debate. This issue continued to exist, and in early 1939, Bilbo began to draft what came to be known as the Greater Liberia Bill. The bill suggested that the United States should purchase 400,000 square miles of African land from England and France, it should credit them as war debts, and it should provide financial assistance to black Americans in order to encourage them to relocate to Africa.[35] It is unclear who, if anyone, the PME sent to Liberia in order to facilitate the emigration which this bill would have encouraged.[37]

Outside the black nationalist movement, the bill did not garner much support, with leading civil rights groups such as the NAACP refusing to endorse it and the national press lambasting it. Other African Americans did not support emigration to Liberia due to charges of slavery and political corruption which were filed against its government by the League of Nations. Additionally, the bill received very little support from the Senate, thus, the idea of black repatriation lost much of its traction. US participation in the Second World War led to a decline in public racism, which made any passing of the bill unlikely after that.[35][38]

The Back-to-Africa movement returned to national prominence in the 1960s, due to the racial unrest which occurred during the Civil Rights Movement. George Lincoln Rockwell, the founder of the American Nazi Party, viewed black people as a "primitive, lethargic race who desired only simple pleasures and a life of irresponsibility." Like Bilbo, Rockwell was a white nationalist who supported the resettlement of all African Americans in a new African state to be funded by the U.S. government. Rockwell attempted to draw attention to his cause by starting a small record label named Hatenanny Records. The name was based on the word hootenanny, a term given to folk music performances. The label released a 45 RPM single by a band called Odis Cochran and the Three Bigots with the songs "Ship Those Niggers Back" and "We Is Non-Violent Niggers", and a second single by a group called the Coon Hunters: "We Don't Want No Niggers For Neighbors" backed with "Who Needs A Nigger?". They were sold mostly through mail order and at party rallies.[39]

Rockwell got along well with many leaders of the black nationalist movement, such as Elijah Muhammad (Nation of Islam leader) and Malcolm X, who later changed his views and opposed the N.O.I's black separatism, since they shared his racial separatist views.[40] In January 1962, Rockwell wrote to his followers that Elijah Muhammad "has gathered millions of the dirty, immoral, drunken, filthy-mouthed, lazy and repulsive people sneeringly called 'niggers' and inspired them to the point where they are clean, sober, honest, hard working, dignified, dedicated and admirable human beings in spite of their color...Muhammad knows that mixing is a Jewish fraud and leads only to aggravation of the problems that it is supposed to solve...I have talked to the Muslim leaders and am certain that a workable plan for separation of the races could be effected to the satisfaction of all concerned—except the communist-Jew agitators."[41] He also said of the N.O.I, "I am fully in concert with their program, and I have the highest respect for Elijah Muhammad." Rockwell referred to Elijah Muhammad as "The Black People's Hitler" [failed verification] and donated $20 (~$204.00 in 2023) to the Nation of Islam at their "Freedom Rally" event on June 25, 1961, at Uline Arena in Washington, where he and 10–20 of his "stormtroopers" attended a speech given by Malcolm X.[42] Rockwell was a guest speaker at a N.O.I event in the International Amphitheater in Chicago hosted by Elijah Mohammed and Malcolm X on February 25, 1962.[43][44]

Repatriation to Africa edit

Ex-slave repatriation or the emigration of African-American, Caribbean, and Black British former slaves to Africa occurred mainly during the late 18th century to mid-19th century. In the cases of Sierra Leone and Liberia, both were established by former slaves who were repatriated to Africa within a 28-year period.

Sierra Leone edit

 
The Province of Freedom from Voyages to the River Sierra Leone by John Matthews, 1788

Many freed slaves were discontent with where they were resettled in Canada after the Revolutionary War and were eager to return to their homeland. Beginning in 1787, the British government made their first attempt to settle people in Sierra Leone. About 300 Black Britons, known as the Black Poor of London, were settled on the Sierra Leonean peninsula in West Africa. Within two years, most members of the settlement would die from disease or conflict with the local Temne people. In 1792, a second attempt at settlement was made when 1,100 freed slaves established Freetown with support from British abolitionist Thomas Clarkson. Their numbers were further bolstered when over 500 Jamaican Maroons were transported first to Nova Scotia, and then to Sierra Leone in 1800.[45]

In 1815, Paul Cuffe brought the first group of thirty-eight emigrant freed slaves from the United States to Sierra Leone. In 1820, minister Daniel Coker led a group of ninety free blacks in hopes of founding a new colony in Sierra Leone. He intended to proselytize Christianity among the Africans. Leaving New York on the ship Elizabeth, his voyage ended on an island off the coast of Sierra Leone. Arriving just before the rains of spring, the group of immigrants were soon stricken with fever. The survivors ultimately fled to Freetown, and the settlement disintegrated.[46]

The repatriation of slaves to Africa from the United Kingdom and its dependencies was initiated by the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor. This organization was later succeeded by the Sierra Leone Company. In time, African American Black Loyalists and West Indians would immigrate to the colony of Freetown, Sierra Leone, in smaller numbers in efforts led by black merchants or beneficiaries such as Paul Cuffe.[47]

The Sierra Leone Creole people are descendants of the Black Poor, freed African-American, Jamaican Maroon and Liberated African slaves who settled in the Western Area of Sierra Leone between 1787 and about 1885. The colony was established by the British, supported by abolitionists, under the Sierra Leone Company as a place for freedmen. The settlers called their new settlement Freetown.[48][49][50]

Liberia edit

 
African Americans depart for Liberia, 1896

The history of Liberia (after European arrival) is, with Sierra Leone, unique in Africa; starting neither as a native state, nor as a European colony. With the departure of the first ship to Africa in 1820, the American Colonization Society established settlements for free American blacks on the coast of West Africa.[51] The first American ships were uncertain of where they were heading. Their plan was to follow the paths that the British had taken, or simply take a chance on where they would land. At first, they followed the previous routes of the British and reached the coast of Sierra Leone. After leaving Sierra Leone, the Americans slowly reached a more southern part of the African coastline.

