|
The Republic of Liberia
The History of Liberia from this point on
assumes a peculiar interest. The capacity and capabilities
of the Negro are subjected to a crucial test. He is left
fully freed from the control or influence of an alien race,
in possession of a borrowed civilization, and of a borrowed
political system of an advanced type, dependent on popular
intelligence for its very existence. Can he maintain his
position? Will he make further progress, developing along
lines peculiar to his race and environment, and spreading a
new civilization among the adjacent tribes? Or is he to
lapse helplessly back into his original condition to be
absorbed into the dense masses of surrounding barbarism? The
question is a vital one. The solution of weighty problems in
large part depends upon the answer.
The form of government was, as has been seen, closely copied
from that of the United States. There is the same tripartite
division executive, legislative and judicial. The President
is elected every two years, on the first Tuesday in May. He
is commander-in-chief of the army and navy; makes treaties
with the concurrence of two-thirds of the Senate, with whose
advice he also appoints all public officers not otherwise
provided for by law.
The legislative authority consists of a Senate of two
members from each county, elected for four years, and a
House of Representatives holding office for two years; four
members being apportioned to Montserado county, three to
Bassa, one to each other county, with one additional
representative for each 10,000 inhabitants. The judicial
power was vested in a Supreme Court with original
jurisdiction in all cases affecting ambassadors and consuls
and where the Republic is a party, and appellate
jurisdiction in all other cases; and in subordinate courts
to be established by the Legislature.
The majority of the colonists had been long accustomed to
similar institutions in the land of their captivity, and the
new machinery of government was soon running smoothly.
Within the little State peace and prosperity prevailed; its
foreign relations, on the contrary, were involved in the
greatest uncertainty. It had indeed severed the leading
strings which bound it to its natural protector, and stood
forth in the assertion of its independence. But it was
wholly unsupported and unrecognized. The dispute with
England, whose protégé on the north looked with jealousy and
distrust on Liberian policy, remained unsettled. The danger
was real and pressing. Clearly recognition must be sought
and an international footing obtained without delay.
President Roberts accordingly determined to go abroad, and
as at once chief magistrate and ambassador appeal to the
leading courts of Europe. His first effort, however, was
directed toward obtaining alliance with the United States.
In America his reception was enthusiastic. But the delicacy
with which the dissension on the slavery question made it
necessary to handle every subject remotely bearing on that
bone of contention, prevented him from obtaining even the
formal recognition of Liberia. Roberts then determined by
pleading his country's cause in England to arouse compassion
in the heart of the power from which there was most to fear.
Here substantial rewards met his efforts. His prepossessing
personality, tact, and statesmanlike qualities won many
friends.[12] With their support the recognition of Liberia
as a sovereign State was soon obtained, together with a
commercial treaty which left nothing to be desired. In
further evidence of kindly sentiment the English Government
presented the young Republic with a trim little cutter of
four guns for coast protection. In France and Belgium
similar generous treatment was experienced, and Roberts was
conveyed home in triumph on the British man-of-war Amazon.
A second visit of Roberts to England, in 1852, four years
later, to adjust disputes with traders who claimed certain
tracts of land, was equally successful, and France, under
Louis Napoleon, presented him with arms and uniforms for the
equipment of the Liberian troops. In 1852 Prussia also
extended her friendship, soon followed by Brazil and the
free Hanse towns. In 1862, the necessity for cautious
dealing with the race question having passed away, the
United States government at last formally recognized the
Republic, and Holland, Sweden, Norway, and Hayti formed
treaties in 1864. The consent of Portugal and Denmark in
1865, and of Austria in 1867, brought Liberia into treaty
relations with nearly all the leading commercial nations.
