Liberia was founded by the American Colonization Society (ACS) in the
1820s as an African refuge for free blacks and liberated American
slaves. While interest in African migration waned after the Civil War,
it roared back in the late nineteenth century with the rise of Jim Crow
segregation and disfranchisement throughout the South. The
back-to-Africa movement held great new appeal to the South's most
marginalized citizens, rural African Americans. Nowhere was this
interest in Liberia emigration greater than in Arkansas. More emigrants
to Liberia left from Arkansas than any other state in the 1880s and
1890s.
In Journey of Hope, Kenneth C. Barnes explains why so many black
Arkansas sharecroppers dreamed of Africa and how their dreams of Liberia
differed from the reality. This rich narrative also examines the role of
poor black farmers in the creation of a black nationalist identity and
the importance of the symbolism of an ancestral continent.
Based on letters to the ACS and interviews of descendants of the
emigrants in war-torn Liberia, this study captures the life of black
sharecroppers in the late 1800s and their dreams of escaping to Africa.