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Republic of Maryland

The Republic of Maryland (also known variously as the Independent State of Maryland, Maryland-in-Africa, and Maryland in Liberia) was a country in West Africa that existed from 1834 to 1857, when it was merged into what is now Liberia. The area was first settled in 1834 by freed African-American slaves and freeborn African Americans primarily from the U.S. state of Maryland, under the auspices of the Maryland State Colonization Society.[1][2]

Colony of Maryland in Africa
1834–1857
Flag (1854–57)
Map of modern-day Maryland County in Liberia
StatusPrivate Colony of the Maryland State Colonization Society (1834–54)
Republic (1854–57)
CapitalHarper
Common languagesEnglish (de facto)
Grebo
Religion
Christianity
GovernmentPrivate Colony of the Maryland State Colonization Society (1834–54)
Republican Government(1854–57)
Governor 
• 1836–51
John Brown Russwurm
• 1854
Samuel Ford McGill
• 1854–56
William A. Prout
• 1856–57
Boston Jenkins Drayton
History 
• Establishment as colony
February 12 1834
January 31, 1853
• Declaration
of independence
May 29, 1854
• Annexed by Liberia
March 18 1857
CurrencyUnited States dollar
Succeeded by

The larger American Colonization Society was founded in 1816. It supported the settlement of thousands of free people of color to its colony of Liberia, in West Africa. There were also initially separate settlements founded by state colonization societies of Mississippi (Mississippi-in-Africa), Kentucky (Kentucky in Africa), Georgia,[3] Pennsylvania,[4] and Louisiana.[citation needed] A New Jersey colony was planned.[5]

In 1838, these African-American settlements were united into the Commonwealth of Liberia, which declared independence from the American Colonization Society on July 26, 1847. The Maryland colony remained separate from the Commonwealth of Liberia, as the colonization society wished to maintain its trade monopoly in the area. On February 2, 1841, Maryland-in-Africa became the Independent State of Maryland. Following an independence referendum in 1853, the state declared its independence on May 29, 1854, under the name Maryland in Liberia,[6] with its capital at Harper.

History edit

 
Map of Liberia in the 1830s, where the Republic of Maryland and other state-sponsored colonies are identified.

The American Colonization Society was founded in 1816, in part due to alarms over the violence of the Haitian slave revolution and its aftermath, which resulted in independence for that country in 1804. Fears were raised about the effects of emancipation of slaves in the United States.[7]

In this period, both slaveholders and abolitionists collaborated on the project to transport free blacks to Africa, though for different reasons. They suggested it was "repatriation", but by this time most African Americans were native-born in the United States, and said they were no more African than the Americans are British. Slaveholders believed that free blacks threatened the stability of their slave societies. Nat Turner's rebellion of 1831 panicked Southerners, who feared another slave uprising and seizure of the country, as had recently happened in Haiti. Abolitionists, many of them ministers, hoped to persuade slaveholders through their religion to manumit (free) their slaves and also worried about the discrimination faced by free blacks in the United States.

Those who supported relocation to West Africa believed (or said they believed) that the African Americans would create there better polities; first as some vague type of colonies, then countries, away from white prejudice, discrimination, and economic exploitation. While thousands of free blacks did relocate to the colonies, most free African Americans opposed this project, claiming the right of their birth in the United States and wanting to improve their lives there.[8]

The U.S. state of Maryland had an increasing proportion of free blacks among its African-American population. During the first two decades after the American Revolution, about 25% of blacks were freed, in part because slaveholders were inspired by the war's ideals. Practically, changing labor needs meant that fewer slaves were required.[9][page needed] By 1810 some 30% of northern Maryland's blacks were free, in what was a more urbanized region, but so were 20% of blacks in the southern part of the state.[9]: 291  In the next two decades the number of free blacks increased markedly in the northern part of the state, and many congregated in Baltimore, the state's and the South's largest city.[9][page needed] By 1830 Maryland had a total of 52,938 free blacks: 51.3% of blacks in northern Maryland were free, and the black population of Baltimore was 75% free. In southern Maryland, free blacks made up 24.7% of the black population.[9][page needed]