The internal condition of the Republic during the first
decade was one of unprecedented growth and prosperity. The
Colonization Society in America was in a flourishing
condition, and gained friends on every side. Its receipts
for the ten years were not far short of a million dollars;
and this generous means permitted the transportation, in the
same period, of over five thousand chosen emigrants. The
accession of so large a force of laborers added a new
stimulus to the activity awakened by self government. Many
new settlements were formed and all the older ones received
an infusion of new strength. Agriculture, especially the
cultivation of the great staples, rice, coffee, sugar and
cotton, made rapid progress; while commerce was stimulated
by the establishment of regular monthly lines of steamers
between England and various points on the coast, the first
of which was started in 1853. The enterprise of Holland soon
added still other lines. Communication with America was at
the same time facilitated by the regular trips of a large
vessel built for the purpose, the gift to the Society of Mr.
John C. Stevens of Maryland.
At the close of his fourth administration President Roberts
decided to decline re-election. For eight years he had been
at the helm, and had brought the ship of state safely
through her first perilous voyages. And now while the waters
seemed smooth and skies serene he thought it best to entrust
her guidance to other hands. The election took place in May,
1855, amidst scenes of political strife and party violence
at once intense and short lived. It resulted in the choice
of Stephen A. Benson for President and Beverly P. Yates for
Vice-President. Both were distinctly the product of Liberian
training. Benson was brought over, at the age of six years,
by his parents in 1822, and received his entire education in
the country. He became a successful merchant and entered
political life in the wake of Roberts. As chief magistrate
he showed himself a practical and efficient man, with the
interests of the country at heart.
One of the leading objects of Benson's policy was the
improvement and elevation of the aborigines; but his designs
were in part frustrated by the outbreak of a stubborn and
exhausting war with the native tribes dwelling about the
Sinou River. Details must be omitted for want of space; but
this war devastated four settlements and sadly depleted the
national treasury. It was soon afterwards that the Maryland
colony at Cape Palmas was almost overwhelmed in a similar
native uprising, and united with the Republic, as elsewhere
narrated.
A widespread scarcity of provisions followed these wars,
which gave rise to much apprehension. But this eventually
did good in giving new emphasis to the fact that main
reliance must be placed upon agriculture rather than trade.
The great resources of Liberia were shown at a National
Fair, held in December, 1858; premiums were awarded for the
best specimens of coffee, arrow root, cotton, rice, ginger,
potatoes, oxen, sheep, swine, turkeys, butter, preserves;
cloth and socks of African cotton; boots; soap and candles
from palm oil; ploughs, hoes and other implements from
native iron and home manufacture; farina; chocolate; planks,
shingles, cabinet work, and many other products of Liberian
agriculture and industry.
President Benson was reelected without opposition, and
entered upon his second term in January, 1858. A fresh
outbreak of the slave trade in this year was followed by a
number of captures by U.S. cruisers, giving rise to the old
difficulty in regard to the disposition of the cargoes. The
Act of March 3, 1819, which had long fallen into disuse, was
revived, and a contract made with the Colonization Society
to transport and maintain for a twelvemonth the recaptured
Africans already on the Government's hands. The substitution
of small, swift steamers for the craft of older days so
increased the efficiency of the navy that captures were made
in rapid succession. Within two months 1,432 Africans were
landed at Key West. This state of affairs made further
legislation immediately necessary. Congress, acting upon the
suggestion of a Presidential message, passed an Act amending
the Act of March 3, 1819, which empowered the President to
form a five-years' contract with "any person or persons,
society or societies," to receive in Africa and care for the
unfortunates rescued from slavers, for the period of one
year, and at a price of $100 per capita. Commanders of
cruisers were to be instructed to land their captures
directly upon the coast of Liberia whenever practicable;
immediate measures were to be taken for removing to Africa
those already at Key West; and the sum of $250,000 was
appropriated to defray expenses.
Three large vessels were at once chartered and stored with
$60,000 worth of supplies; with the least possible delay the
suffering crowd at Key West was transported to Liberia; but
only 893 survived the passage. The effect of the new orders
issued to the U.S. slave squadron was soon felt in Liberia.