The Americans were eventually successful at finding a suitable spot to establish their colonies, arriving at what the British had named the Pepper Coast. (The name of this region referred to the type of ginger spice used for medicine flavoring, Grains of paradise.) Along the Pepper Coast, local African groups were variably forced or convinced to give the Americans tracts of land; most probably assumed they were providing short term land leases based on ancestral patterns of landlord-stranger relationships.[52] Over the course of twenty years, a series of fragmented settlements sprung across Liberia's coast, which had been inhabited by indigenous people since at least the 16th century. Along with the difficulty of gaining enough land, life proved hard for these early settlers. Disease was widespread, along with the lack of food. Almost 50% of the new settlers died in the first twenty years after their arrival in Liberia.[53]

Liberia declared independence on 26 July 1847.[54]: 5  With an elected black government and the offer of free land to African-American settlers, Liberia became the most common destination of emigrating African Americans during the 19th century.[54]: 2 [55] Newly arriving African Americans to Liberia experienced many challenges, including broken family ties, very high mortality rates from disease, and a difficult adjustment period. A group of 43 African Americans from Christiansburg, Virginia, left for Liberia in 1830, but suffered high mortality. "Eighty percent of the emigrants were dead within ten years of landing there, most of them victims of malaria; another ten percent quit the colony, with the majority fleeing to Sierra Leone."[56] Many African Americans who survived this period of adjustment in Liberia became fond of the country.[57]

Black interest in Liberian emigration emerged when the Civil War promised the end of slavery and meaningful change to the status of Black Americans. Some 7,000 enslaved people were freed by their masters, so at that point those free African Americans left the U.S. to escape racism and have more opportunities (mainly because they had lost all hope of achievement). In the 1830s, the movement became increasingly dominated by Southern slave owners, who did not want free blacks and saw sending them to Liberia as a solution. Slaves freed from slave ships were sent there instead of their countries of origin. The emigration of free blacks to Liberia particularly increased after Nat Turner's Rebellion of 1831. Middle-class blacks were more resolved to live as black Americans; many rural poor folks gave up on the United States and looked to Liberia to construct a better life. Liberia promised freedom and equality; it also represented a chance for a better life for the South's black farmers. The Liberian government offered 25 acres of free land for each immigrant family, and 10 acres for a single adult, who came to the Black republic. In the early 19th century, Liberia evoked mixed images in the minds of black Americans. They viewed Liberia as a destination for black families who left the United States in search of a better way of life, returning to their ancestral homeland of Africa.[54]: 2–9 

As noted by researcher Washington Hyde, "Black Americans—who in the time of slavery lost their original languages and much of their original culture, gained a distinctly American, English-speaking Christian identity, and had no clear idea of precisely where in the wide continent of Africa their ancestors had come from—were perceived by the natives of Liberia as foreign settlers. Having an African ancestry and a black skin color were definitely not enough. Indeed, their settlement in Liberia had much in common with the contemporary white settlement of the American Frontier and these settlers' struggle with Native American tribes.... The Liberian experience can also be considered as anticipating that of Zionism and Israel—with Jews similarly seeking redemption through a return to an ancestral land and similarly being regarded as foreign interlopers by the local Arab tribes. It would take Americo-Liberians a century and more to become truly accepted as one of Liberia's ethnic groups.... All of which certainly contributed to most Black Americans rejecting the Back-to-Africa option and opting instead for seeking equal rights in America."[58]

Notable emigrants from the United States to Africa edit

See also edit

Citations edit

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  42. ^ McPheeters, Sam (April 16, 2015). "When Malcolm X Met the Nazis". Vice.
  43. ^ "Magnum Photos Home". pro.magnumphotos.com.
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on July 27, 2020. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  45. ^ Sivapragasam, Michael (June 2018). After the treaties: a social, economic and demographic history of Maroon society in Jamaica, 1739-1842 (Thesis). University of Southampton. pp. 136–154.
  46. ^ "Jan. 15, 1817: The Vote on Colonization of Free Blacks in West Africa". Zinn Education Project. Retrieved May 23, 2022.
  47. ^ Sims-Alvarado, Falechiondro (June 20, 2011). The African-American Emigration Movement in Georgia during Reconstruction. History Dissertations (Thesis). doi:10.57709/2375334.
  48. ^ a b Walker, James W (1992). "Chapter Five: Foundation of Sierra Leone". The Black Loyalists: The Search for a Promised Land in Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone, 1783–1870. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 94–114. ISBN 978-0-8020-7402-7., originally published by Longman & Dalhousie University Press (1976).
  49. ^ Taylor, Bankole Kamara (February 2014). Sierra Leone: The Land, Its People and History. New Africa Press. p. 68. ISBN 9789987160389.
  50. ^ Hargreaves, J.; Porter, A. (1963). "The Sierra Leone Creoles - Creoledom: A Study of the Development of Freetown Society". The Journal of African History. 4 (3, 0000539): 468–469. doi:10.1017/S0021853700004394. S2CID 162611104.
  51. ^ Hodge, Carl Cavanagh; Nolan, Cathal J. (2007). US Presidents and Foreign Policy. ABC-CLIO. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-85109-790-6. Retrieved February 5, 2013.
  52. ^ Brooks, George. Landlords And Strangers: Ecology, Society, And Trade In Western Africa, 1000-1630. Routledge, 1993.
  53. ^ Butcher, Tim (October 2010). "Our Man In Liberia". History Today. 60 (10): 10–17.
  54. ^ a b c Barnes, Kenneth C., Journey of Hope: The Back-to-Africa Movement in Arkansas in the Late 1800s (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2004).
  55. ^ James Campbell, Middle Passage: African American Journeys to Africa, 1787–2005. (New York: Penguin Press, 2006), xxiii.
  56. ^ Burin, Eric (2006). "A Manumission in the Mountains: Slavery and the African Colonization Movement in Southwestern Virginia". Appalachian Journal. 33 (2): 164–186. JSTOR 40934746. EBSCOhost 20771383.
  57. ^ Rommel-Ruiz, Bryan (2007). "Sister Societies: Women's Antislavery Organizations in Antebellum America, and: Slavery and the Peculiar Solution: A History of the American Colonization Society (review)". Journal of the Early Republic. 27 (1): 184–188. doi:10.1353/jer.2007.0013. S2CID 145618874.
  58. ^ Dr. Washington Hyde, The Tortuous Route of Black American History, Ch. 3, 5.[full citation needed]
  59. ^ Pybus, C. (2007). Epic Journeys of Freedom: Runaway Slaves of the American Revolution and Their Global Quest for Liberty. Beacon Press. ISBN 9780807055151.
  60. ^ "Mary Perth 1740- after 1813". Slavery and Remembrance. The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  61. ^ Leach, Fiona (2019). Reclaiming the Women of Britain's First Mission to West Africa: Three Lives. Brill. p. 239. ISBN 9789004387447.

