Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Americo-Liberian people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromAmerico-Liberian)
Ethnic group of Liberia
For the ethnic group native to theCongo Basin, seeKongo people.
Not to be confused withLiberian Americans.

Ethnic group
Americo-Liberian people
Total population
150,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
Languages
Religion
Protestantism,Catholicism (minority)
Related ethnic groups
Sierra Leone Creoles,Black Nova Scotians,Gold Coast Euro-Africans,Atlantic Creoles,Afro-Caribbeans andAfrican Americans
Part ofa series on
African Americans

Americo-Liberian people (also known asCongo people orCongau people),[2] are a Liberianethnic group ofAfrican American,Afro-Caribbean, andliberated African origin. Americo-Liberians trace their ancestry to free-born and formerlyenslaved African Americans who emigrated in the 19th century to become thefounders of thestate ofLiberia. They identified themselves as Americo-Liberians.[3]

Although the terms "Americo-Liberian" and "Congo" had distinct definitions in the nineteenth century, they are currently interchangeable and refer to an ethnic group composed of the descendants of the various free and ex-slave African American,Caribbean, recaptive, andSierra Leone Creoles who settled in Liberia from 1822.

The designation "Congo" for the Americo-Liberian population came into common usage when these African Americans integrated 5,000 liberated Africans called Congos (former slaves from theCongo Basin, who were freed by British and Americans from slave ships after the prohibition of the African slave trade) and 500Barbadian immigrants into the Americo-Liberian identity.[4][2] Under Americo-Liberian leadership, the country was relatively stable, though the Americo-Liberians and indigenous West Africans maintained largely separate existences and seldom intermarried.[5]

In addition to indigenous Liberian elites, chiefs, and royalty, upper-class Americo-Liberians led the political, social, cultural and economic sectors of the country and ruled the new state from the 1800s all the way to 1980 as a small butdominant minority. However, PresidentWilliam Tubman challenged the status quo and championed the cause of indigenous groups in the interior against the established oligarchy.[6][7]

History and settlement

[edit]
African Americans depart for Liberia, 1896. The American Colonization Society sent its last emigrants to Liberia in 1904.

Americo-Liberians were descended from African American and Afro-Caribbean settlers, many of whom were freed slaves and their descendants who emigrated to Liberia with assistance from theAmerican Colonization Society (ACS). The first black American settlers arrived in Liberia in 1822.[8] The ACS's plan of encouraging black American migration to Africa was met with mixed responses at the time. Some members of theabolitionist movement, such asGerrit Smith, opposed the idea, arguing that African-American families had lived in the United States for generations, and their prevailing sentiment was that they were no more African than white Americans were European. Other historians have argued that white Americans encouraged the emigration of people of color to Africa due to their opposition tointegration. Additionally, some slave ownersmanumitted some of their slaves on the condition of emigration. However, other African Americans believed they would face better economic opportunities in Africa and be free from racial prejudice, a sentiment that was endorsed by theBack-to-Africa movement.[9][10] As black American emigration to Liberia continued steadily into the mid to late nineteenth century, the movement gained support from an assortment of influential figures, includingUNIA presidentMarcus Garvey, who would go on to become president of theBlack Star Line which encouraged emigration and economic shipping commerce between the United States and Liberia.[11]

The early African-American settlers who arrived in the region that was established as Liberia between 1820 and 1843 were mainlyfree blacks fromVirginia,South Carolina, andGeorgia, while smaller numbers came fromnorthern states likeNew Jersey,New York,Delaware, andConnecticut. Subsequent movements also included emigrants fromMississippi,Louisiana,Arkansas,Kentucky, andFlorida.[12][13]