On August 8, 1860, the Storm King unexpectedly arrived with
a cargo of 619; within twenty-four hours the Erie, prize to
the steamer Mohican, followed with 867. Tidings came that
still larger numbers were en route. The effect of this
inundation of liberated barbarians upon the small civilized
community, already surrounded by savage swarms, may be
imagined. The greatest consternation prevailed, and
excitement rose to fever heat. President Benson wrote to the
Society that great evils would result unless means were
liberally supplied, and entire control of the new arrivals
given to the Liberian Government. The Society accordingly
transferred the execution of its contracts to that
government, and placed at its disposal all money received by
their terms. This action seems to have allayed the worst
apprehensions; and although over 4,000 recaptured Africans
were landed within the space of two months, no harm seems to
have resulted. They made rapid progress in civilization,
becoming assimilated to and in many cases intermarrying with
the colonists; from among them arose some of the best
citizens of the Republic.
President Benson's policy in regard to the natives was
successful in bringing many tribes much more closely under
the influence of the government. A number of steps were
taken toward actively spreading among them the arts of
civilized life, improving their methods of agriculture, and
checking the evils of intertribal warfare and of
superstition. A poll tax of one dollar a year was levied on
each male adult, to be collected from the chiefs of the
several districts; with a part of the funds thus raised
schools for popular instruction were to be established
throughout the country.
The control and oversight by the central authority of so
many small settlements scattered over a large range of coast
had been greatly facilitated by the small armed cutter
presented in 1848 by the English government. This was now
found to be hopelessly out of repair, and was generously
replaced by the donor with another and somewhat larger
vessel the Quail, an armed schooner of 123 tons. About the
same time the New York Society sent over a small steamer to
provide rapid and regular communication between points along
the coast. In honor of a liberal benefactor it was called
the "Seth Grosvenor."
The third and fourth administrations of Benson passed
uneventfully, and in January, 1864, Daniel B. Warner, who,
the May previous, had been elected, succeeded him. Warner
was born near Baltimore, in 1812, and emigrated in 1823. The
Civil War in America, with the sanguine hopes it aroused in
the breast of the Negro, caused a rapid falling off in the
number of applicants for transportation to Liberia. The
income of the Society for once exceeded the demand upon it,
and several good investments were made. Liberia, however,
was demanding more cultivators. A supply came from an
unexpected quarter. Two societies were organized by thrifty
negroes of Barbadoes, to return to Africa and make their
home in the new Republic. Agents were sent out, and sympathy
with their enterprise enlisted. The Liberian Government
issued a proclamation of cordial invitation, and the
Legislature appropriated $4,000 to assist the colonists,
increasing in their case the allotment of land from ten to
twenty-five acres for each family. The Colonization Society
devoted $10,000 to their aid, and dispatched an experienced
agent to take charge of the expedition. A large vessel was
chartered, and after a pleasant voyage of thirty-three days,
without the loss of a single life, 346 emigrants were landed
at Monrovia. They proved a welcome and valuable acquisition,
many being mechanics and skilled laborers.
After the close of the war, the alluring prospect of "ten
acres and a mule" having failed our freedmen, the Society
again received numerous applications for passage. The M. C.
Stevens had been sold during the period of depression;
another and larger vessel, the Golconda, was therefore
purchased and fitted for an emigrant ship. During her first
four voyages she safely carried over 1,684 persons.
In January, 1867, the semi centennial of the founding of the
Colonization Society was celebrated in Washington. From the
review of the fifty years' work it appeared that the sum of
$2,558,907 had been expended, exclusive of outlay by the
Maryland Society, and of the large sums expended by the
United States Government. 11,909 emigrants had been sent
over, in 147 vessels; of these 4,541 were born free, 344
purchased freedom, and 5,957 were emancipated for the
purpose of going to Liberia. Besides these, 1,227 had
been settled by the Maryland Society, and 5,722 recaptured
Africans had been sent back by the United States Government.