The Maryland State Colonization Society was originally a branch of the American Colonization Society, which had founded the colony of Liberia at Monrovia on January 7, 1822. The Maryland Society decided to establish a new settlement of its own to accommodate its emigrants and with the intention of controlling trade to its colony. In December 1831, the Maryland state legislature in the United States appropriated US$10,000 for 26 years to transport 10,000 free blacks and ex-slaves, and 400 Caribbean slaves from the United States and the Caribbean islands, respectively, to Africa. It founded the Maryland State Colonization Society for this purpose.[10] Nowhere near that number were actually transported.

Settlement of Cape Palmas edit

 
Cape Palmas mission, circa 1840.

The first area in the future Republic of Maryland to be settled by the Maryland Colonization Society was Cape Palmas, in 1834, somewhat south of the rest of the American colony.[1] The Cape is a small, rocky peninsula connected to the mainland by a sandy isthmus. Immediately to the west of the peninsula is the estuary of the Hoffman River. Approximately 21 km (15 mi) along the coast to the east, the Cavalla River empties into the sea, marking the border between Liberia and the Ivory Coast. It marks the western limit of the Gulf of Guinea, according to the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO).

 
Etching of Cape Palmas, circa 1853.

Most of the settlers were freed African-American slaves and freeborn African Americans primarily from the state of Maryland.[11][page needed] The Colonization Society organizers thought they could establish new trading ties by relocating African Americans to West Africa. The colony was named Maryland in Africa (also known as Maryland in Liberia) on February 12, 1834.

John Brown Russwurm edit

 
John Brown Russwurm, first mixed-race governor of Maryland in Africa (1836–1851).

In 1836 the Colonization Society appointed its first mixed-race governor, John Brown Russwurm (1799–1851), who served as governor for more than a dozen years, until his death. Russwurm encouraged the immigration of African Americans to Maryland in Africa, and supported agriculture and trade.[12] He had begun his career working as the colonial secretary for the American Colonization Society between 1830 and 1834. He also worked as the editor of the Liberia Herald. He resigned this post in 1835 to protest America's colonization policies.

In 1838, a number of other American settlements on the west coast of Africa united to form the Commonwealth of Liberia, which declared its independence on July 26, 1847.

Two American visitors in 1851 reported the population of "Maryland in Liberia" to be between 900 and 1,000, with four churches and six schools.[13]

The colony of Maryland in Liberia remained independent, as the Maryland State Colonization Society wished to maintain its trade monopoly in the area. On February 2, 1841, Maryland-in-Africa declared its statehood and became the State of Maryland. In 1847 the Maryland State Colonization Society published the Constitution and Laws of Maryland in Liberia, based on the United States Constitution.

Declaration of Independence, and annexation by Liberia edit

On May 29, 1854, the State of Maryland declared its independence, naming itself Maryland in Liberia,[6] with its capital at Harper. It was also known as the Republic of Maryland. It held the land along the coast between the Grand Cess and San Pedro rivers. It lasted three years as an independent state.

Soon afterward, local tribes, including the Grebo and the Kru, attacked the State of Maryland. Unable to maintain its own defense, Maryland appealed for help to Liberia, its more powerful neighbor. President Roberts sent military assistance, and an alliance of Marylanders and Liberian militia troops successfully repelled the local tribesmen. The Republic of Maryland recognized that it could not survive as an independent state, and following a referendum, Maryland was annexed by Liberia on April 6, 1857, becoming known as Maryland County.