TheLiberian exodus saw mass emigration of African Americans fromSouth Carolina to Liberia.[14] CongressmanRichard H. Cain called for a million men to leave the injustices they suffered in theUnited States and leave forAfrica. In 1877, theLiberian Exodus Joint Stock Steamship Company was formed inCharleston, South Carolina with a fund of $6,000 (~$162,609 in 2024) to assist the emigration of black Americans to Africa. The company then purchased abark called theAzor, which arrived in Charleston in March 1878 to start shipping African American migrants to Liberia.[14] Enthusiasm for the Liberian exodus had been fed partly by exaggerated reports of Liberia's fertility, including claims that potatoes grew so large that a single one could feed a family for a day, and that certain trees produced bacon. However, 23 of the emigrants died during the journey and upon arrival, the passengers discovered that these claims were not true and many found themselves impoverished. Those who could afford it returned to the U.S. in 1879 and plans for a second voyage by the Liberian Exodus Company were scrapped.[14] However, passengers from theAzor who stayed did find success and established themselves as some of the most prominent Americo-Liberians, including farmer and agricultural businessman Saul Hill, Liberian Senator Reverend David Frazier and Daniel Frank Tolbert, the latter of whom was the grandfather of future Liberian presidentWilliam Tolbert.[15]

TheAmerican Navy was responsible for the recapture of illegal slave vessels seeking to transport enslaved Africans to the Americas following the American abolition of the slave trade in 1808. These enslaved Africans called Liberated Africans or Recaptives, many of whom were from theCongo Basin were designated as 'Congoes' and all Recaptives, including those from modern-dayNigeria,Cameroon, andGhana were all described as 'Congoes.'

Over the course on the 19th century, roughly 20,000 settlers arrived in Liberia with ~14,000 African-American and ~5,700 Recaptives. Of the 14,000 African American settlers, nearly half died of malaria in the 10 years after their arrival.[16]

Although the number of Afro-Caribbean immigrants toLiberia was relatively small in comparison tocolonial Sierra Leone, at least 300Afro-Barbadians settled in Liberia in 1865 and smaller numbers ofAfro-Caribbean immigrants settled inLiberia between 1865 and 1930 fromCaribbean islands such asTrinidad,Jamaica, andGrenada.

The early African American settlers did not relate well to the native African inhabitants they first encountered in Liberia due to cultural differences and soon began to establish a social and economic elite in the country.[17] According to the website BlackPast, “They retained preferences forWestern style of dress, Southern plantation-style homes, American food, Protestantism, the English language, and monogamous kinship practices.” Demographically, the Americo-Liberians tended to concentrate in larger cities and towns while native Africans remained in more poorly developed areas before the two groups started to intermingle in the twentieth century.[18]

Development of society

[edit]

The settler community developed an Americo-Liberian society, culture, and political organization that was strongly influenced by their roots in theAmericanSouth as well as the AnglophoneCaribbean.[19]

Americo-Liberians were credited for Liberia's largest and longest economic expansion in the early to late twentieth century, especially William V. S. Tubman, who did much to promote foreign investment and to bridge the economic, social, and political gaps between the descendants of the original settlers and the inhabitants of the interior. Most of the powerful Americo-Liberian families fled to the United States in the 1980s after the last True Whig Party president, William Tolbert, was assassinated in a military coup.

Although Liberianist scholars have neglected internal stratifications such as class and geography among the Americo-Liberian society, regional and local socio-economic differences among the Americo-Liberians resulted in slight cultural differences between rural 'upriver' Americo-Liberians such as those based in Clay-Ashland and city-based Americo-Liberians, particularly those based in Monrovia who were sometimes referred to 'Monrovia Americo-Liberians.' Americo-Liberians based in Monrovia were portrayed as more urbane than their rural counterparts and were perceived by some Americo-Liberians as wielding too great an influence on national political affairs.[20]

Settlements

[edit]

The Americo-Liberians settled inMonrovia,Careysburg,Clay-Ashland,Buchanan,Maryland,Mississippi-in-Africa,Cape Mount,Greenville, and in a number of small towns along theSt. Paul River. Notably, the families originally fromBarbados, which included the Barclays, Morgans, Bests, Thorpes, Weeks, and Portemans, settled inCrozierville.[21][22]

The original "Congo people" were settled inNew Georgia.[23]In 1821, the shipElizabeth from New York landed onSherbro Island,Sierra Leone with 86 freed African Americans, who were later resettled in Monrovia.[24][25]

Political influence in Liberia

[edit]
Charles D. B. King, an Americo-Liberian who served as President of Liberia (1920–1930), with his entourage on the steps of thePeace Palace, The Hague (the Netherlands), 1927.