In January, 1868, James S. Payne entered upon the office of
President. He is another example of Liberian training. Born
in Richmond, Va., in 1819, he was taken before his tenth
year to Monrovia by his father. One of the leading purposes
of his administration was the establishment of closer
intercourse with the great tribes of the interior. These
people, the Mandingoes especially, were much further
advanced in civilization than the coast tribes, who formed a
barricade between them and Liberia, and offered determined
opposition to any attempt to penetrate inland. They feared
to lose their advantageous position as middlemen, and
succeeded in keeping anything but the vaguest rumors about
the interior from reaching the colonists. In 1869 Benjamin
Anderson, a young Liberian appointed by the Government, and
provided with liberal financial aid by a wealthy citizen of
New York, accomplished an extremely interesting journey to a
point over 200 miles from the coast.[14]
With great difficulty and the expense of a small fortune in
presents to captious and rapacious chiefs, he succeeded in
making his way from point to point along a course roughly
corresponding to that of the St. Paul's River. The route lay
through dense forests, along paths worn by many generations
of native feet. The ascent was steady; at 100 miles from the
coast the elevation was 1,311 feet, and toward the end of
the journey it rose to 2,257 feet. All along the way the
population was dense, and showed a steady improvement in
character, civilization and hospitality as the coast was
left behind. The object of his journey, Musardu, the chief
city of the Western Mandingoes, was at length reached, just
on the edge of the primeval forest. Beyond lies a vast
plateau covered with tall grass, showing here and there a
solitary palm, and stretching away to the head waters of the
Niger. The climate is wholesome, the air bracing, and the
soil fertile.
The city proved large and populous; the houses were small
and of a monotonous uniformity, bewilderingly placed without
apparent arrangement. The whole was surrounded with a huge
mud wall, which served not only as a defense against foes,
but to keep out wild beasts, especially elephants, herds of
which were frequently seen near the town. The inhabitants
were strict Mussulmans, and were much further advanced in
civilization than even the most intelligent tribes through
which he had passed. They had an extensive commerce with the
interior, caravans coming from places as distant as
Timbuctoo. Good horses were plentiful, and there were
evidences of the existence of valuable gold mines. Anderson
was received with profuse hospitality; they appeared to be
delighted with the idea of opening trade with Liberia, and
promised gold, ivory and various commodities in exchange for
European goods.
Another journey with the same general results was
subsequently made by another citizen, to Pulaka, about one
hundred miles to the southeast of Monrovia. These
explorations are of great interest. They show the belt of
coast occupied by Liberia to be merely the entrance to a
high and healthful interior of great fertility and unlimited
resources, over which the Republic has power to expand
indefinitely.
President Payne's successor was Edward James Roye, who was
duly inaugurated January 3, 1870. Born in Newark, Ohio, in
1815, he had passed through the public schools of his native
town, afterwards attending the college at Athens, Ohio, and
Oberlin. He went to Liberia in 1846, becoming a prosperous
merchant and politician. From 1865 to 1868 he held the post
of Chief Justice. Roye came into office at a time when a
rage for internal improvements possessed the country; and
with this spirit he was in full sympathy. His inaugural
outlines a bold and ambitious policy. The resources of the
Treasury were entirely inadequate to his extensive projects,
and in an evil moment the Legislature passed an Act
authorizing the negotiation of a loan of $500,000. The loan
was placed in London on terms which netted only £85 per bond
of £100, redeemable at par in 15 years and bearing interest
at 7 per cent. The amount thus offered was further reduced
by the requirement that the first two years' interest should
be paid in advance. From the remainder were deducted various
agents' commissions and fees, until at length the principal
reached Monrovia sadly reduced in amount, not over $200,000.
And this soon disappeared without any visible result. It is
an old story; but in Liberia's case it was particularly
disastrous. For with her little revenue, rarely exceeding
$100,000, it soon became impossible to pay the $35,000
yearly interest on a debt for which she had practically
received not a single advantage. And this accumulating at
compound interest has reached a magnitude absolutely
crushing. So desperate is her financial condition that many
believe inevitable the fate which croaking prophets have
long foretold, and against which she has struggled bravely
absorption by England.