General bibliography edit

  • Barnes, Kenneth C. Journey of Hope: The Back-to-Africa Movement in Arkansas in the Late 1800s. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2004.
  • Brooks, George. Landlords and Strangers: Ecology, Society, And Trade In Western Africa, 1000-1630. Routledge, 1993.
  • Campbell, James. Middle Passage: African American Journeys to Africa, 1787–2005. New York: Penguin Press, 2006.
  • Clegg, Claude A. III. The Price of Liberty: African Americans and the Making of Liberia. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2004.
  • Jenkins, David (1975). Black Zion: The Return of Afro-Americans and West Indians to Africa. Wildwood House. ISBN 978-0-7045-0116-4.
  • Page, Sebastian N. Black Resettlement and the American Civil War. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2021.
  • Weisbord, Robert G. Ebony Kinship: Africa, Africans, and the Afro-American. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1973.

External links edit

  • Palmer, Barbara (March 1, 2006). "Historian situates 'back-to-Africa' movements in broad context". Stanford University.
  • . Archived from the original on February 2, 2007.
  • "African American Nation Radio Online Radio by AA Nation1". BlogTalkRadio. June 25, 2010.
  • "Reclaiming the Middle Passage: African-American Actor Isaiah Washington becomes first to use DNA Testing to gain Citizenship to an African Nation (Sierra Leone)". SwitSalone. April 26, 2010.
  • "Hatenanny Records The Record Label of the American Nazi Party".

