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This Our Dark Country: The American Settlers of Liberia
 
 
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This Our Dark Country: The American Settlers of Liberia [Hardcover]

Catherine Reef (Author)

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Book Description

10 and up5 and up
In the early 19th century, the American Colonization Society was formed with the sole intent of creating a colony for free blacks and former slaves. Both blacks and whites took passionate stands either for or against this proposal. Despite the controversy, the first group of settlers landed on the west coast of Africa in 1822. They faced numerous problems arising from the unfamiliar climate, hostile encounters with the indigenous people, and the failure of other nations to recognize their independence, but they managed to build a nation, naming it Liberia, for liberty. Today, partly because of these difficult beginnings, Liberia is a country plagued by unrest.

In this accessible and well-written book, award-winning author Catherine Reef presents a significant but as of yet relatively unexplored chapter in African American history. Her account is filled with excerpts from diaries and letters of the settlers and richly illustrated with period photographs and prints, many of which have never been published before. Photo gallery, endnotes, bibliography, index.

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This Our Dark Country: The American Settlers of Liberia + History of Liberia + The House at Sugar Beach: In Search of a Lost African Childhood
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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 5 Up-Reef presents this biography of the African nation from its birth in the early 19th century to the present day with the same attention to primary sources and visual materials as she did in her biographies of Sigmund Freud (2001) and Walt Whitman (1995, both Clarion). This account of the country's complex history is presented chronologically, making generous use of letters, diaries, photographs, and prints. In 1816, a group of wealthy and influential whites founded what became the American Colonization Society. The main purpose was to find a way to relocate free blacks to their own colony. The underlying motivations and the complicated arguments of the time for and against this volatile issue are discussed in great detail, taking care to explain not only the ignorance and prejudice that shaped the decisions, but also the hope and promise that relocation held for many. Reef does not hold back the ugly truths in Liberia's history, including the abhorrent treatment of people native to the region as well as recaptured slaves who were delivered to Liberia against their will. Although the chronology is occasionally choppy, jumping between different groups of settlers and the complicated state of affairs in America, the foundations of this seldom-explored topic are readily understood.
Genevieve Gallagher, Orange County Public Library, VA
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Gr. 7-12. This photo-essay is a grim, disturbing history of Liberia, first in 1822 when it was an American colony for free blacks and former slaves and later as an independent nation. It's an account of racism and betrayal in the U.S and in West Africa, with no happy ending. Reef draws on letters and speeches to show that the whites, including Abraham Lincoln, saw the deportation of blacks as a way to solve racial problems in the U.S. In contrast, few African American leaders supported colonization: Frederick Douglass termed it the hateful, unchristian "twin-sister of slavery," and he called the U.S. the black American's native land. Just as ugly is the Americo-Liberian colonists' prejudice toward the local people: the new settlers regarded the Africans as uncivilized and inferior and denied them civil rights. Reef tells it in clear, plain style, always showing the connections between the two homelands. The handsome, very spacious design, marked by thick, quality paper and stirring black-and-white photos (many of them published here for the first time), makes the hard facts accessible, and many readers, adults as well as teenagers, will want to use the meticulous endnotes to find out more about the politics and the individuals in the portraits. A must for history collections. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Two long months, and nothing to see but the ocean. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, African Americans, American Colonization Society, Sierra Leone, Cape Mesurado, Paul River, West Africa, Jehudi Ashmun, Joseph Jenkins Roberts, North America, South Carolina, Daniel Coker, Paul Cuffe, Peyton Skipwith, Matilda Skipwith, Sao Boso, Cape Palmas, Charles Taylor, Divine Providence, Thomas Jefferson, Troubled Land, Bushrod Washington, District of Columbia, John Hartwell Cocke, King George
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