Upper-class Americo-Liberians played a leading role in Liberian national politics from the country's founding. Upon theLiberian Declaration of Independence in 1847, Americo-Liberians controlled much of Liberia's political and social institutions. Political and educational institutions were inspired by United States framework. They established a government system with a constitutional republic and three branches of government (legislative, judicial, executive).[26] From 1878 to 1980, the Republic of Liberia was ade factoone-party state, ruled byTrue Whig Party andMasonic Order of Liberia, which were dominated by Americo-Liberians and a sizeable minority of "Indigenous Liberians".[7]

Liberia was initially dominated by two political parties that were supported by Americo-Liberians, theRepublican Party and theTrue Whig Party (TWP). After TWP candidateAnthony W. Gardiner was elected president in 1878, the TWP went on to govern Liberia for over a century, cementing Americo-Liberian political dominance. While opposition parties were never made illegal and Liberia was not classed as a dictatorship, the TWP more or less ran the country as aone party state and held a monopoly on Liberian politics. Liberian presidents from that date onwards were either of full or partial Americo-Liberian origin.[27]

Administration of PresidentWilliam Tubman

Elected as president in 1944, Americo-Liberian William Tubman was widely regarded as the father of modern Liberia. The Tubman administration embarked on a mass modernization program, including improving literacy among the population, agricultural development, updating the nation's infrastructure, courting close relationships with the United States, and attracting foreign investment to stimulate the economy.[28][29] During his presidency, Liberia usually supported U.S. interests in foreign affairs including cutting off critical ties with Germany to side with the Allied powers and voting with the U.S. at the United Nations on Cold War matters. In return, Tubman secured $280 million in aid from the U.S., the greatest amount to any African country (per capita) at the time.[30] During his presidency Tubman introduced two major policies: The Open Door Policy and the National Unification Policy. Tubman's Open Door Policy primary goal was to solicit foreign investment, business or allied countries, in Liberia's development.[31] Through this policy Tubman facilitated foreign businesses to locate in Liberia, including major companies such as the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company, Republic Steel Corporation, and the Liberian American Swedish Mineral Company.[32] The Firestone Tire and Rubber Company proved to be the most influential investment for the Liberian economy as rubber became the major export crop for Liberia. As a result, Liberia experienced a period of rapid development and economic prosperity in the 1960s.[33] He also introduced a National Unification Policy in which he stated his goal to destroy "all ideologies that divide [Liberian people]", and eliminate what he called Americo-Liberianism to replace it with a new societal focus on "justice, equality, fair play, and equal opportunities for all throughout the country."[34] The policy aimed to assimilate interior indigenous Liberians population more fully into the political, economic, and social fabric of Liberia. Tubman also fought for more constitutional rights for indigenous Liberians although disparity still remained.[35]

William Tubman andJFK at theWhite House in 1961

Tubman was succeeded by his Vice President, TWP Americo-Liberian William Tolbert in 1971. After coming to power Tolbert sought to introduce more liberal reforms which also included addressing imbalances between Americo-Liberians and the indigenous peoples by bringing more native figures into the government. However, these reforms proved unpopular among some of the Americo-Liberian population (including members of his cabinet) who felt Tolbert was undermining their position and accused him of "letting the peasants into the kitchen" while native Liberians felt the changes were happening too slowly.[36][37] The U.S.-Liberia relationship also became strained during this time as Tolbert welcomed leaders from communist nations such as China, Cuba, and the Soviet Union. Additionally, he cut ties with U.S. ally Israel during the Yom Kippur War.[30]

In 1980,Samuel Doe became the first non-Americo-Liberian head of state after he led the 1980 Liberian coup d'état, in which Tolbert was assassinated. Doe's tenure as leader of Liberia led to the destruction of the country's economy and the destabilization of the country, including the political marginalization of Americo-Liberians and eventually theFirst Liberian Civil War beginning in 1989. By the early 21st century, Liberia had been reduced to one of the most impoverished nations in the world, with a majority of the population living below the international poverty line.