back, africa, movement, back, africa, movement, political, movement, 19th, 20th, centuries, advocating, return, descendants, african, american, slaves, african, continent, movement, originated, from, widespread, belief, among, some, european, americans, 18th, . The back to Africa movement was a political movement in the 19th and 20th centuries advocating for a return of the descendants of African American slaves to the African continent The movement originated from a widespread belief among some European Americans in the 18th and 19th century United States that African Americans would want to return to the continent of Africa citation needed In general the political movement was an overwhelming failure very few former slaves wanted to move to Africa The small number of freed slaves who did settle in Africa some under duress initially faced brutal conditions due to diseases to which they no longer had biological resistance 1 As the failure became known in the United States in the 1820s it spawned and energized the radical abolitionist movement In the 20th century the Jamaican political activist and black nationalist Marcus Garvey members of the Rastafari movement and other African Americans supported the concept but few actually left the United States Back to Africa movementDeparture of African Americans to Liberia 1896LocationAtlantic worldParticipantsColonization societiesSierra Leone CompanyAmerican Colonization SocietyOutcomeCreation and settlement of Sierra Leone and Liberia In the late 18th century thousands of Black Loyalists joined British military forces during the American Revolutionary War 2 In 1787 the British Crown founded a settlement in Sierra Leone in what was called the Province of Freedom beginning a long process of settlement of formerly enslaved African Americans in Sierra Leone During these same years some African Americans launched their own initiatives to return to Africa and by 1811 Paul Cuffee a wealthy New England African American Native American shipper had transported some members of the group known as the Free African Society to Liberia During these years some free African Americans also relocated to Haiti where a slave revolution had effected a free black state by 1800 3 On 18 November 1803 Haiti became the first nation ever to successfully gain independence through a slave revolt In the following years Liberia was founded by free Africans from the United States The emigration of African Americans both free and recently emancipated was funded and organized by the American Colonization Society ACS which hoped that slavery could be ended as an institution without releasing millions of former slaves into American society 1 The mortality rate of these settlers was high 4 5 Of the 4 571 emigrants who arrived in Liberia between 1820 and 1843 only 1 819 survived 6 7 Contents 1 Background 2 The emergence of the back to Africa movement 2 1 Religious motivations for colonization 2 2 American Colonization Society 2 3 Other pre Civil War attempts 2 4 Post Emancipation 3 Repatriation to Africa 3 1 Sierra Leone 3 2 Liberia 4 Notable emigrants from the United States to Africa 5 See also 6 Citations 7 General bibliography 8 External linksBackground editThe question of where free black people of American birth should reside was not much discussed by white writers and by some black thinkers in the 18th century At the time of the American Revolution there had been few free blacks anywhere in the country 8 19 In 1776 slavery was legal everywhere in the Thirteen Colonies that became the United States through the American Revolutionary War There were a small number of free black people Pressures for ending slavery began small but steadily increased Various philosophical and religious condemnations of slavery especially by Quakers were published Slavery became illegal in England in 1772 by court decision see Somerset v Stewart and in the British Empire by statute in 1833 In France slavery was illegal at least since the 16th century As part of the French Revolution it was abolished in French colonies in 1794 although it was restored from 1802 to 1848 Starting in 1791 the enslaved of Saint Domingue revolted gaining their freedom and establishing the free black country of Haiti Starting with Pennsylvania and Massachusetts in 1780 slavery was gradually abolished in all the Northern states although this did not mean that existing slaves were always freed Vermont which at the time was not part of the United States abolished adult slavery in its foundational document of 1777 In the 1840 census there were still hundreds of slaves in the North and millions more in the South By the 1850 census there weren t any slaves in the free states In the South sometimes influenced by appeals from preachers abolitionism in the United States had a strong religious component some individuals freed their slaves or left instructions in their will to free them upon the owner s death The number of free black people in the new United States skyrocketed and the question of what to do with them steadily grew in importance Even when free nowhere in the United States did they have the same rights as white people They were not citizens as the Dred Scott decision made clear Usually seen as racially inferior few whites believed them a desirable or even possible part of American society They were prohibited from living in some areas and there was much completely legal discrimination Black passengers on river boats were not allowed in the cabin but had to stay on deck whatever the weather In Florida each free black man had to have a white man who could be sued for the Negro s misdeeds if any since black people could neither sue nor be sued The Quaker Zephaniah Kingsley who believed that the amalgamation of the races was desirable was forced to leave Florida for Haiti In the South until it was forbidden free black people learned to read and write and often came into contact with the widely circulated abolitionist writings The slave owners who controlled the Southern states saw these free black people as a threat to the stability of the economy and society and made no secret of their desire to be rid of them The emergence of the back to Africa movement editMuch of the African American population was freed people seeking opportunity Many Southern freed blacks migrated to the industrial North to seek employment while others moved to surrounding Southern states 9 No one anywhere wanted them they were seen as perpetual foreigners who by working for less took jobs from citizens Whites were not used to sharing space with blacks in a context outside of chattel slavery Many did not believe that free blacks had a place in America 10 In the North many whites believed that blacks could not achieve equality in the United States and therefore pushed for their emigration to Africa 11 even though most had been born in the U S and had never seen Africa Such sentiment was not exclusive to Northerners One proponent of the colonization movement Solomon Parker of Hampshire County Virginia was quoted as having said I am not willing that the Man or any of my Blacks shall ever be freed to remain in the United States Am opposed to slavery and also opposed to freeing blacks to stay in our Country and do sincerely hope that the time is approaching when our Land shall be rid of them 12 Riots swept the free states in waves usually in urban areas where there had been recent immigration of blacks from the South The height of these riots was in 1819 with 25 riots recorded resulting in many injuries and fatalities 13 although riots continued up through the 1830s see anti abolitionism in the North The back to Africa movement was seen as the solution to these problems by both groups with more support from the white population than the black population Blacks often viewed the project with skepticism particularly among the middle class who feared that the Colonization movement was a ploy to deport freed African Americans to restrict their efforts against slavery Shortly after the foundation of the American Colonization Society 3 000 free blacks gathered in a church in Philadelphia and issued forth a declaration stating that they will never separate ourselves voluntarily from