Joseph Jenkins Roberts, First President of Liberia
Prominent Americans such as Henry Clay,
Daniel Webster, and
John Randolph
were among the best known members of ACS. Former President Thomas
Jefferson publicly supported the organization's goals, and President
James Madison
arranged public funding for the Society. The motives for joining the society
were vast as a range of people from abolitionists to slaveholders counted
themselves members. On the other hand, many abolitionists, both black and white,
ultimately rejected the notion that it was impossible for the races to integrate
and therefore did not support the idea of an African-American colony in Africa.
Still, the ACS had powerful support and its colonization project gained
momentum.In 1818 the Society sent two representatives to West Africa to find a suitable location for the colony, but they were unable to persuade local tribal leaders to sell any territory. In 1820, 88 free black settlers and 3 society members sailed for Sierra Leone. Before departing they had signed a constitution requiring that an agent of the Society administer the settlement under U.S. laws. They found shelter on Scherbo Island off the west coast of Africa, but many died from malaria. In 1821, a U.S. Navy vessel resumed the search for a place of permanent settlement in what is now Liberia. Once again the local leaders resisted American attempts to purchase land. This time, the Navy officer in charge, Lieutenant Robert Stockton, coerced a local ruler to sell a strip of land to the Society. The Scherbo Island group moved to this new location and other blacks from the United States joined them. The local tribes continually attacked the new colony and in 1824, the settlers built fortifications for protection. In that same year, the settlement was named Liberia and its capital Monrovia, in honor of President James Monroe who had procured more U.S. Government money for the project.
Lieutenant Robert Stockton
Other colonization societies sponsored by individual states purchased land and
sent settlers to areas nearMonrovia. Africans removed
from slave ships by the U.S. Navy after the abolition of the trans-Atlantic
slave trade were also put ashore in Liberia. In 1838 most of these settlements,
with up to 20,000 people, combined into one organization. The settlers attempted
to retain the culture they had brought from the United States and for the most
part did not integrate with the native societies. Today, about 5 percent of the
population of Liberia is descended from these settlers.The U.S. Government had provided Liberia some financial support, but Washington expected Monrovia to move toward self-sufficiency. Commerce was the first economic sector to grow in the colony. However, French and British traders continually encroached upon Liberian territory. As it was not a sovereign state, it was hard-pressed to defend its economic interests. The U.S. Government lent some diplomatic support, but Britain and France had territories in West Africa and were better poised to act. As a result, in 1847, Liberia declared independence from the American Colonization Society in order to establish a sovereign state and create its own laws governing commerce.
Despite protests by the affected British companies, London was the first to extend recognition to the new republic, signing a treaty of commerce and friendship with Monrovia in 1848. Because of fears of the impact this might have on the issue of slavery in the United States, Washington did not recognize the nation it had played a role in creating. In the meantime, a mass exodus of African-Americans to Liberia never materialized. Though President Abraham Lincoln was open to promoting the idea, several abolitionists in his cabinet opposed it, some for moral considerations and others for the more practical reason of retaining sufficient labor and military forces for the future. The United States finally established diplomatic relations with Liberia in 1862, and continued to maintain strong ties until the 1990s.