There is a debate among academics about how upper-class Americo-Liberians were able to exert political power and influence greater than their population. Some academics attribute the influence of the Americo-Liberians to the consolidation of economic and social interests across the various facets of Americo-Liberian society despite the fact that some initial divisions in early Americo-Liberian society were based on state of origin in the United States, educational levels, socio-economic class, free or freedmen status, and perhaps "colorism", particularly because the first president was of mixed race, as were numerous immigrants, reflecting the nature of African-American society in theUpper South.

However, some scholars argue against the importance of colorism in early Americo-Liberian society and have noted, that during the early Republic, the Americo-Liberian political leaders had an array of skin colors and tones from very dark skin to light-skinned phenotypes reflecting African-European admixture, indicating that the theory on the importance of colorism in Americo-Liberian society is unlikely to be accurate.

It is more likely that upper-class Americo-Liberians built their power on their familiarity with American culture and economics, shared lineage, and ability to create a network of shared interests. Others believe their extensive political influence was in part due to theMasonic Order of Liberia, a fraternal organization. A marble Masonic Lodge was built in 1867 as one of Monrovia's most impressive buildings. It was considered a bastion of Americo-Liberian power and was strong enough to survive the civil war. After years of neglect after the war the Masonic order has repaired the lodge.[38]

Culture

[edit]

Americo-Liberian culture is a blend of theAfrican-American andCaribbean cultures brought to Liberia by the variousAmerican, Recaptive, andWest Indian settlers and is exhibited by the language, social norms, and architectural style of the Americo-Liberians.[citation needed]

The early African American settlers practiced Christianity, sometimes in combination with traditional African religious beliefs. They spoke an African-American Vernacular English, which developed into Liberian English.[39] English played a central role in education, governance, and communication. The indigenous languages of Liberia are also spoken by various ethnic groups, but English has been the dominant and official language since the arrival of the Americo-Liberian settlers.

Upon arrival the settlers did little to integrate into the existing native practices, instead, they established a society in Liberia that mirrored America's. In addition to modeling their political institutions after the United States, Americo-Liberians were known to prefer Western modes of dress, African-American Southern food, and followed American social norms such as monogamous relationships and class structure.[19] Furthermore, Americo-Liberians contributed to the culinary cuisine of the region by introducing American baking techniques.[citation needed]

The Americo-Liberian settlers built towns and cities with architecture reminiscent of American styles. Churches, building, and home featured a unique form of antebellum architecture and the homes of the elites often resembled American Southern plantation homes. Infrastructure projects, including roads and bridges, were also developed following American models.[40]

Americo-Liberian weddings follow the traditionalAfrican-American orAfro-Caribbean style weddings in which the bridegroom appears in alounge suit and the bride in a white wedding dress.[citation needed]

Many upper-class and influential Americo-Liberians belonged to theMasonic Order of Liberia which was established in 1867 and based in the Grand Masonic Temple inMonrovia.[41] In Liberia, particularly during the early years of the republic, the Masonic Order played a significant role in the political and social structure as it became intertwined with political power and elite networks in Liberia. Being a Mason was a veritable prerequisite for positions ofpolitical leadership in theTrue Whig Party.[41] TWP political meetings were even held in the Grand Masonic Temple, where only members could enter. Following the 1980 Liberian coup,Samuel Doe outlawed Freemasonry before lifting the ban in 1987.[42] The Masonic Temple was damaged during theFirst Liberian Civil War[43] and remained unoccupied before being restored.

Grand Masonic Temple in Monrovia Prior to the War

Education

[edit]

The Americo-Liberians arrived with varying degrees of formal and informal education. Americo-Liberians established schools and also established theUniversity of Liberia, formerly Liberia College, in addition to other higher learning institutions such asCuttington College.