Legacy edit

A statue of John Brown Russwurm was erected near his burial site at Harper, Cape Palmas, Liberia.[14]

Governors of Maryland-in-Africa edit

(Dates in italics indicate de facto continuation of office)

Term Incumbent
February 12, 1834 – February 1836 James Hall, Governor, Maryland in Africa
February 1836 – July 1, 1836 Oliver Holmes Jr., Governor, Maryland in Africa
July 1, 1836 – September 28, 1836 Three-member Committee, Maryland in Africa
September 28, 1836 – February 2, 1841 John Brown Russwurm, Governor, Maryland in Africa
February 2, 1841 – June 9, 1851 John Brown Russwurm, Governor, State of Maryland in Liberia
June 9, 1851 – 1852 Samuel Ford McGill, acting Governor, State of Maryland in Liberia
1852 May 29, 1854 Samuel Ford McGill, Governor, State of Maryland in Liberia
May 29, 1854 – June 8, 1854 Samuel Ford McGill, Governor, The Independent State of Maryland in Liberia
June 8, 1854 – April 1856 William A. Prout, Governor, The Independent State of Maryland in Liberia
April 1856 – March 18, 1857 Boston Jenkins Drayton, Governor, The Independent State of Maryland in Liberia

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b The African Repository, Volume 14, p.42 Retrieved March 13, 2010
  2. ^ Hall, Richard, On Afric's Shore: A History of Maryland in Liberia, 1834-1857
  3. ^ "[Freed American Slave Colony] (Maryland In Liberia)". www.raremaps.com. Retrieved June 15, 2022.
  4. ^ "Merchant Congressman in the Young Republic: Samuel Smith of Maryland 1752-1839". The SHAFR Guide Online. doi:10.1163/2468-1733_shafr_sim030060173. Retrieved June 15, 2022.
  5. ^ "Arrival, and Intelligence from Liberia". African Repository. Vol. 32, no. 8. August 1856. p. 229.
  6. ^ a b Constitution and Laws of Maryland in Liberia, p.1 Retrieved March 13, 2010
  7. ^ Geggus, David (2017), Eltis, David; Richardson, David; Drescher, Seymour; Engerman, Stanley L. (eds.), "Slavery and the Haitian Revolution", The Cambridge World History of Slavery: Volume 4: AD 1804–AD 2016, The Cambridge World History of Slavery, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, vol. 4, pp. 321–343, ISBN 978-0-521-84069-9, retrieved June 15, 2022
  8. ^ Franklin, Vincent P. (1974). "Education for Colonization: Attempts to Educate Free Blacks in the United States for Emigration to Africa, 1823-1833". The Journal of Negro Education. 43 (1): 99–100. doi:10.2307/2966946. JSTOR 2966946.
  9. ^ a b c d Freehling, William H. (1991). The Road to Disunion, Volume 1: Secessionists at Bay, 1776-1854. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-976276-7.
  10. ^ Latrobe, John H. B. (1885). Maryland in Liberia: a History of the Colony Planted By the Maryland State Colonization Society Under the Auspices of the State of Maryland, U. S. At Cape Palmas on the South-West Coast of Africa, 1833-1853. Maryland Historical Society. p. 125. ISBN 9780404576219.
  11. ^ Hall, Richard (2003). On Afric's Shore: A History of Maryland in Liberia, 1834-1857. Baltimore: Maryland Historical Society.
  12. ^ Lear, Alex (December 7, 2006). . The Community Leader. Archived from the original on July 14, 2011. Retrieved January 31, 2008.
  13. ^ Fuller Jr, Thomas; Janifer, Benjamin (1852) [December 17, 1851], "Mressrs. Fuller and Janifer's Report", Thirty-fifth annual report of the American Colonization Society : with the proceedings of the Board of Directors and of the Society, and the addresses delivered at the annual meeting, January 20, 1852 : to which is added an appendix, containing information about going to Liberia; things which every emigrant ought to know; Messrs. Fuller and Janifer's report, and a table of emigrants, Washington, D.C.: American Colonization Society, pp. 44–48, at p. 46
  14. ^ . Chicago: World Book. 1996. ISBN 0-7166-0096-X. Archived from the original on August 23, 2006. Retrieved March 13, 2010

Further reading edit

  • Maryland in Africa; the Maryland State Colonization Society, 1831-1857 by Campbell, Penelope, 1971.
  • Constitution and Laws of Maryland in Liberia: With an Appendix of Precedents, 1847.
  • Proceedings and addresses on the occasion of the 66th, anniversary of the founding of Maryland in Liberia, 1900.