Serious as were the more remote effects of the financial
blunder just considered, its immediate consequences brought
upon the country a crisis which might have resulted in civil
war. Great dissatisfaction with the negotiation of the loan
prevailed. The Administration was severely criticized;
serious accusations were brought against it. While the
excitement was at fever heat matters were complicated by an
attempt of the Administration to prolong its hold of office,
which precipitated the threatened outbreak. For some years a
Constitutional Amendment had been under consideration,
lengthening the term of President and members of the
Legislature. The measure had been submitted to the people,
and twice voted upon; but the result was a subject of
dispute. Roye and his party maintained that it had been duly
carried and was a part of the organic law of the land; and
that as a consequence his term did not expire until January,
1874. A proclamation was issued forbidding the coming
biennial elections to be held.
This action at once aroused violent opposition. A strong
party declared that the amendment had not been carried; and
in any event could not be construed to apply to the present
incumbent. The proclamation was disregarded; the polls
opened on the accustomed day; and the veteran Joseph J.
Roberts, aptly called the epitome of Liberian history, was
elected by large majorities.
Far from being subdued by the decided expression of popular
will Roye and his supporters, with the spirit of the
decemvirs of old, determined to maintain power at any
hazard. Roberts's election was declared illegal, and of no
effect. Throughout the summer the two parties stood at
daggers drawn. At length the increasing strength of the
opposition encouraged the thought of removing the President
from office. The legal method of impeachment seemed far too
slow and uncertain for the temper of the times. An excited
convention was held in Monrovia, October 26, 1871, at which
a "Manifesto" was adopted decreeing his deposition. A few
extracts disclose its character:
"President Roye has, contrary to the Constitution,
proclaimed himself President for four years, although
elected for only two years.
"He has distributed arms and munitions of war, and has not
ceased his efforts to procure armed men to crush the
liberties of the people.
"He has contracted a foreign loan contrary to the law made
and provided; and without an act of appropriation by the
Legislature he has with his officers been receiving the
proceeds of that loan.
"Every effort to induce him to desist from his
unconstitutional course has been unavailing. Threats and
entreaties have been alike lost upon him. He has turned a
deaf ear to the remoteness from all the counties of the
Republic:
"Therefore, on the 26th day of October in the year of our
Lord 1871, and in the twenty-fifth year of the Independence
of the Republic, the sovereign people of Liberia did by
their resolutions in the city of Monrovia, joined to the
resolutions from the other counties of the Republic, depose
President E. J. Roye from his high office of President of
Liberia; and did decree that the Government shall be
provisionally conducted by a Chief Executive Committee of
three members, and by the chiefs of Departments until the
arrival of the constitutional officer at the seat of
Government."
Before the party of the Administration could recover from
the shock of this action, President Roye and his Secretaries
of State and of the Treasury were arrested and thrown into
prison a coup d'état which made his opponents undisputed
masters of the situation. The appointed Committee took
charge of affairs; the excitement died away with a rapidity
characteristic of Liberian politics, and in January, 1872,
Roberts was triumphantly inaugurated. Roye died in prison
soon afterward.
A reign of peace and prosperity followed under Roberts,
interrupted toward the end of another term, to which he was
elected, by a severe war with the Grebo tribe near Cape
Palmas. Limited space will prevent detailed consideration of
the later history of the Republic. Payne was elected to a
second term in 1876. A. W. Gardiner was Chief Executive for
three successive terms, from 1878-1884; and H. R. W.
Johnson, a native born Liberian, son of the famous pioneer
Elijah Johnson, was made President in 1884. The recent years
of the Republic have not brought an increased tide of
immigration, nor any marked progress. The diminished
interest in colonization felt in the United States so
crippled the finances of the Society that few immigrants
have been sent in the last decade. That large numbers of
Negroes are willing, even anxious to go, is shown by the
lists of the Society, which has adopted the policy of aiding
only those who can pay a part of their passage. Several
instances of the formation of societies among the Negroes
themselves to provide for their own transportation have
occurred. In South Carolina the "Liberia Joint Stock
Steamship Company" was formed, which succeeded in purchasing
a vessel and sending over one expedition of 274 emigrants.
The company was unfortunate and failed financially before
another attempt could be made. In Arkansas a large secret
Society for the same object was formed, several hundred
members of which made their way to New York and prevailed
upon the Colonization Society to give them passage.