the slave population of the country 14 261 Similarly black leaders such as James Forten who had previously supported the Colonization Movement changed their minds as a result of widespread black resistance to the idea 15 Religious motivations for colonization edit Following the Great Awakening in which America was swept by a wave of religious fervor many enslaved African Americans converted to Christianity At the same time many religious people in America struggled to reconcile slavery with their beliefs Quakers in particular found difficulty in continued support for the enslavement of their brothers in Christ 15 For example Reverend Moses Tichnell and Reverend Samuel R Houston freed slaves and sent them to Liberia in 1855 and 1856 respectively 12 These two men believing that they were morally obligated to finance such voyages played an important role in the colonization movement American Colonization Society edit Main article American Colonization Society The American Colonization Society ACS was an early advocate of the idea of resettling American born blacks in Africa Founded in 1816 by Dr Robert Finley it was composed of two core groups abolitionists and slave owners Abolitionist members believed in freeing African slaves along with their descendants and providing them with the opportunity to return to Africa Slave owning members believed free blacks endangered the system of slavery and sought to expel them from America by means of migration 16 self published source The American Colonization Society came under attack from American abolitionists who insisted that the removal of freed slaves from the United States reinforced the institution of slavery 17 Since its inception the American Colonization Society struggled to garner support from within free black communities During the late 1840s and early 1850s the creation of an independent Liberian state splintered the nearly uniform voice against colonization The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 provided the United States government ample power to recapture fugitive slaves Following its passage many black leaders promoted emigration and colonization to a nation that would provide and protect their rights 18 In spite of this several black critics were outspoken against the back to Africa movement and the activities of the American Colonization Society A report from a free black political conference in New York warned all kinds of chicanery and stratagem will be employed to allure the people to the colony the independence of its inhabitants the enjoyment and privileges of its citizens will be pictured forth in glowing colors to deceive you 18 According to the Encyclopedia of Georgia History and Culture as early as 1820 black Americans had begun to return to their ancestral homeland through the auspices of the American Colonization Society By 1847 the American Colonization Society founded Liberia a land to be settled by black people returning from the United States of America 19 Between 1822 and the American Civil War the American Colonization Society had migrated approximately 15 000 free blacks back to Africa 20 Notable members of the American Colonization Society included Thomas Buchanan Thomas Jefferson James Monroe Abraham Lincoln James Madison Daniel Webster John Marshall and Francis Scott Key 21 Other pre Civil War attempts edit In 1811 Paul Cuffe a black man who was a wealthy man of property a petitioner for equal rights for blacks 22 began to explore the idea of Black people returning to their native land convinced that opportunities for the advancement of black people were limited in America and he became interested in African colonization 23 With the help of Quakers in Philadelphia he was able to transport 38 blacks to Freetown Sierra Leone in 1815 24 Martin Delany an African American in 1854 led the National Emigration Convention in Cleveland Ohio 25 He visited Liberia and made plans largely unrealized to assist Blacks in relocating there Post Emancipation edit The back to Africa movement eventually began to decline but would see a revival again in 1877 at the end of the Reconstruction era as many blacks in the South faced violence from groups such as the Ku Klux Klan 26 Interest among the South s black population in African emigration peaked during the 1890s a time when racism reached its peak and the greatest number of lynchings in American history took place 27 The continued experience of segregation discrimination and the belief that they would never achieve true equality attracted many blacks to a Pan African emancipation in their motherland The movement declined again following many hoaxes and fraudulent activities associated with the movement According to Crumrin however the most important reason for the decline in the back to Africa movement was that the vast majority of those who were meant to colonize did not wish to leave Most free blacks simply did not want to go home to a place from which they were generations removed America not Africa was their home and they had little desire to migrate to a strange and forbidding land not their own 28 They often said that they were no more African than white Americans were British Florida Governor Napoleon Bonaparte Broward 1905 1909 called for blacks to be permanently moved to land the federal government would purchase either foreign or domestic After buying their respective properties a territory would be established in which blacks could not leave and whites could not enter Early 20th century attempts at resettlement were made such as those by Chief Alfred Sam between 1913 and 1915 29 The eventual disillusionment of those who migrated to the North and the frustrations of struggling to cope with urban life set the scene for the back to Africa movement of the 1920s established by Marcus Garvey 30 Garvey contemporaneously served as a major inspiration for a number of 1920s activists and preachers such as James E Lewis whose Los Angeles congregation help to finance the construction of a passenger ship 31 Many of those who migrated to the Northern States from the South found that although they were financially better off they remained at the bottom both economically and socially 32 Garvey supported a proposal by Torrey George McCallum that passed the Mississippi State Senate in 1922 though it was widely rejected and ridiculed by the Black press 33 The movement picked up steam once again in the decade or so preceding the Second World War Activists in the Peace Movement of Ethiopia organisation were committed to black emigration to West Africa in order to escape from the torrid social conditions which they were experiencing in the United States due to the Depression 34 They harboured an almost utopian vision of Liberia created from a simultaneous vision of Pan Africanism and a belief that the Americanisation they would provide would heal Liberia s social and economic troubles 35 This reflects the imperialist assumption of the PME and other back to Africa proponents that African Americans had the right to return to and determine Africa s future 36 Others were unaware or ignored that Liberia had been crippled by the Depression and instead viewed it as prosperous Mittie Maude Lena Gordon the founder of the PME was essential to this campaign as she acquired the support of Earnest Sevier Cox a white nationalist from Richmond Virginia She convinced him to support their cause by using her gender in order to appear submissive and thus appeal to Cox s masculinity as well as by playing on their mutual goal of racial separatism Cox provided influential connections that the movement had previously lacked and he gave the issue of black emigration political exposure when he managed to convince members of the Virginia General Assembly to recommend the US Congress provide financial aid for this in 1936 Despite Cox s racial beliefs the PME retained support amongst black communities because Gordon described him as a necessary Moses like figure 35 His support soon began to diminish so Gordon looked elsewhere once again finding an unlikely ally on the opposite side of the moral compass in Senator Theodore G Bilbo An ardent white nationalist Bilbo had been campaigning for racial separatism within the