The Americo-Liberians were among the first sub-Saharan Africans to qualify as medical doctors and lawyers in the United States. Prominent Americo-Liberian pioneers include Dr.Solomon Carter Fuller, a distinguishedHarvard-educated Liberian psychiatrist and physician.[44][45][46]

Several Americo-Liberians worked as teachers and taught both indigenous Liberians and fellow Americo-Liberians. Many Americo-Liberian educators made a concerted effort to educate Liberians from other ethnic groups, including through the use of the ward system.[47][48]

Religion

[edit]

The Americo-Liberians are predominantlyProtestant Christians and mainly belong to theBaptist andMethodist denominations, although some Americo-Liberians areEpiscopalians and perhaps a smaller minority adhere to theCatholic faith. Americo-Liberians introducedProtestant Christianity on a wider scale in the modern-day region of Liberia. Several Americo-Liberians served as missionaries to other ethnic groups in Liberia and were among the firstBaptist,Methodist, andEpiscopal missionaries of black African descent in Liberia.[17]

Food

[edit]

Americo-Liberian cuisine includes a variety of dishes and is a blend ofAfrican-American,Afro-Caribbean, and local indigenous Liberian rice andfoofoo dishes. Americo-Liberians introduced traditional African-American baking techniques into the modern-day nation of Liberia. Liberia remains unique for its baking traditions that are derived from the African-American immigrants to Liberia. Traditional Americo-Liberian cuisine includesAfrican-Americansoul food such as cornbread, fried chicken, and collard greens but also incorporated local African traditional dishes such as palm butter soup and rice.[49]

Dress

[edit]

Present-day Americo-Liberians, similar to other Liberians, wear both African and Western-style dress. Ethnic groups in Liberia had been accustomed to seeing European dress prior to the arrival of the Americo-Liberians, as a consequence of extensive trade with Europeans dating to the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.[citation needed]

However, the ethnic groups who inhabited Liberia did not customarily wear Western-style dress, and it was the Americo-Liberians who popularized Western-style dress including the top hat, tailcoat, lounge suit, and frock coat. Americo-Liberian women between the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries wore elaborateVictorian andEdwardian styleAmerican dresses that were fashionable among both theAfrican-American andwhite American communities in the southernUnited States. Americo-Liberian men wore top hats, frock coats, and lounge suits in addition to spats.[citation needed]

Although Americo-Liberians would continue to wear elaborate styles of dress for special occasions such as weddings, parades, and the inauguration of presidents, they adapted their styles of dress to incorporate newer Western-style fashion and elaborate African-style dresses between the early to late twentieth centuries. In the modern era, although pioneered by the Americo-Liberians, Liberians, irrespective of ethnicity, wear both African and Western-style dress.[50]

Language

[edit]

Americo-Liberians speakLiberian English and its varieties such asMerico andLiberian Settler English, all of which have been influenced byAfrican-American Vernacular English,Gullah, andBarbadian Creole. The Americo-Liberians introduced a form ofAfrican-American Vernacular English that influenced the existing pidgin English or patois that existed in the region of Liberia from the pre-colonial era. This form, calledStandard Liberian English or Liberian Settler English, continues to be spoken by descendants of the original settlers today.[39]

Architecture

[edit]
Lithograph of the former home ofJoseph Jenkins Roberts in Monrovia

Americo-Liberian architecture in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was a unique fusion of antebellum architecture from the United States blended into the African environment of Liberia. Americo-Liberian houses were a variation of different architectural styles from the American South and were built of weather-board or stone frame and had both verandahs.[citation needed]

Wealthier Americo-Liberians incorporatedantebellum southern architecture that included neoclassical and the neo-Greco-Roman architecture of the antebellum southern plantation great houses into the houses that they built in Liberia. Antebellum southern architecture incorporatedGeorgian,Neoclassical, andGreek Revival styles that are also reflected in Americo-Liberian architecture of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.[51][38]

Diaspora and legacy

[edit]

Americo-Liberian diaspora

[edit]