4°22′N 7°43′W / 4.367°N 7.717°W / 4.367; -7.717

republic, maryland, confused, with, maryland, other, uses, maryland, disambiguation, also, known, variously, independent, state, maryland, maryland, africa, maryland, liberia, country, west, africa, that, existed, from, 1834, 1857, when, merged, into, what, li. Not to be confused with Maryland For other uses see Maryland disambiguation The Republic of Maryland also known variously as the Independent State of Maryland Maryland in Africa and Maryland in Liberia was a country in West Africa that existed from 1834 to 1857 when it was merged into what is now Liberia The area was first settled in 1834 by freed African American slaves and freeborn African Americans primarily from the U S state of Maryland under the auspices of the Maryland State Colonization Society 1 2 Colony of Maryland in Africa1834 1857Flag 1854 57 Map of modern day Maryland County in LiberiaStatusPrivate Colony of the Maryland State Colonization Society 1834 54 Republic 1854 57 CapitalHarperCommon languagesEnglish de facto GreboReligionChristianityGovernmentPrivate Colony of the Maryland State Colonization Society 1834 54 Republican Government 1854 57 Governor 1836 51John Brown Russwurm 1854Samuel Ford McGill 1854 56William A Prout 1856 57Boston Jenkins DraytonHistory Establishment as colonyFebruary 12 1834 IndependencereferendumJanuary 31 1853 Declarationof independenceMay 29 1854 Annexed by LiberiaMarch 18 1857CurrencyUnited States dollarSucceeded byLiberiaThe larger American Colonization Society was founded in 1816 It supported the settlement of thousands of free people of color to its colony of Liberia in West Africa There were also initially separate settlements founded by state colonization societies of Mississippi Mississippi in Africa Kentucky Kentucky in Africa Georgia 3 Pennsylvania 4 and Louisiana citation needed A New Jersey colony was planned 5 In 1838 these African American settlements were united into the Commonwealth of Liberia which declared independence from the American Colonization Society on July 26 1847 The Maryland colony remained separate from the Commonwealth of Liberia as the colonization society wished to maintain its trade monopoly in the area On February 2 1841 Maryland in Africa became the Independent State of Maryland Following an independence referendum in 1853 the state declared its independence on May 29 1854 under the name Maryland in Liberia 6 with its capital at Harper Contents 1 History 1 1 Settlement of Cape Palmas 1 2 John Brown Russwurm 1 3 Declaration of Independence and annexation by Liberia 2 Legacy 3 Governors of Maryland in Africa 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Further readingHistory edit nbsp Map of Liberia in the 1830s where the Republic of Maryland and other state sponsored colonies are identified Main article American Colonization Society Further information African Americans in Maryland The American Colonization Society was founded in 1816 in part due to alarms over the violence of the Haitian slave revolution and its aftermath which resulted in independence for that country in 1804 Fears were raised about the effects of emancipation of slaves in the United States 7 In this period both slaveholders and abolitionists collaborated on the project to transport free blacks to Africa though for different reasons They suggested it was repatriation but by this time most African Americans were native born in the United States and said they were no more African than the Americans are British Slaveholders believed that free blacks threatened the stability of their slave societies Nat Turner s rebellion of 1831 panicked Southerners who feared another slave uprising and seizure of the country as had recently happened in Haiti Abolitionists many of them ministers hoped to persuade slaveholders through their religion to manumit free their slaves and also worried about the discrimination faced by free blacks in the United States Those who supported relocation to West Africa believed or said they believed that the African Americans would create there better polities first as some vague type of colonies then countries away from white prejudice discrimination and economic exploitation While thousands of free blacks did relocate to the colonies most free African Americans opposed this project claiming the right of their birth in the United States and wanting to improve their lives there 8 The U S state of Maryland had an increasing proportion of free