government for a while He proposed an amendment to the House Joint Resolution 679 a work relief bill in 1938 that would have repatriated African American volunteers to Liberia providing them with financial assistance This amendment was endorsed by Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association at the Eight International UNIA convention 34 This amendment provided the precedent for the movement to progress Bilbo had the political capital which he needed in order to get the issue of black repatriation into wide scale political debate This issue continued to exist and in early 1939 Bilbo began to draft what came to be known as the Greater Liberia Bill The bill suggested that the United States should purchase 400 000 square miles of African land from England and France it should credit them as war debts and it should provide financial assistance to black Americans in order to encourage them to relocate to Africa 35 It is unclear who if anyone the PME sent to Liberia in order to facilitate the emigration which this bill would have encouraged 37 Outside the black nationalist movement the bill did not garner much support with leading civil rights groups such as the NAACP refusing to endorse it and the national press lambasting it Other African Americans did not support emigration to Liberia due to charges of slavery and political corruption which were filed against its government by the League of Nations Additionally the bill received very little support from the Senate thus the idea of black repatriation lost much of its traction US participation in the Second World War led to a decline in public racism which made any passing of the bill unlikely after that 35 38 The Back to Africa movement returned to national prominence in the 1960s due to the racial unrest which occurred during the Civil Rights Movement George Lincoln Rockwell the founder of the American Nazi Party viewed black people as a primitive lethargic race who desired only simple pleasures and a life of irresponsibility Like Bilbo Rockwell was a white nationalist who supported the resettlement of all African Americans in a new African state to be funded by the U S government Rockwell attempted to draw attention to his cause by starting a small record label named Hatenanny Records The name was based on the word hootenanny a term given to folk music performances The label released a 45 RPM single by a band called Odis Cochran and the Three Bigots with the songs Ship Those Niggers Back and We Is Non Violent Niggers and a second single by a group called the Coon Hunters We Don t Want No Niggers For Neighbors backed with Who Needs A Nigger They were sold mostly through mail order and at party rallies 39 Rockwell got along well with many leaders of the black nationalist movement such as Elijah Muhammad Nation of Islam leader and Malcolm X who later changed his views and opposed the N O I s black separatism since they shared his racial separatist views 40 In January 1962 Rockwell wrote to his followers that Elijah Muhammad has gathered millions of the dirty immoral drunken filthy mouthed lazy and repulsive people sneeringly called niggers and inspired them to the point where they are clean sober honest hard working dignified dedicated and admirable human beings in spite of their color Muhammad knows that mixing is a Jewish fraud and leads only to aggravation of the problems that it is supposed to solve I have talked to the Muslim leaders and am certain that a workable plan for separation of the races could be effected to the satisfaction of all concerned except the communist Jew agitators 41 He also said of the N O I I am fully in concert with their program and I have the highest respect for Elijah Muhammad Rockwell referred to Elijah Muhammad as The Black People s Hitler failed verification and donated 20 204 00 in 2023 to the Nation of Islam at their Freedom Rally event on June 25 1961 at Uline Arena in Washington where he and 10 20 of his stormtroopers attended a speech given by Malcolm X 42 Rockwell was a guest speaker at a N O I event in the International Amphitheater in Chicago hosted by Elijah Mohammed and Malcolm X on February 25 1962 43 44 Repatriation to Africa editEx slave repatriation or the emigration of African American Caribbean and Black British former slaves to Africa occurred mainly during the late 18th century to mid 19th century In the cases of Sierra Leone and Liberia both were established by former slaves who were repatriated to Africa within a 28 year period Sierra Leone edit Main article History of Sierra Leone nbsp The Province of Freedom from Voyages to the River Sierra Leone by John Matthews 1788 Many freed slaves were discontent with where they were resettled in Canada after the Revolutionary War and were eager to return to their homeland Beginning in 1787 the British government made their first attempt to settle people in Sierra Leone About 300 Black Britons known as the Black Poor of London were settled on the Sierra Leonean peninsula in West Africa Within two years most members of the settlement would die from disease or conflict with the local Temne people In 1792 a second attempt at settlement was made when 1 100 freed slaves established Freetown with support from British abolitionist Thomas Clarkson Their numbers were further bolstered when over 500 Jamaican Maroons were transported first to Nova Scotia and then to Sierra Leone in 1800 45 In 1815 Paul Cuffe brought the first group of thirty eight emigrant freed slaves from the United States to Sierra Leone In 1820 minister Daniel Coker led a group of ninety free blacks in hopes of founding a new colony in Sierra Leone He intended to proselytize Christianity among the Africans Leaving New York on the ship Elizabeth his voyage ended on an island off the coast of Sierra Leone Arriving just before the rains of spring the group of immigrants were soon stricken with fever The survivors ultimately fled to Freetown and the settlement disintegrated 46 The repatriation of slaves to Africa from the United Kingdom and its dependencies was initiated by the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor This organization was later succeeded by the Sierra Leone Company In time African American Black Loyalists and West Indians would immigrate to the colony of Freetown Sierra Leone in smaller numbers in efforts led by black merchants or beneficiaries such as Paul Cuffe 47 The Sierra Leone Creole people are descendants of the Black Poor freed African American Jamaican Maroon and Liberated African slaves who settled in the Western Area of Sierra Leone between 1787 and about 1885 The colony was established by the British supported by abolitionists under the Sierra Leone Company as a place for freedmen The settlers called their new settlement Freetown 48 49 50 Liberia edit Main article History of Liberia nbsp African Americans depart for Liberia 1896 The history of Liberia after European arrival is with Sierra Leone unique in Africa starting neither as a native state nor as a European colony With the departure of the first ship to Africa in 1820 the American Colonization Society established settlements for free American blacks on the coast of West Africa 51 The first American ships were uncertain of where they were heading Their plan was to follow the paths that the British had taken or simply take a chance on where they would land At first they followed the previous routes of the British and reached the coast of Sierra Leone After leaving Sierra Leone the Americans slowly reached a more southern part of the African coastline The Americans were eventually successful at finding a suitable spot to establish their colonies arriving at what the British had named the Pepper Coast The name of this region referred to the type of ginger spice used for medicine flavoring Grains of paradise Along the Pepper Coast local African groups were variably forced or convinced to give the Americans tracts of land most probably assumed they were providing short term land leases based on ancestral patterns of landlord stranger relationships 52 Over the course of twenty years a series of fragmented settlements sprung across Liberia s coast which had been inhabited by indigenous people since at