Following the1980 Liberian coup d'état and theFirst and theSecond Liberian Civil Wars, thousands of Americo-Liberians left the country while others were killed in the conflicts. The 1980 coup brought an end to the dominant political position that Americo-Liberians had held on Liberian society and resulted in influential Americo-Liberian individuals and families leaving the country either by being forced or voluntarily going into exile. The higher socio-economic status of Americo-Liberians also enabled them to emigrate from the country more easily compared to other ethnic groups during times of conflict. In 1991, American PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush granted Liberians immigration protection in 1991 under "temporary protected status" during the first civil war.[52] Americo-Liberians have settled predominantly in the United States in places such asMaryland,Minnesota,New York,Pennsylvania, as well as in smaller numbers in Canada and the United Kingdom. Some of the children of Americo-Liberian immigrants to the United States are known to identify themselves as African-American as opposed to Liberian and have adopted American accents and culture.[52] Although the Americo-Liberian diaspora is extensive in the United States, there remain communities of Americo-Liberians in the larger Liberian cities and towns such asMonrovia,Crozerville, andCareysburg. In 2009, it was estimated that a population of 150,000 Americo-Liberians existed within the total Liberian population of 3.5 million people.[18]

Americo-Liberian cultural legacy

[edit]

While globalization has carriedAfrican-American culture around the world, Americo-Liberians reproduced their own cultural American continuity in Liberia. Its name means "land of the free", and it is considered the most American of African countries in terms of itspolitical institutions.[17]

The Liberian constitution, structure of government, and flag resemble those of the United States. The former residences of Americo-Liberian families were built in the style ofantebellum plantation homes they may have admired in theAmerican South.[38] Their language continued to carry elements ofAfrican-American Vernacular English.[39] By many accounts, Liberians easily integrate into African-American communities. Liberian immigrants to the United States have the highest passport acceptance rates and the longest extension rates of any citizens of African nations.[51]

Although many of the upper-class Americo-Liberians left the country or were killed during the civil wars, and their houses and monuments crumbled, ordinary Liberians look to the United States for aid. In 2007,BET founderRobert Johnson called for "African Americans to support Liberia likeJewish Americans supportIsrael".[53]

Notable Americo-Liberians

[edit]
This sectionneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Americo-Liberian people" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(October 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

The Americo-Liberian or Congau ethnic group has produced several notable politicians, businessmen, and professionals including:

Politicians

[edit]

Education and writers

[edit]

Business

[edit]

Science and medicine

[edit]

American-born presidents of Liberia

[edit]

Americo-Liberians formed a cultural elite inLiberia. The followingpresidents of Liberia were born in theUnited States:

Also one Americo-Liberian president of Liberia was born in theBritish West Indies:

