
This work offers a compact yet thoughtful survey of Liberia’s early years, tracing how a small strip of West‑African coast became the stage for a bold social experiment. Drawing on years of research, the author sketches the colony’s origins, its founding settlers, and the challenges they faced from both the environment and surrounding peoples. The narrative highlights the tension between optimism about self‑government and the skepticism of contemporary observers, setting the scene for a deeper exploration of the nation’s formative decades.
Through vivid portraits of figures such as Elijah Johnson, John Russwurm and Joseph Jenkins Roberts, the book illustrates how individual resolve helped shape a fledgling republic. It also engages with the broader debate of the era—whether imported institutions could thrive in a different cultural context—and reflects on what Liberia’s development might reveal about larger questions of race, civilization, and future African progress. The study remains anchored in its period, inviting listeners to consider the early hopes and complexities that defined this unique chapter of history.
Full title
History of Liberia Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (104K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
1865–1953
A historian and political scientist best known for History of Liberia, he wrote one of the early scholarly accounts of Liberia while building an academic career in the American South. His work reflects late 19th-century university history writing and a deep interest in politics, government, and colonization.
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by Andrew H. (Andrew Hull) Foote