least the 16th century Along with the difficulty of gaining enough land life proved hard for these early settlers Disease was widespread along with the lack of food Almost 50 of the new settlers died in the first twenty years after their arrival in Liberia 53 Liberia declared independence on 26 July 1847 54 5 With an elected black government and the offer of free land to African American settlers Liberia became the most common destination of emigrating African Americans during the 19th century 54 2 55 Newly arriving African Americans to Liberia experienced many challenges including broken family ties very high mortality rates from disease and a difficult adjustment period A group of 43 African Americans from Christiansburg Virginia left for Liberia in 1830 but suffered high mortality Eighty percent of the emigrants were dead within ten years of landing there most of them victims of malaria another ten percent quit the colony with the majority fleeing to Sierra Leone 56 Many African Americans who survived this period of adjustment in Liberia became fond of the country 57 Black interest in Liberian emigration emerged when the Civil War promised the end of slavery and meaningful change to the status of Black Americans Some 7 000 enslaved people were freed by their masters so at that point those free African Americans left the U S to escape racism and have more opportunities mainly because they had lost all hope of achievement In the 1830s the movement became increasingly dominated by Southern slave owners who did not want free blacks and saw sending them to Liberia as a solution Slaves freed from slave ships were sent there instead of their countries of origin The emigration of free blacks to Liberia particularly increased after Nat Turner s Rebellion of 1831 Middle class blacks were more resolved to live as black Americans many rural poor folks gave up on the United States and looked to Liberia to construct a better life Liberia promised freedom and equality it also represented a chance for a better life for the South s black farmers The Liberian government offered 25 acres of free land for each immigrant family and 10 acres for a single adult who came to the Black republic In the early 19th century Liberia evoked mixed images in the minds of black Americans They viewed Liberia as a destination for black families who left the United States in search of a better way of life returning to their ancestral homeland of Africa 54 2 9 As noted by researcher Washington Hyde Black Americans who in the time of slavery lost their original languages and much of their original culture gained a distinctly American English speaking Christian identity and had no clear idea of precisely where in the wide continent of Africa their ancestors had come from were perceived by the natives of Liberia as foreign settlers Having an African ancestry and a black skin color were definitely not enough Indeed their settlement in Liberia had much in common with the contemporary white settlement of the American Frontier and these settlers struggle with Native American tribes The Liberian experience can also be considered as anticipating that of Zionism and Israel with Jews similarly seeking redemption through a return to an ancestral land and similarly being regarded as foreign interlopers by the local Arab tribes It would take Americo Liberians a century and more to become truly accepted as one of Liberia s ethnic groups All of which certainly contributed to most Black Americans rejecting the Back to Africa option and opting instead for seeking equal rights in America 58 Notable emigrants from the United States to Africa editJoseph Jenkins Roberts first President and founding father of Liberia Thomas Peters African American Black Loyalist leader and founder of Freetown Sierra Leone departed after settling in Halifax Nova Scotia William Coleman President of Liberia Stephen Allen Benson President of Liberia David George African American Baptist preacher in Sierra Leone Boston King African American Methodist missionary in Sierra Leone Henry Washington or Harry Washington African born slave to first U S President George Washington who emigrated to Sierra Leone Daniel Coker African American missionary to Sierra Leone Edward Jones American missionary to Sierra Leone Edward J Roye President of Liberia and first president from the True Whig Party John Russwurm founder of Freedom s Journal the first black newspaper in the United States who emigrated to Liberia Abraham Hazeley 1784 1847 founder of what was to become one of the most prominent Creole families in Freetown Sierra Leone 48 309 Cato Perkins died 1805 missionary who migrated to Freetown where he led a strike of carpenters against the Sierra Leone Company 59 Mary Perth 1740 1813 prominent African American colonist and businesswoman in Freetown Sierra Leone 60 Easmon medical dynasty medical and business family in Sierra Leone Elizabeth Renner died 1826 emigrated to Sierra Leone and became the first female teacher and principal of a girls school in the missionary in Africa 61 McCormack Easmon Creole doctor Noah Arthur Cox George Sierra Leonean economist and university professor Arthur Thomas Porter Sierra Leonean university professor and administratorSee also editPortal nbsp Africa African American diaspora African Americans in Africa African Americans in the Revolutionary War Nova Scotian Settlers Atlantic Creole American Colonization Society Linconia Remigration African Americans in Ghana Afro American settlement in Africa Diaspora tourism Door of Return Genealogy tourism Africa Return to roots Right of return Ghana Turner Chapel a Canadian church which is named after Bishop Turner Scipio Vaughan Year of Return Ghana 2019 Zionist antisemitismCitations edit a b Sowell Thomas 2005 Black rednecks and white liberals 1st ed San Francisco Calif Encounter Books p 148 ISBN 1 59403 086 3 OCLC 57579375 Cassandra Pybus Epic Journeys of Freedom Runaway Slaves of the American Revolution and Their Global Quest for Liberty Beacon Press Boston 2006 Graham Russell Hodges Susan Hawkes Cook Alan Edward Brown eds The Black Loyalist Directory African Americans in Exile After the American Revolution subscription required C L R James The Black Jacobins Vintage Press 1963 and Rosalind Wiggins letters of Captain Paul Cuffee Howard University Press 1996 McDaniel Antonio November 1992 Extreme mortality in nineteenth century Africa the case of Liberian immigrants Demography 29 4 581 594 doi 10 2307 2061853 JSTOR 2061853 PMID 1483543 S2CID 46953564 McDaniel Antonio April 1995 Swing Low Sweet Chariot The Mortality Cost of Colonizing Liberia in the Nineteenth Century University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226557243 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 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 9780801823091 Foner Eric 2015 Gateway to Freedom The Hidden History of the Underground Railroad New York W W Norton ISBN 9780393244076 Jenkins David 1975 Black Zion The Return of Afro Americans and West Indians to Africa Wildwood House pp 41 43 ISBN 978 0 7045 0116 4 Kenneth C Barnes Journey of Hope The Back to Africa Movement in Arkan Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2004 3 Dixon Rebecca S 2009 Back to Africa Movement In Smith Jessie Carney Wynn Linda T eds Freedom Facts and Firsts 400 Years of the African American Civil Rights Experience Visible Ink Press p 28 ISBN 978 1 57859 260 9 a b Ailes Jane Tyler McGraw Marie 2012 Leaving Virginia for Liberia Western Virginia Emigrants and Emancipators West Virginia History A Journal of Regional Studies 6 2 1 34 doi 10 1353 wvh 2012 0021 S2CID 159669576 Ronald L F Davis Creating Jim Crow Archived 2002 06 14 at the Wayback Machine The History of Jim Crow Accessed 14 October 2007 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 ProQuest 200334994 a b White Deborah Gray Slavery and Freedom in the New Republic In Freedom on my mind S l Bedford Bks St Martin s 2012 pp 186 188 The American Colonization Society Archived from the original on September 23 2017 Douglass Frederick Brown John Stowe Harriet Beecher Reynolds William Garrison William Lloyd February 9 1998 Abolition Anti Slavery Movements and the Rise of the Sectional