All subsequent presidents were born in Liberia.[55]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Americo-Liberians".BlackPast.org. 16 June 2009. Retrieved16 June 2009.They are an estimated population of 150,000 [Americo-Liberians] out of the 3.5 million people in the nation.
  2. ^abCooper, Helene,The House at Sugar Beach: In Search of a Lost African Childhood (United States: Simon and Schuster, 2008), p. 6
  3. ^Liberia: History, Geography, Government, and Culture, Infoplease.com
  4. ^"About this Collection - Maps of Liberia, 1830-1870".The Library of Congress. Retrieved1 February 2016.
  5. ^"Settlement of Liberia and Americo-Liberian Rule".PeacebuildingData.org. Harvard Humanitarian Initiative. Archived fromthe original on 11 October 2018. Retrieved7 October 2018.
  6. ^Muehlenbeck, Philip E. (2012)."Kennedy, Felix Houphouët-Boigny, William Tubman, and Conservative African Nationalism".www.academic.oup.com. pp. 141–152.doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195396096.003.0007.ISBN 978-0-19-539609-6.
  7. ^ab"President William V. S. Tubman, 1944–1971". Archived fromthe original on 16 March 2016. Retrieved31 January 2020.
  8. ^"The Americo-Liberian Community, a brief story - African American Registry".African American Registry.
  9. ^Power-Greene, Ousmane (2014).Against Wind and Tide: The African American Struggle Against the Colonization Movement. New York:New York University Press. pp. 1–10.ISBN 9781479823178.
  10. ^Key, Francis Scott (November 1836)."Mr. Key on the Colonization Society".African Repository and Colonial Journal.12 (11):339–351, at pp. 346–347 and 350–351.Neither he nor the Colonization Society called for the abolition of slavery; their mission instead focused solely on sending freed blacks to Africa. This was one of the reasons that few abolitionists had any use for the society.
  11. ^Grant 2008, p. 383.
  12. ^"Arkansas' connection to the back to Africa movement | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette".www.nwaonline.com. 18 July 2022. Retrieved11 July 2025.
  13. ^Society, American Colonization; Bonds, Henry; Burke, William; Burke, Rosabella (23 July 2010)."Personal Stories and ACS New Directions - The African-American Mosaic Exhibition | Exhibitions (Library of Congress)".www.loc.gov. Retrieved11 July 2025.
  14. ^abcTindall, George (July 1952). "The Liberian Exodus of 1878".The South Carolina Historical Magazine.53 (2):133–145.
  15. ^"Liberia: The Promised Land".transcript. Journeyman Pictures. February 1997. Retrieved23 June 2012.
  16. ^Thompsell, A (4 April 2020)."The Foundation of Liberia".History Today.
  17. ^abcWegmann, Andrew (5 May 2010).Christian community and the development of an Americo-Liberian identity, 1824–1878 (Thesis).doi:10.31390/gradschool_theses.525.
  18. ^ab"Americo-Liberians •". 16 June 2009.
  19. ^abAkpan, M. B. (1973)."Black Imperialism: Americo-Liberian Rule over the African Peoples of Liberia, 1841-1964".Canadian Journal of African Studies / Revue Canadienne des Études Africaines.7 (2):217–236.doi:10.2307/483540.ISSN 0008-3968.JSTOR 483540.
  20. ^Young, Neely (2017).Trans-Atlantic sojourners: The Story of an Americo-Liberian Family. University of Virginia Press. p. 52.ISBN 9780977722068.
  21. ^""J. Lincoln Porte of Bassa Dies",Liberian Observer, March 23, 2006". Archived fromthe original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved14 June 2023.
  22. ^Negro Year Book: An Annual Encyclopedia of the Negro ... 1947,1952. Negro year Book Publishing Company. 1916. p. 187.
  23. ^Swanson:177-79
  24. ^Harris, Sheldon H.Paul Cuffee: Black America and the African Return. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1972.
  25. ^"The foundation of Liberia".www.historytoday.com. 14 June 2023.
  26. ^The Republic of Liberia Constitution
  27. ^"Liberia Country Study: The True Whig Ascendancy" Global Security
  28. ^Rapport de l'Unesco sur l'alphabétisation (1965-1967) p.28www.unesdoc.unesco.org.(french) Retrieved November 20, 2013.
  29. ^"Literacy, 1965-1967", United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), 1968, p. 28
  30. ^ab"Global Connections . Liberia . U.S. Policy".www.pbs.org.
  31. ^Agbude, Godwyns Ade'; Ojo, Emmanuel Olatunde (2014). "An Exploration of the Historical and the Political Backgrounds of Liberia".AFRREV IJAH: An International Journal of Arts and Humanities.1 (3): 190.
