The nineteenth-century American Colonization Society (ACS) project of
persuading all American free blacks to emigrate to the ACS colony of
Liberia could never be accomplished. Few free blacks volunteered, and
greater numbers would have overwhelmed the meager resources of the ACS.
Given that reality, who supported African colonization and why? No state
was more involved with the project than Virginia, where white Virginians
provided much of the political and organizational leadership and black
Virginians provided a majority of the emigrants.
In An African Republic, Marie Tyler-McGraw traces the parallel but
seldom intersecting tracks of black and white Virginians' interests in
African colonization, from revolutionary-era efforts at emancipation
legislation to African American churches' concern for African missions.
In Virginia, African colonization attracted aging revolutionaries,
republican mothers and their daughters, bondpersons schooled and
emancipated for Liberia, evangelical planters and merchants, urban free
blacks, opportunistic politicians, Quakers, and gentlemen novelists.
An African Republic follows the experiences of the emigrants from
Virginia to Liberia, where some became the leadership class, consciously
seeking to demonstrate black abilities, while others found greater
hardship and early death. Tyler-McGraw carefully examines the tensions
between racial identities, domestic visions, and republican citizenship
in Virginia and Liberia.