blacks among its African American population During the first two decades after the American Revolution about 25 of blacks were freed in part because slaveholders were inspired by the war s ideals Practically changing labor needs meant that fewer slaves were required 9 page needed By 1810 some 30 of northern Maryland s blacks were free in what was a more urbanized region but so were 20 of blacks in the southern part of the state 9 291 In the next two decades the number of free blacks increased markedly in the northern part of the state and many congregated in Baltimore the state s and the South s largest city 9 page needed By 1830 Maryland had a total of 52 938 free blacks 51 3 of blacks in northern Maryland were free and the black population of Baltimore was 75 free In southern Maryland free blacks made up 24 7 of the black population 9 page needed The Maryland State Colonization Society was originally a branch of the American Colonization Society which had founded the colony of Liberia at Monrovia on January 7 1822 The Maryland Society decided to establish a new settlement of its own to accommodate its emigrants and with the intention of controlling trade to its colony In December 1831 the Maryland state legislature in the United States appropriated US 10 000 for 26 years to transport 10 000 free blacks and ex slaves and 400 Caribbean slaves from the United States and the Caribbean islands respectively to Africa It founded the Maryland State Colonization Society for this purpose 10 Nowhere near that number were actually transported Settlement of Cape Palmas edit nbsp Cape Palmas mission circa 1840 The first area in the future Republic of Maryland to be settled by the Maryland Colonization Society was Cape Palmas in 1834 somewhat south of the rest of the American colony 1 The Cape is a small rocky peninsula connected to the mainland by a sandy isthmus Immediately to the west of the peninsula is the estuary of the Hoffman River Approximately 21 km 15 mi along the coast to the east the Cavalla River empties into the sea marking the border between Liberia and the Ivory Coast It marks the western limit of the Gulf of Guinea according to the International Hydrographic Organization IHO nbsp Etching of Cape Palmas circa 1853 Most of the settlers were freed African American slaves and freeborn African Americans primarily from the state of Maryland 11 page needed The Colonization Society organizers thought they could establish new trading ties by relocating African Americans to West Africa The colony was named Maryland in Africa also known as Maryland in Liberia on February 12 1834 John Brown Russwurm edit nbsp John Brown Russwurm first mixed race governor of Maryland in Africa 1836 1851 In 1836 the Colonization Society appointed its first mixed race governor John Brown Russwurm 1799 1851 who served as governor for more than a dozen years until his death Russwurm encouraged the immigration of African Americans to Maryland in Africa and supported agriculture and trade 12 He had begun his career working as the colonial secretary for the American Colonization Society between 1830 and 1834 He also worked as the editor of the Liberia Herald He resigned this post in 1835 to protest America s colonization policies In 1838 a number of other American settlements on the west coast of Africa united to form the Commonwealth of Liberia which declared its independence on July 26 1847 Two American visitors in 1851 reported the population of Maryland in Liberia to be between 900 and 1 000 with four churches and six schools 13 The colony of Maryland in Liberia remained independent as the Maryland State Colonization Society wished to maintain its trade monopoly in the area On February 2 1841 Maryland in Africa declared its statehood and became the State of Maryland In 1847 the Maryland State Colonization Society published the Constitution and Laws of Maryland in Liberia based on the United States Constitution Declaration of Independence and annexation by Liberia edit On May 29 1854 the State of Maryland declared its independence naming itself Maryland in Liberia 6 with its capital at Harper It was also known as the Republic of Maryland It held the land along the coast between the Grand Cess and San Pedro rivers It lasted three years as an independent state Soon afterward local tribes including the Grebo and the Kru attacked the State of Maryland Unable to maintain its own defense Maryland appealed for help to Liberia its more powerful