Colonization Apart From Garrison: Widening the Lens on America's Black Resettlement Movement

Authors

  • Katherine Orloff Stanford University

Keywords:

colonialism, slavery, American Colonization Society

Abstract

Among the least known stories of America’s early historical narrative, African colonization was the United States’ large and lengthy attempt to resettle free blacks outside American territory during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Despite the size and duration of the movement, African colonization is largely absent from a modern-day retelling of America’s founding and formative years. Where the historical details of this movement fall short, William Lloyd Garrison can be counted on for clarification by denouncing colonization as the “enemy of abolition” of slavery. Garrison provides an historical lens through which to view black resettlement. While this lens helps to clarify colonization, and gives shape to this rather elusive part of American history, to accept explicitly Garrison’s reading of colonization is to miss the distinct nature of the movement. When viewed apart from Garrison’s theory, the African colonization movement occupies a distinct and important place in American history and speaks to the deep complexity that surrounded the country’s early debates over slavery.

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Author Biography

Katherine Orloff, Stanford University

Katherine Orloff is an alumna of Stanford University's Master of Liberal Aerts Program. She currently lives in San Francisco where she is a dancer, a dance educator, and lecturer for California State University, East Bay. Her interests range from questions about the body and movement to more historical inquiries about the evolution of human rights in America. Having always felt that her academic and artistic interests compliment and drive one another, she continues to stay engaged in the fields of dance, history, and writing, and particularly enjoys the spaces where these fields intersect.

References

Fairfax, Ferdinando. “Plan For Liberating the Negroes Within the United States,” American Museum, of Universal Magazine, VIII (December 1790), pp. 285- 87.

Finley, Robert. Thoughts on the Colonization of Free Blacks. [Washington D. C.] 1816.

Fox, Early Lee. The American Colonization Society 1817-1840. Baltimore: The John Hopkins Press, 1919.

Garrison, William Lloyd to Henry E. Benson, July 21, 1832, quoted by Zorn, Garrisonian Abolitionism.

Gurley, Ralph Randolph. “Letter on the American Colonization Society, and Remarks on South Carolina Opinions on that Subject.” [Washington D.C.] 1832.

Gurley, Ralph Randolph and Henry Ibbottson. Letter of the Rev. Ralph R. Gurley, on the American Colonization Society: Addressed to Henry Ibbotson, Esq. of Sheffield, England [Washington, D.C.: J.C. Dunn, 1833.

Staudenraus, J.P. The African Colonization Movement, 1816-1865. New York: Columbia University Press, 1961.

Streifford, David M. “The American Colonization Society: An Application of Republican Ideology to Early Antebellum Reform.” The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 45, no. 2 (May 1979), pp 201-220.

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Published

2016-05-15

Issue

Section

Articles