In 1787, the Sierra Leone colony was founded as a “province of freedom” by British philanthropists and abolitionists to settle down former slaves from England, in addition to a number of AfricanAmerican blacks who fought on the British side in the American War for Independence. The first settlers were joined by the 1790’s by new African-American settlers, Nova Scotians and Maroons, as well as freed slaves who had been liberated by the British navy since 1808. The Sierra Leone colony became therefore, a centre for the suppression of the slave trade. British abolitionists under the leadership of Granville Sharp regarded the introduction of western education and Christianity throughout the colony as the best means to help campaign against the ...
British colonial rule has often been praised for its comparatively benign features, such as its supp...
This article reconstructs and interprets the early history of the Liberated African villages of Sier...
Appendices : A. Black poor, a handbill, May, 1786.--B. Treaty for grant of land, August, 1788.--C. E...
In 1787, the Sierra Leone colony was founded as a “province of freedom” by British phila...
The free establishment of Sierra Leone was a project developed by English abolitionists in order to ...
Mission education helped to transform the small colony at Freetown and mission outposts at Rio Pongo...
A history of the abolition of the British slave trade in Sierra Leone and how the British used its s...
This article analyses the ways in which the Sierra Leone Company, a chartered trading company, attem...
This special issue of the Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History consists of a forum of innovat...
While past British abolitionist endeavours in Sierra Leone were praised at Westminster during the de...
Bought by British activists of the abolitionist cause in the late 18th century to shelter Black surv...
Contains fulltext : 28173.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access
The British project of repatriating freed slaves in the ‘Province of Freedom’, now known as Sierra L...
In 1805, naval officer Captain Philip Beaver (1766-1813) published his African Memoranda: Relative t...
The roots of Krio Christianity are to be found in a particular period of Nova Scotian ...
British colonial rule has often been praised for its comparatively benign features, such as its supp...
This article reconstructs and interprets the early history of the Liberated African villages of Sier...
Appendices : A. Black poor, a handbill, May, 1786.--B. Treaty for grant of land, August, 1788.--C. E...
In 1787, the Sierra Leone colony was founded as a “province of freedom” by British phila...
The free establishment of Sierra Leone was a project developed by English abolitionists in order to ...
Mission education helped to transform the small colony at Freetown and mission outposts at Rio Pongo...
A history of the abolition of the British slave trade in Sierra Leone and how the British used its s...
This article analyses the ways in which the Sierra Leone Company, a chartered trading company, attem...
This special issue of the Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History consists of a forum of innovat...
While past British abolitionist endeavours in Sierra Leone were praised at Westminster during the de...
Bought by British activists of the abolitionist cause in the late 18th century to shelter Black surv...
Contains fulltext : 28173.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access
The British project of repatriating freed slaves in the ‘Province of Freedom’, now known as Sierra L...
In 1805, naval officer Captain Philip Beaver (1766-1813) published his African Memoranda: Relative t...
The roots of Krio Christianity are to be found in a particular period of Nova Scotian ...
British colonial rule has often been praised for its comparatively benign features, such as its supp...
This article reconstructs and interprets the early history of the Liberated African villages of Sier...
Appendices : A. Black poor, a handbill, May, 1786.--B. Treaty for grant of land, August, 1788.--C. E...