Controversy The African American Odyssey A Quest for Full Citizenship Exhibitions Library of Congress www loc gov Retrieved May 23 2022 a b Mills Brandon 2014 The United States of Africa Liberian Independence and the Contested Meaning of a Black Republic Journal of the Early Republic 34 1 79 107 doi 10 1353 jer 2014 0012 S2CID 143753119 Back to Africa Movement The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture 2007 The Central Arkansas Library System July 26 1847 Liberian independence proclaimed This Day In History History website Cox Earnest 1938 Lincoln s Negro Policy Richmond VA William Byrd Press p 13 Campbell Mavis Christine Ross George 1993 Back to Africa George Ross and the Maroons from Nova Scotia to Sierra Leone Africa World Press ISBN 978 0 86543 383 0 page needed Lapsansky Werner Emma J Bacon Margaret Hope eds 2010 Back to Africa Benjamin Coates and the Colonization Movement in America 1848 1880 Penn State Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 271 04571 9 O Donnell Edward T 2006 1001 Things Everyone Should Know about Irish American History Random House Value Publishing ISBN 978 0 517 22754 1 page needed National Emigration Convention of Colored People The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History Cleveland Ohio Case Western Reserve University March 4 1998 Retrieved May 30 2013 The Ending of Reconstruction Archived October 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine America s Reconstruction People and Politics After the Civil War University of Houston Digital History Kenneth C Barnes Journey of Hope The Back to Africa Movement in Arkansas in the Late 1800s Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2004 p 2 Crumrin Timothy Back to Africa The Colonization Movement in Early America Archived May 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine 2007 S K B Asante Sam Alfred Dictionary of African Christian Biography reprinted from The Encyclopedia Africana Dictionary of African Biography 1977 Retrieved August 8 2016 Daniel M Johnson and Rex R Campbell Black Migration in America A Social Demographic History Durham N C Duke University Press 1981 p 62 Los Angeles Noah Reverend J E Lewis and the Liberian Arks February 11 2022 Retrieved April 25 2022 Jenkins 1975 Black Zion The Return of Afro Americans and West Indians to Africa p 43 Benton Joshua February 19 2022 A century ago Mississippi s Senate voted to send all the state s Black people to Africa Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 a b Fitzgerald Michael W May 1997 We Have Found a Moses Theodore Bilbo Black Nationalism and the Greater Liberia Bill of 1939 The Journal of Southern History 63 2 293 320 doi 10 2307 2211284 JSTOR 2211284 a b c d Blain Keisha N 2018 Set the world on fire black nationalist women and the global struggle for freedom Philadelphia ISBN 978 0 8122 9477 4 OCLC 1021885414 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link page needed McDuffie Erik S 2015 Chicago Garveyism and the history of the diasporic Midwest African and Black Diaspora 8 2 139 doi 10 1080 17528631 2015 1027332 S2CID 145594257 via Taylor amp Francis Online Sanders Crystal R 2019 Challenging Historical Iconography A Look at Women s Everyday Political Mobilization Reviews in American History 47 4 634 doi 10 1353 rah 2019 0087 S2CID 214306080 via Project MUSE Theodore G Bilbo and the Decline of Public Racism 1938 1947 PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 8 2021 Retrieved May 11 2021 Hatenanny Records Advertisement American Nazi Party handbill Virginia Commonwealth University Schmaltz William H June 25 1961 When George Lincoln Rockwell Elijah Muhammad and Malcolm X Shared the Same Stage AnthonyFlood com Marable Manning 2013 The Portable Malcolm X Reader Penguin Books ISBN 9780143106944 McPheeters Sam April 16 2015 When Malcolm X Met the Nazis Vice Magnum Photos Home pro magnumphotos com The Nation of Islam BLVCK Vrchives Archived from the original on July 27 2020 Retrieved May 11 2021 Sivapragasam Michael June 2018 After the treaties a social economic and demographic history of Maroon society in Jamaica 1739 1842 Thesis University of Southampton pp 136 154 Jan 15 1817 The Vote on Colonization of Free Blacks in West Africa Zinn Education Project Retrieved May 23 2022 Sims Alvarado Falechiondro June 20 2011 The African American Emigration Movement in Georgia during Reconstruction History Dissertations Thesis doi 10 57709 2375334 a b Walker James W 1992 Chapter Five Foundation of Sierra Leone The Black Loyalists The Search for a Promised Land in Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone 1783 1870 Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 94 114 ISBN 978 0 8020 7402 7 originally published by Longman amp Dalhousie University Press 1976 Taylor Bankole Kamara February 2014 Sierra Leone The Land Its People and History New Africa Press p 68 ISBN 9789987160389 Hargreaves J Porter A 1963 The Sierra Leone Creoles Creoledom A Study of the Development of Freetown Society The Journal of African History 4 3 0000539 468 469 doi 10 1017 S0021853700004394 S2CID 162611104 Hodge Carl Cavanagh Nolan Cathal J 2007 US Presidents and Foreign Policy ABC CLIO p 49 ISBN 978 1 85109 790 6 Retrieved February 5 2013 Brooks George Landlords And Strangers Ecology Society And Trade In Western Africa 1000 1630 Routledge 1993 Butcher Tim October 2010 Our Man In Liberia History Today 60 10 10 17 a b c Barnes Kenneth C Journey of Hope The Back to Africa Movement in Arkansas in the Late 1800s Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2004 James Campbell Middle Passage African American Journeys to Africa 1787 2005 New York Penguin Press 2006 xxiii Burin Eric 2006 A Manumission in the Mountains Slavery and the African Colonization Movement in Southwestern Virginia Appalachian Journal 33 2 164 186 JSTOR 40934746 EBSCOhost 20771383 Rommel Ruiz Bryan 2007 Sister Societies Women s Antislavery Organizations in Antebellum America and Slavery and the Peculiar Solution A History of the American Colonization Society review Journal of the Early Republic 27 1 184 188 doi 10 1353 jer 2007 0013 S2CID 145618874 Dr Washington Hyde The Tortuous Route of Black American History Ch 3 5 full citation needed Pybus C 2007 Epic Journeys of Freedom Runaway Slaves of the American Revolution and Their Global Quest for Liberty Beacon Press ISBN 9780807055151 Mary Perth 1740 after 1813 Slavery and Remembrance The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation Retrieved March 25 2016 Leach Fiona 2019 Reclaiming the Women of Britain s First Mission to West Africa Three Lives Brill p 239 ISBN 9789004387447 General bibliography editBarnes Kenneth C Journey of Hope The Back to Africa Movement in Arkansas in the Late 1800s Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2004 Brooks George Landlords and Strangers Ecology Society And Trade In Western Africa 1000 1630 Routledge 1993 Campbell James Middle Passage African American Journeys to Africa 1787 2005 New York Penguin Press 2006 Clegg Claude A III The Price of Liberty African Americans and the Making of Liberia Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2004 Jenkins David 1975 Black Zion The Return of Afro Americans and West Indians to Africa Wildwood House ISBN 978 0 7045 0116 4 Page Sebastian N Black Resettlement and the American Civil War New York Cambridge University Press 2021 Weisbord Robert G Ebony Kinship Africa Africans and the Afro American Westport Conn Greenwood Press 1973 External links editPalmer Barbara March 1 2006 Historian situates back to Africa movements in broad context Stanford University Back to Africa The Colonization Movement Archived from the original on February 2 2007 African American Nation Radio Online Radio by AA Nation1 BlogTalkRadio June 25 2010 Reclaiming the Middle Passage African American Actor Isaiah Washington becomes first to use DNA Testing to gain Citizenship to an African Nation Sierra Leone SwitSalone April 26 2010 Hatenanny Records The Record Label of the American Nazi Party Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Back to Africa movement amp oldid 1220197431, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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