neighbor President Roberts sent military assistance and an alliance of Marylanders and Liberian militia troops successfully repelled the local tribesmen The Republic of Maryland recognized that it could not survive as an independent state and following a referendum Maryland was annexed by Liberia on April 6 1857 becoming known as Maryland County Legacy editA statue of John Brown Russwurm was erected near his burial site at Harper Cape Palmas Liberia 14 Governors of Maryland in Africa edit Dates in italics indicate de factocontinuation of office Term IncumbentFebruary 12 1834 February 1836 James Hall Governor Maryland in AfricaFebruary 1836 July 1 1836 Oliver Holmes Jr Governor Maryland in AfricaJuly 1 1836 September 28 1836 Three member Committee Maryland in AfricaSeptember 28 1836 February 2 1841 John Brown Russwurm Governor Maryland in AfricaFebruary 2 1841 June 9 1851 John Brown Russwurm Governor State of Maryland in LiberiaJune 9 1851 1852 Samuel Ford McGill acting Governor State of Maryland in Liberia1852 May 29 1854 Samuel Ford McGill Governor State of Maryland in LiberiaMay 29 1854 June 8 1854 Samuel Ford McGill Governor The Independent State of Maryland in LiberiaJune 8 1854 April 1856 William A Prout Governor The Independent State of Maryland in LiberiaApril 1856 March 18 1857 Boston Jenkins Drayton Governor The Independent State of Maryland in LiberiaSee also editHistory of Liberia History of slavery in Maryland Mississippi in Africa Kentucky in AfricaNotes edit a b The African Repository Volume 14 p 42Retrieved March 13 2010 Hall Richard On Afric s Shore A History of Maryland in Liberia 1834 1857 Freed American Slave Colony Maryland In Liberia www raremaps com Retrieved June 15 2022 Merchant Congressman in the Young Republic Samuel Smith of Maryland 1752 1839 The SHAFR Guide Online doi 10 1163 2468 1733 shafr sim030060173 Retrieved June 15 2022 Arrival and Intelligence from Liberia African Repository Vol 32 no 8 August 1856 p 229 a b Constitution and Laws of Maryland in Liberia p 1 Retrieved March 13 2010 Geggus David 2017 Eltis David Richardson David Drescher Seymour Engerman Stanley L eds Slavery and the Haitian Revolution The Cambridge World History of Slavery Volume 4 AD 1804 AD 2016 The Cambridge World History of Slavery Cambridge Cambridge University Press vol 4 pp 321 343 ISBN 978 0 521 84069 9 retrieved June 15 2022 Franklin Vincent P 1974 Education for Colonization Attempts to Educate Free Blacks in the United States for Emigration to Africa 1823 1833 The Journal of Negro Education 43 1 99 100 doi 10 2307 2966946 JSTOR 2966946 a b c d Freehling William H 1991 The Road to Disunion Volume 1 Secessionists at Bay 1776 1854 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 976276 7 Latrobe John H B 1885 Maryland in Liberia a History of the Colony Planted By the Maryland State Colonization Society Under the Auspices of the State of Maryland U S At Cape Palmas on the South West Coast of Africa 1833 1853 Maryland Historical Society p 125 ISBN 9780404576219 Hall Richard 2003 On Afric s Shore A History of Maryland in Liberia 1834 1857 Baltimore Maryland Historical Society Lear Alex December 7 2006 Crossing the color line The Community Leader Archived from the original on July 14 2011 Retrieved January 31 2008 Fuller Jr Thomas Janifer Benjamin 1852 December 17 1851 Mressrs Fuller and Janifer s Report Thirty fifth annual report of the American Colonization Society with the proceedings of the Board of Directors and of the Society and the addresses delivered at the annual meeting January 20 1852 to which is added an appendix containing information about going to Liberia things which every emigrant ought to know Messrs Fuller and Janifer s report and a table of emigrants Washington D C American Colonization Society pp 44 48 at p 46 The World Book encyclopedia Chicago World Book 1996 ISBN 0 7166 0096 X Archived from the original on August 23 2006 Retrieved March 13 2010Further reading editMaryland in Africa the Maryland State Colonization Society 1831 1857 by Campbell Penelope 1971 Constitution and Laws of Maryland in Liberia With an Appendix of Precedents 1847 Proceedings and addresses on the occasion of the 66th anniversary of the founding of Maryland in Liberia 1900 4 22 N 7 43 W 4 367 N 7 717 W 4 367 7 717 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Republic of Maryland amp oldid 1184984962, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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