The culmination of a dispute with Great Britain over the
north-western boundary of Liberia is perhaps the most
interesting topic of her recent history. The boundaries of
the Republic were never very definitely marked out, as her
territory grew by gradual settlement and purchase from
native chiefs. Even today there is no hard and fast interior
border line; the country extends back indefinitely from the
coast, new land being taken up as settlement proceeds. In
1849 the coast line acquired in this way extended from the
San Pedro River on the south-east to Cape Mount, the extreme
settlement on the north-west. Between 1849 and 1852 various
purchases were made from the natives covering some fifty
miles more of the north-western seaboard. These purchases
extended to She Bar, very near Sherbro Island, and were
confirmed by formal deeds from chiefs of the local tribes.
The conditions of the deeds bound Liberia to establish
schools in the districts ceded, and to guarantee the
protection, peace and safety of the natives. If now a few
settlements had been made in this territory all future
trouble would have been avoided; but all available energy
was needed for intensive development, and the newly acquired
territory was left un-colonized. In the course of time
English traders established themselves within this district,
who refused to recognize Liberia's jurisdiction, and who
smuggled in large quantities of goods in bold defiance of
the revenue laws. As early as 1866 correspondence with the
British Government was opened; and Liberia's jurisdiction
was more than once virtually recognized. Matters were
complicated by the outbreak of disturbances among the
natives, in quelling which the Republic was obliged to use
military force a course which resulted in the destruction of
property belonging to the English traders. Claims were at
once brought against Liberia through the English Government
to a large aggregate amount. Holding Liberia liable for
damages received in the territory was a practical admission
of her jurisdiction. Nothing was accomplished until 1871,
when Lord Granville proposed to President Roye, who was then
in England, to compromise on the River Solyma as the limit
of the Republic. This is about the middle of the disputed
territory. Roye weakly agreed, and this agreement is known
as the Protocol of 1871. It was not ratified by the Senate.
The tact of President Roberts staved off the crisis for some
time; but at length the English Foreign Office demanded a
settlement, and a commission of two from each State and an
arbitrator appointed by the President of the United States
met on the ground. Every possible delay and impediment was
resorted to by the British commissioners, who further
refused to submit the points disputed to the umpire. Of
course, no agreement was reached.
The situation remained unchanged until 1882. On March 20
four British men-of-war silently entered the harbor, and Sir
A. E. Havelock, Governor of Sierra Leone, came ashore.
President Gardiner was intimidated into acceding to the
demand that the boundary should be fixed at the Manna River,
only fifteen miles from Cape Mount. But when this "Draft
Convention," as it was called, came before the Senate for
ratification, it was indignantly repudiated. At the next
regular meeting of the Legislature in December, a resolution
refusing to ratify the Draft Convention was passed, and a
copy sent to Havelock. It elicited the reply:
"Her Majesty's Government cannot in any case recognize any
rights on the part of Liberia to any portions of the
territories in dispute," followed by the peremptory
announcement that "Her Majesty's Government consider that
they are relieved from the necessity of delaying any longer
to ratify an agreement made by me with the Gallinas, Solyma,
and Manna River chiefs on the 30th of March, 1882, whereby
they ceded to Her Majesty the coast line of their
territories up to the right bank of the Manna River."
Liberia made a last feeble effort. A "Protest" was drawn up
and sent to the various powers with whom she stood in treaty
relations of course, without result. The President of the
United States replied at once, counseling acquiescence.
Nothing else was possible. The Senate authorized the
President to accept the terms dictated, and the "Draft
Convention" was signed November 11, 1885. On April 26, 1888,
Sir Samuel Rowe visited Monrovia and formally exchanged
ratifications. Thus once more strength proved triumphant;
Liberia's boundary was set at the Manna River, and Sierra
Leone, which had possessed but a few hills and swamps, was
given a valuable coast line.
History of Liberia, 1891
History of
LiberiaHome | African
American Genealogy |
History of Liberia
|
|