  32. ^Tubman, W V.S.,Open Door Policy, William V.S. Tubman Papers. Department of Internal Affairs, The Executive Branch Administrative Files, Liberian Government Papers. Bloomington, IN: Liberian Collections, Indiana University Libraries, 2008.
  33. ^Otayek, René. "Libéria,"Encyclopédie Universalis, 1999 Edition.
  34. ^Tubman, W V.S.,National Unification Policy, William V.S. Tubman Papers. Department of Internal Affairs, The Executive Branch Administrative Files, Liberian Government Papers. Bloomington, IN: Liberian Collections, Indiana University Libraries, 2008.
  35. ^Muehlenbeck, Philip E. (2012)."Kennedy, Felix Houphouët-Boigny, William Tubman, and Conservative African Nationalism".www.academic.oup.com. pp. 141–152.doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195396096.003.0007.ISBN 978-0-19-539609-6.
  36. ^Tolbert, Richard (26 May 2009)."Liberia: William R. Tolbert - 'In The Pantheon Of Great African Leaders'".AllAfrica.Com. Retrieved11 November 2015.
  37. ^"Pres. Tolbert Says 'No' To Evil Tradition: Vows to Veto Any Amendment To Keep Him In Office". [Monrovia]Sunday Express 1976-03-21: 1/2.
  38. ^abc"For Liberians, old ties to US linger",The Christian Science Monitor, 8 August 2003.
  39. ^abcSingler, John Victor (2012). "Liberian Settler English".The Mouton World Atlas of Variation in English. pp. 358–368.doi:10.1515/9783110280128.358.ISBN 978-3-11-027988-7.
  40. ^Herman, Bernard L (22 February 1989). "End Paper: Americo-Liberian Folk Architecture".The Chronicle of Higher Education.35 (24): B64.ProQuest 214739835.
  41. ^ab"Monrovia - Masonic Grand Lodge".www.globalsecurity.org. Retrieved29 December 2024.
  42. ^Wauther, Claude (September 1997)."A strange inheritance".Monde Diplo. Retrieved13 June 2015.
  43. ^Old Ruling Elite Making a Comeback in Liberia, Tim Sullivan,Associated Press, September 29, 2001.
  44. ^Lucy Ozarin, M.D.,"Solomon Carter Fuller: First Black Psychiatrist",Psychiatric News, September 6, 2002, Volume 37, Number 17, p. 19.
  45. ^Gray, Madison (12 January 2007)."Black History Month: Unsung Heroes".Time.
  46. ^"The role of education in the rise and fall of the Americp-Luberians of West Africa".www.scholarworks.gsu.edu.
  47. ^"The Atlantic Monthly".www.theatlantic.com.
  48. ^Nettles, Darryl, Liberia: Study of Liberian Government and Its Relationship to American Government (April 30, 2008). The International Journal of Interdisciplinary Social Sciences, Volume 2, Issue 4, pp.1-6, 2008, 2015 National Conference of Black Political Scientists (NCOBPS) Annual Meeting, Available at SSRN:https://ssrn.com/abstract=2524060
  49. ^"Americo-Liberian Thanksgiving".www.tantvstudios.com. 3 November 2023.
  50. ^Africa and the West: Intellectual Responses to European Culture. Edited by Curtin, Philip D.. Madison, Wisconsin, 1972. University of Wisconsin Press.
  51. ^ab"The Americo-Liberian community: A Brief Story".www.aaregistry.org.
  52. ^ab"Her ancestors were enslaved in the U.S. Now a Trump decision could lead to her deportation to Africa. - The Washington Post".The Washington Post.
  53. ^Robert L. Johnson,"Liberia's Moment of Opportunity",The Washington Post, 13 May 2007
  54. ^"'Goldfinger' and the presidency".The Economist. 17 January 2014.ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved23 October 2019.
  55. ^"25 years after his demise, Samuel Doe continues to cast a long shadow across Liberian politics".African Arguments. 9 September 2015. Retrieved30 November 2015.

Sources

[edit]
  • Grant, Colin (2008).Negro with a Hat: The Rise and Fall of Marcus Garvey. London: Jonathan Cape.ISBN 978-0-09-950145-9.

External links

[edit]
Africa
Asia
East
South
Southeast
West
Europe
North America
Oceania
South America
See also
History
Culture
Notable people
Education, science
and technology
Religion
Political movements
Civic and economic
groups
Sports
Athletic associations
and conferences
Ethnic subdivisions
Demographics
Languages
By state/city
Diaspora
Lists
Geography
Americas/
Latin America
Caribbean
Central
America
North
America
South
America
Europe
(Blacks)
Middle East
Asia and
Oceania
Atlantic
Secondary
Afro-American
diaspora
Africa
Europe
Asia and
Oceania
Related
topics
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Americo-Liberian_people&oldid=1310483387"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp