Jump to content

Alfred Francis Russell: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Early life: state-only disambiguators are disfavored for human names, replaced: John Todd (Virginia) → John Todd (Virginia soldier)
The incubated Vai Wikipedia site is making efforts to translate biographical articles of all historical Liberian presidents into Vai.
 
(30 intermediate revisions by 15 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{short description|President of Liberia (1817-1884)}}
{{short description|Liberian politician (1817-1884)}}
{{Infobox officeholder
{{Infobox officeholder
|name=Alfred Francis Russell
|name=Alfred Francis Russell
|image=Alfred Russell2.jpg
|image=Alfred Francis Russell (cropped).tif
|order=[[President of Liberia#Lists of President of Liberia|10th]]
|office=10th [[President of Liberia]]
|office=President of Liberia
|term_start=January 20, 1883
|term_start=January 20, 1883
|term_end=January 7, 1884
|term_end=January 7, 1884
|predecessor=[[Anthony William Gardiner]]
|predecessor=[[Anthony William Gardiner]]
|successor=[[Hilary R. W. Johnson]]
|successor=[[Hilary R. W. Johnson]]
|order2=[[Vice President of Liberia#List of Vice Presidents of Liberia|10th]]
|office2=11th [[Vice President of Liberia]]
|office2=Vice President of Liberia
|term_start2=January 7, 1878
|term_start2=January 7, 1878
|term_end2=January 20, 1883
|term_end2=January 20, 1883
Line 16: Line 14:
|predecessor2=[[Charles Harmon]]
|predecessor2=[[Charles Harmon]]
|successor2=[[James Thompson (politician)|James Thompson]]
|successor2=[[James Thompson (politician)|James Thompson]]
|birth_date={{birth date|1817|8|25|mf=y}}
|birth_date={{birth date|1817|8|25}}
|birth_place=[[Lexington, Kentucky|Lexington]], [[Kentucky]], [[United States]]
|birth_place=[[Lexington, Kentucky|Lexington]], [[Kentucky]], [[United States]]
|death_date={{death date and age|1884|4|4|1817|8|25|mf=y}}
|death_date={{death date and age|1884|4|4|1817|8|25}}
|death_place=[[Liberia]]
|death_place=[[Liberia]]
|party=[[True Whig]]
|party=[[True Whig]]
}}
}}
'''Alfred Francis Russell''' (25 August 1817 – 4 April 1884) was an [[Americo-Liberian]] missionary, planter and politician. Elected as [[Vice president of Liberia|vice-president of Liberia]] in 1881 under [[Anthony William Gardiner]], he succeeded to the presidency after the latter resigned due to poor health. Russell served as [[President of Liberia#List of Presidents of Liberia|tenth President of Liberia]] from 1883 to 1884.
'''Alfred Francis Russell''' (August 25, 1817 – April 4, 1884) was an [[Americo-Liberian]] missionary, planter, and politician who served as tenth [[president of Liberia]] from 1883 to 1884 after serving as [[vice president of Liberia|vice-president]] under [[Anthony William Gardiner]], whom he succeeded as president.


Born in [[Lexington, Kentucky]], Russell was emancipated in 1833 (with his mother Amelie "Milly" Crawford) by their mistress Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe (Russell's grandmother through his white father). Wickliffe also emancipated his cousin, Lucretia Russell, and her four children. Both families emigrated together from the United States to Liberia that year. Alfred F. Russell later married and had a daughter by the name of Julia Ann, who later married John Douglas Simpson one of the first black congressmen from Florida, United States. They both had several children including Alpha Douglas Simpson, father of former Vice President of Liberia Clarence L. Simpson Sr. Alfred Russell served as a Methodist [[missionary]] and later owned a large coffee and sugarcane farm. Russell continued to serve as a Methodist minister after entering politics; he was also elected to the [[Liberian Senate]], and served as [[List of Presidents Pro Tempore of the Senate of Liberia|President Pro Tempore of the Senate of Liberia]].<ref name="chronicle">{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=saY4ubEU20QC|title=The Annual Messages of the Presidents of Liberia 1848–2010: State of the Nation Addresses to the National Legislature|first=D. Elwood|last=Dunn|date=4 May 2011|publisher=Walter de Gruyter|via=Google Books}}</ref>
Born in [[Lexington, Kentucky]], Russell was emancipated in 1833 (with his mother Amelie "Milly" Crawford) by their mistress Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe (Russell's grandmother through his white father). Wickliffe also emancipated his cousin, Lucretia Russell, and her four children. Both families emigrated together from the United States to Liberia that year. Alfred F. Russell later married and had a daughter by the name of Julia Ann, who later married John Douglas Simpson one of the first black congressmen from Florida, United States. They both had several children including Alpha Douglas Simpson, father of future Liberian vice president Clarence L. Simpson Sr. Alfred Russell served as a Methodist [[missionary]] and later owned a large coffee and sugarcane farm. Russell continued to serve as a Methodist minister after entering politics; he was also elected to the [[Liberian Senate]], and served as [[List of Presidents Pro Tempore of the Senate of Liberia|President Pro Tempore of the Senate of Liberia]].<ref name="chronicle">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=saY4ubEU20QC|title=The Annual Messages of the Presidents of Liberia 1848–2010: State of the Nation Addresses to the National Legislature|first=D. Elwood|last=Dunn|date=4 May 2011|publisher=Walter de Gruyter|isbn=9783598441691|via=Google Books}}</ref>


==Early life==
==Early life==
Russell was born into slavery in 1817 [[Lexington, Kentucky]], as the mixed-race, very white son of Amelie "Milly" Crawford, a mixed-race woman described as [[octoroon]] (meaning she was {{frac|7|8}} European in ancestry). Their mistress was Jane Hawkins Todd Irvine. These two slaves were the subject of gossip in Lexington, first bruited by [[Robert S. Todd]]. [[Robert Jefferson Breckinridge|Robert J. Breckinridge]] published a pamphlet revealing the Lexington gossip: that Alfred Francis Russell's father was John Russell, Irvine's grandson and Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe's son from her previous marriage. During a summer visit with his grandmother, John Russell, then a student at [[Princeton University]], raped the enslaved octoroon Milly Crawford.<ref name="intro"/> Their son Alfred was overwhelmingly European in ancestry and appearance; he was only {{frac|1|16}} African. In many states at the time he would have been considered legally white although born into slavery.
Russell was born into slavery in 1817 [[Lexington, Kentucky]], as the mixed-race, very white son of Amelie "Milly" Crawford, a mixed-race woman described as [[octoroon]] (meaning she was {{frac|7|8}} European in ancestry). Their mistress was Jane Hawkins Todd Irvine. These two slaves were the subject of gossip in Lexington, first bruited by [[Robert S. Todd]]. [[Robert Jefferson Breckinridge|Robert J. Breckinridge]] published a pamphlet revealing the Lexington gossip: that Alfred Francis Russell's father was John Russell, Irvine's grandson and Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe's son from her previous marriage. During a summer visit with his grandmother, John Russell, then a student at [[Princeton University]], raped the enslaved octoroon Milly Crawford.<ref name="intro"/> Their son Alfred was overwhelmingly European in ancestry and appearance; he was only {{frac|1|16}} African. In many states at the time he would have been considered legally white although born into slavery.


After Irvine's death in 1822, Alfred Russell and his mother were sold to Irvine's daughter Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe and her husband Robert. (Mary Wickliffe was the mother of John Russell by her late husband James Russell.)<ref name="wickliffe-preston">[http://www.uky.edu/~dolph/HIS316/sources/liberia.html Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers, Introduction & Milly Crawford, 1833]</ref> Alfred and his mother called their new mistress Mrs. Polly; she was a wealthy [[Beneficiary|heiress]] of the frontiersman Colonel [[John Todd (Virginia soldier)|John Todd]].<ref>[http://history.ky.gov/pdf/Publications/ancestors_v39_n4.pdf ''Kentucky Ancestors:Genealogical Quarterly of the Kentucky Historical Society'']</ref> He was the brother of [[Levi Todd]], the grandfather of [[Mary Todd Lincoln]].<ref>[http://members.aol.com/beaufait/biography/genealogy.htm The Genealogy of Mary Todd Lincoln (see generation four)]</ref>
After Irvine's death in 1822, Alfred Russell and his mother were sold to Irvine's daughter Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe and her husband Robert. (Mary Wickliffe was the mother of John Russell by her late husband James Russell.)<ref name="wickliffe-preston">{{Cite web |url=http://www.uky.edu/~dolph/HIS316/sources/liberia.html |title=Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers, Introduction & Milly Crawford, 1833 |access-date=2008-03-30 |archive-date=2008-10-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081007043052/http://www.uky.edu/~dolph/HIS316/sources/liberia.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> Alfred and his mother called their new mistress Mrs. Polly; she was a wealthy [[Beneficiary|heiress]] of the frontiersman Colonel [[John Todd (Virginia soldier)|John Todd]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://history.ky.gov/pdf/Publications/ancestors_v39_n4.pdf |title=''Kentucky Ancestors:Genealogical Quarterly of the Kentucky Historical Society'' |access-date=2008-03-30 |archive-date=2008-05-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080528175756/http://history.ky.gov/pdf/Publications/ancestors_v39_n4.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> He was the brother of [[Levi Todd]], the grandfather of [[Mary Todd Lincoln]].<ref>[http://members.aol.com/beaufait/biography/genealogy.htm The Genealogy of Mary Todd Lincoln (see generation four)]</ref>


In 1833, Mary Wickliffe emancipated Alfred (her grandson by blood) and his mother Milly; she also freed his cousin Lucretia (Lucy) Russell and her four children: Sinthia, Gilbert, George, and Henry, all of whom were of majority-white ancestry. They emigrated that year with nearly 200 other colonists to [[Liberia]] on the brig ''Ajax'' under auspices of the [[American Colonization Society]];<ref>[http://www.disc.wisc.edu/Liberia/pdfs/emigrant2c.pdf Emigrants to Liberia between 1820 and 1843], University of Wisconsin</ref><ref>[http://www.disc.wisc.edu/Liberia/pdfs/emigrant6n.pdf Emigrants to Liberia between 1820 and 1843], University of Wisconsin</ref> Alfred was fifteen years old when they arrived with other pioneers in Liberia on July 11, 1833. Some 146 pioneers survived the voyage; about 30 children had died during the voyage.<ref name="wickliffe-preston" /><ref>''17th Annual Report of the A.C.S.'', 11; ''African Repository'', IX (October 1833), p. 243</ref>
In 1833, Mary Wickliffe emancipated Alfred (her grandson by blood) and his mother Milly; she also freed his cousin Lucretia (Lucy) Russell and her four children: Sinthia, Gilbert, George, and Henry, all of whom were of majority-white ancestry. They emigrated that year with nearly 200 other colonists to [[Liberia]] on the brig ''Ajax'' under auspices of the [[American Colonization Society]];<ref>[http://www.disc.wisc.edu/Liberia/pdfs/emigrant2c.pdf Emigrants to Liberia between 1820 and 1843] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111001192432/http://www.disc.wisc.edu/Liberia/pdfs/emigrant2c.pdf |date=2011-10-01 }}, University of Wisconsin</ref><ref>[http://www.disc.wisc.edu/Liberia/pdfs/emigrant6n.pdf Emigrants to Liberia between 1820 and 1843] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111001192506/http://www.disc.wisc.edu/Liberia/pdfs/emigrant6n.pdf |date=2011-10-01 }}, University of Wisconsin</ref> Alfred was fifteen years old when they arrived with other settlers in Liberia on July 11, 1833. Some 146 pioneers survived the voyage; about 30 children died during the voyage.<ref name="wickliffe-preston" /><ref>''17th Annual Report of the A.C.S.'', 11; ''African Repository'', IX (October 1833), p. 243</ref>


==Pioneers in Liberia==
==Pioneers in Liberia==
[[File:Alfred Francis Russell - LOC.tif|thumb|upright|Photograph of Russell in the late 1850s]]
The Russells were among the last of 1,400 settlers to the colony. Conditions were very harsh for the pioneers; they suffered greatly from local diseases, including [[malaria]], and supplies were extremely short in the colony for some time. "Housing was inadequate, food was scarce, and medical service was almost nonexistent."<ref name="intro">[http://www.uky.edu/~dolph/HIS316/sources/liberia.html "Introduction: Four Letters from Kentucky to Liberia"], James Wesley Smith, ''Sojourners in Search of Freedom: The Settlement of Liberia by Black Americans'' [Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, Inc., 1987], p. 122</ref> His cousin Lucy, her daughter Sinthia and two eldest sons all quickly succumbed to the local fever, which caused ulcers. Sinthia died in 1836 and Gilbert in 1839. Alfred Russell also suffered this disease, which resulted by 1835 in his having to use a crutch.<ref name="uky"/>
The Russells were among the last of 1,400 settlers to the colony. Conditions were very harsh for the pioneers; they suffered greatly from local diseases, including [[malaria]], and supplies were extremely short in the colony for some time. "Housing was inadequate, food was scarce, and medical service was almost nonexistent."<ref name="intro">[http://www.uky.edu/~dolph/HIS316/sources/liberia.html "Introduction: Four Letters from Kentucky to Liberia"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081007043052/http://www.uky.edu/~dolph/HIS316/sources/liberia.html |date=2008-10-07 }}, James Wesley Smith, ''Sojourners in Search of Freedom: The Settlement of Liberia by Black Americans'' [Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, Inc., 1987], p. 122</ref> His cousin Lucy, her daughter Sinthia, and two eldest sons all quickly succumbed to the local fever, which caused ulcers. Sinthia died in 1836 and Gilbert in 1839. Alfred Russell also suffered from this disease, which resulted by 1835 in his having to use a crutch.<ref name="uky"/>


Russell's mother Milly married George Crawford, another immigrant. She died in 1845 of "[[Dropsy|dropsey]]", and he died the following year.<ref name="uky">[http://www.uky.edu/~dolph/HIS316/sources/liberia1.html Ltr: "G.W. McElroy to Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe, September 20, 1835, for Lucy Russell"], ''Letters from Liberia to Kentucky'', (Box39, Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers, University of Kentucky Special Collections and Archives)</ref> Russell wrote in 1855 of their struggles in Africa: "It was so long before we could find Africa out, how to live in it, and what to do to live, that it all most cost us death seeking life."<ref name="afr1855"/>
Russell's mother Milly married George Crawford, another immigrant. She died in 1845 of "[[Dropsy|dropsey]]", and he died the following year.<ref name="uky">[http://www.uky.edu/~dolph/HIS316/sources/liberia1.html Ltr: "G.W. McElroy to Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe, September 20, 1835, for Lucy Russell"], ''Letters from Liberia to Kentucky'', (Box39, Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers, University of Kentucky Special Collections and Archives)</ref> Russell wrote in 1855 of their struggles in Africa: "It was so long before we could find Africa out, how to live in it, and what to do to live, that it all most cost us death seeking life."<ref name="afr1855"/>
Line 46: Line 45:


==Presidency (1883–1884)==
==Presidency (1883–1884)==
[[File:Alfred Russell2.jpg|thumb|upright|Undated photo]]

===Territorial conflict with the British===
===Territorial conflict with the British===
The conflict with the British, which had reached a crisis during the [[Anthony W. Gardiner|Gardiner]] administration, was still unsolved. Two months after Russell took office, in March 1883, the British Government annexed the Gallinas territory west of the [[Mano River]] and formally incorporated it into their colony of [[Sierra Leone]], like Liberia established as a place of resettlement of free blacks and liberated slaves.
The conflict with the British, which had reached a crisis during the [[Anthony W. Gardiner|Gardiner]] administration, was still unsolved. Two months after Russell took office, in March 1883, the British Government annexed the Gallinas territory west of the [[Mano River]] and formally incorporated it into their colony of [[Sierra Leone]], like Liberia established as a place of resettlement of free blacks and liberated slaves.
Line 53: Line 52:


===Economy===
===Economy===
In the decades after 1868, escalating economic difficulties weakened the state's dominance over the coastal indigenous population. As conditions worsened, the cost of imports was far greater than the income generated by exports of coffee, rice, palm oil, sugar cane, and timber. Liberia tried desperately to modernize its largely agricultural economy.
In the decades after 1868, escalating economic difficulties weakened the state's dominance over the coastal indigenous population. As conditions worsened, the cost of imports was far greater than the income generated by exports of coffee, rice, [[palm oil]], sugar cane, and timber. Liberia tried desperately to modernize its largely agricultural economy.


==Death and legacy==
==Death and legacy==
Russell died, three months after he left office, on April 4, 1884.<ref>[http://www.npg.si.edu/exh/awash/russell.htm ''"A Durable Memento:" Portraits by Augustus Washington, African American Daguerreotypist''], exhibit, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution</ref>
Russell died, three months after he left office, on April 4, 1884.<ref>[http://www.npg.si.edu/exh/awash/russell.htm ''"A Durable Memento:" Portraits by Augustus Washington, African American Daguerreotypist''], exhibit, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution</ref>


Russell is survived by many [[kinship|descendants]] in Liberia and West Africa, and he was the paternal great-grandfather of [[Clarence Lorenzo Simpson]]. He also has collateral paternal Russell relatives in U.S. states such as [[Maryland]], Kentucky, and [[South Carolina]].
Russell is survived by many [[kinship|descendants]] in Liberia and West Africa, and he was the paternal great-grandfather of [[Clarence Lorenzo Simpson]] and great-great-grandfather of [[Clarence Lorenzo Simpson Jr.]]. He also has collateral paternal Russell relatives in U.S. states such as [[Maryland]], Kentucky, and [[South Carolina]].


==See also==
==See also==
Line 68: Line 67:
==Further reading==
==Further reading==
*Smither, James Wesley. ''Sojourners in Search of Freedom: The Settlement of Liberia by Black Americans''. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, Inc., 1987.
*Smither, James Wesley. ''Sojourners in Search of Freedom: The Settlement of Liberia by Black Americans''. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, Inc., 1987.
*Liebenow, J. Gus. ''Liberia: the Quest for Democracy''. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987.
*Liebenow, J. Gus. ''Liberia: The Quest for Democracy''. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987.
*See further: [[History of Liberia#Further reading|History of Liberia, further reading]]
*See further: [[History of Liberia#Further reading|History of Liberia, further reading]]


Line 83: Line 82:
{{LiberianVicePresidents}}
{{LiberianVicePresidents}}
{{LiberianPresidents}}
{{LiberianPresidents}}
{{incubator|vai/ꕉꖢꔓ ꖢꕟꘋꔖ ꗐꖺꗓ}}

{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


Line 92: Line 91:
[[Category:Politicians from Lexington, Kentucky]]
[[Category:Politicians from Lexington, Kentucky]]
[[Category:Presidents of Liberia]]
[[Category:Presidents of Liberia]]
[[Category:Vice Presidents of Liberia]]
[[Category:Vice presidents of Liberia]]
[[Category:Presidents Pro Tempore of the Senate of Liberia]]
[[Category:Presidents pro tempore of the Senate of Liberia]]
[[Category:True Whig Party politicians]]
[[Category:True Whig Party politicians]]
[[Category:19th-century Liberian politicians]]
[[Category:19th-century African-American politicians]]

Latest revision as of 00:22, 3 April 2024

Alfred Francis Russell
10th President of Liberia
In office
January 20, 1883 – January 7, 1884
Preceded byAnthony William Gardiner
Succeeded byHilary R. W. Johnson
11th Vice President of Liberia
In office
January 7, 1878 – January 20, 1883
PresidentAnthony William Gardiner
Preceded byCharles Harmon
Succeeded byJames Thompson
Personal details
Born(1817-08-25)August 25, 1817
Lexington, Kentucky, United States
DiedApril 4, 1884(1884-04-04) (aged 66)
Liberia
Political partyTrue Whig

Alfred Francis Russell (August 25, 1817 – April 4, 1884) was an Americo-Liberian missionary, planter, and politician who served as tenth president of Liberia from 1883 to 1884 after serving as vice-president under Anthony William Gardiner, whom he succeeded as president.

Born in Lexington, Kentucky, Russell was emancipated in 1833 (with his mother Amelie "Milly" Crawford) by their mistress Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe (Russell's grandmother through his white father). Wickliffe also emancipated his cousin, Lucretia Russell, and her four children. Both families emigrated together from the United States to Liberia that year. Alfred F. Russell later married and had a daughter by the name of Julia Ann, who later married John Douglas Simpson one of the first black congressmen from Florida, United States. They both had several children including Alpha Douglas Simpson, father of future Liberian vice president Clarence L. Simpson Sr. Alfred Russell served as a Methodist missionary and later owned a large coffee and sugarcane farm. Russell continued to serve as a Methodist minister after entering politics; he was also elected to the Liberian Senate, and served as President Pro Tempore of the Senate of Liberia.[1]

Early life

[edit]

Russell was born into slavery in 1817 Lexington, Kentucky, as the mixed-race, very white son of Amelie "Milly" Crawford, a mixed-race woman described as octoroon (meaning she was 78 European in ancestry). Their mistress was Jane Hawkins Todd Irvine. These two slaves were the subject of gossip in Lexington, first bruited by Robert S. Todd. Robert J. Breckinridge published a pamphlet revealing the Lexington gossip: that Alfred Francis Russell's father was John Russell, Irvine's grandson and Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe's son from her previous marriage. During a summer visit with his grandmother, John Russell, then a student at Princeton University, raped the enslaved octoroon Milly Crawford.[2] Their son Alfred was overwhelmingly European in ancestry and appearance; he was only 116 African. In many states at the time he would have been considered legally white although born into slavery.

After Irvine's death in 1822, Alfred Russell and his mother were sold to Irvine's daughter Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe and her husband Robert. (Mary Wickliffe was the mother of John Russell by her late husband James Russell.)[3] Alfred and his mother called their new mistress Mrs. Polly; she was a wealthy heiress of the frontiersman Colonel John Todd.[4] He was the brother of Levi Todd, the grandfather of Mary Todd Lincoln.[5]

In 1833, Mary Wickliffe emancipated Alfred (her grandson by blood) and his mother Milly; she also freed his cousin Lucretia (Lucy) Russell and her four children: Sinthia, Gilbert, George, and Henry, all of whom were of majority-white ancestry. They emigrated that year with nearly 200 other colonists to Liberia on the brig Ajax under auspices of the American Colonization Society;[6][7] Alfred was fifteen years old when they arrived with other settlers in Liberia on July 11, 1833. Some 146 pioneers survived the voyage; about 30 children died during the voyage.[3][8]

Pioneers in Liberia

[edit]
Photograph of Russell in the late 1850s

The Russells were among the last of 1,400 settlers to the colony. Conditions were very harsh for the pioneers; they suffered greatly from local diseases, including malaria, and supplies were extremely short in the colony for some time. "Housing was inadequate, food was scarce, and medical service was almost nonexistent."[2] His cousin Lucy, her daughter Sinthia, and two eldest sons all quickly succumbed to the local fever, which caused ulcers. Sinthia died in 1836 and Gilbert in 1839. Alfred Russell also suffered from this disease, which resulted by 1835 in his having to use a crutch.[9]

Russell's mother Milly married George Crawford, another immigrant. She died in 1845 of "dropsey", and he died the following year.[9] Russell wrote in 1855 of their struggles in Africa: "It was so long before we could find Africa out, how to live in it, and what to do to live, that it all most cost us death seeking life."[10]

Lucy Russell married a man by the surname of Briant. By 1857, she had learned to read and write, as she wrote to her former master Robert Wickliffe from Liberia, asking to be remembered to his daughters and other persons she knew.[11]

Political career

[edit]

Russell was trained to be a teacher after having suffered an illness that caused an injury in one leg. He later became an Episcopal priest in the St. Paul River area, where he had 200 acres in the Clay Ashland district, purchased for the free people of color by the Kentucky Colonization Society, an affiliate of the ACS.[10] He cultivated sugar cane and coffee, for which he hired indigenous workers.[10]

Russell also became active in politics. In 1881, he ran for vice-president with Anthony W. Gardiner, who won the presidency for a third term. When health issues resulted in Gardiner's resignation three years later, Russell became president.

Presidency (1883–1884)

[edit]
Undated photo

Territorial conflict with the British

[edit]

The conflict with the British, which had reached a crisis during the Gardiner administration, was still unsolved. Two months after Russell took office, in March 1883, the British Government annexed the Gallinas territory west of the Mano River and formally incorporated it into their colony of Sierra Leone, like Liberia established as a place of resettlement of free blacks and liberated slaves.

Whenever the British and French seemed intent on enlarging at Liberia's expense the neighboring territories they already controlled, periodic appearances by U.S. warships helped discourage encroachment. But successive American administrations rejected appeals from Monrovia for more forceful support.[12] Russell, along with Gardiner, has been notably blamed for Liberia's losing much of its territory to the British. This was likely why he was not re-elected to the presidency for a second term.

Economy

[edit]

In the decades after 1868, escalating economic difficulties weakened the state's dominance over the coastal indigenous population. As conditions worsened, the cost of imports was far greater than the income generated by exports of coffee, rice, palm oil, sugar cane, and timber. Liberia tried desperately to modernize its largely agricultural economy.

Death and legacy

[edit]

Russell died, three months after he left office, on April 4, 1884.[13]

Russell is survived by many descendants in Liberia and West Africa, and he was the paternal great-grandfather of Clarence Lorenzo Simpson and great-great-grandfather of Clarence Lorenzo Simpson Jr.. He also has collateral paternal Russell relatives in U.S. states such as Maryland, Kentucky, and South Carolina.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Dunn, D. Elwood (4 May 2011). The Annual Messages of the Presidents of Liberia 1848–2010: State of the Nation Addresses to the National Legislature. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 9783598441691 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b "Introduction: Four Letters from Kentucky to Liberia" Archived 2008-10-07 at the Wayback Machine, James Wesley Smith, Sojourners in Search of Freedom: The Settlement of Liberia by Black Americans [Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, Inc., 1987], p. 122
  3. ^ a b "Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers, Introduction & Milly Crawford, 1833". Archived from the original on 2008-10-07. Retrieved 2008-03-30.
  4. ^ "Kentucky Ancestors:Genealogical Quarterly of the Kentucky Historical Society" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-05-28. Retrieved 2008-03-30.
  5. ^ The Genealogy of Mary Todd Lincoln (see generation four)
  6. ^ Emigrants to Liberia between 1820 and 1843 Archived 2011-10-01 at the Wayback Machine, University of Wisconsin
  7. ^ Emigrants to Liberia between 1820 and 1843 Archived 2011-10-01 at the Wayback Machine, University of Wisconsin
  8. ^ 17th Annual Report of the A.C.S., 11; African Repository, IX (October 1833), p. 243
  9. ^ a b Ltr: "G.W. McElroy to Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe, September 20, 1835, for Lucy Russell", Letters from Liberia to Kentucky, (Box39, Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers, University of Kentucky Special Collections and Archives)
  10. ^ a b c Ltr: "Reverend Alfred F. Russell to Robert Wickliffe in Lexington, Kentucky", Letters from Liberia to Kentucky, (Box 50, Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers, University of Kentucky Special Collections and Archives)
  11. ^ Letter: "Lucy Russell Briant to Robert Wickliffe, March 7, 1857", Letters from Liberia to Kentucky (Box 8, Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers, University of Kentucky Special Collections and Archives)
  12. ^ Liebenow
  13. ^ "A Durable Memento:" Portraits by Augustus Washington, African American Daguerreotypist, exhibit, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Further reading

[edit]
  • Smither, James Wesley. Sojourners in Search of Freedom: The Settlement of Liberia by Black Americans. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, Inc., 1987.
  • Liebenow, J. Gus. Liberia: The Quest for Democracy. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987.
  • See further: History of Liberia, further reading
[edit]
Political offices
Preceded by Vice President of Liberia
1881–1883
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of Liberia
1883–1884
Succeeded by