Joseph Jenkins Roberts

Olóṣèlú

Joseph Jenkins Roberts (March 15, 1809 – February 24, 1876) jẹ́ Ààrẹ kìnní àti keje ilẹ̀ Làìbéríà (1848-1856) àti (1872-1876). Ó jẹ́ bíbí bíi aláìnídèkùn ní Norfolk, Virginia, USA, Roberts kó lọ sí Làìbéríà ní 1829 nígbà tó jẹ́ ọ̀dọ́. Ó sí ìbùsọ̀ òwò ní Monrovia, kó tó di pé ó kọjú sí ìṣèlú. Nígbàtí Làìbéríà di alómìnira ní 1847, Roberts jẹ́ dídìbòyàn bíi ààrẹ àkọ́kọ́, ó wà lórí àga títí di 1856. Ní 1872 ó tún jẹ́ dídìbòyàn lẹ́kàansíi bíi ààrẹ Làìbéríà keje.

Joseph Jenkins Roberts
1k Ààrẹ ilẹ̀ Làìbéríà
In office
January 3, 1848 – January 7, 1856
Vice PresidentStephen Allen Benson
Arọ́pòStephen Allen Benson
7k Ààrẹ ilẹ̀ Làìbéríà
In office
January 1, 1872 – January 3, 1876
Vice PresidentAnthony W. Gardiner
AsíwájúJames Skivring Smith
Arọ́pòJames Spriggs Payne
2k Gómìnà ilẹ̀ Làìbéríà
In office
September 3, 1841 – January 3, 1848
AsíwájúThomas Buchanan
Arọ́pòPosition abolished
Àwọn àlàyé onítòhún
Ọjọ́ìbí(1809-03-15)15 Oṣù Kẹta 1809
Norfolk, Virginia
Aláìsí24 February 1876(1876-02-24) (ọmọ ọdún 66)
Monrovia, Liberia
Ẹgbẹ́ olóṣèlúRepublican Party
(Àwọn) olólùfẹ́Sarah Roberts
Jane Rose Waring


Ìgbà èwe

àtúnṣe

Joseph je bibi ni Norfolk, Virginia, ni orile-ede Amerika ikeji ninu awon omo meje. Baba re je adako ara Welsi. Iya re Amelia, je fun gba die eru okunrin na.[1] Amelia so gbogbo awon omo re leyin ikan ni Jenkins. Nigbati Amelia gba ilominira re o fe James Roberts, to je alawodudu alainidekun loko; eni yi fun Joseph ati awon omo yioku ni oruko re, o si to won bi awon omo re. Roberts unse owo oko ojuomi ni Odo James, o si di olola gidigidi gege bi omo Afrika Amerika igba re.[2] Joseph Roberts was more than half European in ancestry. As the Liberian historian Abayomi Karnga noted in 1926, "He was not really black; he was an octoroon and could have easily passed for a white man."[3] As a boy, Joseph began to work in his stepfather's business, handling goods on a flatboat that transported materials from Petersburg to Norfolk on the James River.[4] The family moved to Petersburg, Virginia, which was an industrial city. Shortly after the move, James Roberts died. Joseph continued to work in his family's business, but also served as an apprentice in a barber shop. The owner of the barber shop, William Colson, was also a minister and one of Virginia's best educated black residents. He gave Roberts access to his private library, which was a source of much of his early education.[2]

Ìgbéyàwó àti ẹbí

àtúnṣe

Roberts gbe obinrin omo odun 18 kan niyawo ni 1828. Won ni omo owo nigbati won kolosi Laiberia. Sarah ati omo won salaisi ni odun akoko ni Laibeia.[5] Leyin iku Sarah ni Laiberia, Roberts tun yawogbe mo Jane Rose Waring, to je omo Harriet Graves ati Colston Waring lati Norfolk ati Petersburg, Virginia, awon na ti won tun kolosi Laiberia.[6]

Ìkólọsí Làìbéríà

àtúnṣe
 
Daguerreotype taken between 1840 and 1860.

After hearing of the plans of the American Colonization Society to colonize the African coast at Cape Mesurado near modern-day Monrovia, the Roberts family decided to join an expedition. The restrictions of the Black Code in Virginia on free blacks played an important part. In addition, the Roberts family was strongly religious and wanted to evangelize the indigenous people of Africa.[2] On February 9, 1829 they set off for Africa on the Harriet. Joseph Roberts, his wife Sarah and their unnamed infant traveled to Liberia together,[7] along with his mother and five of his six siblings. On the same ship was James Spriggs Payne, who would later become Liberia's fourth president.[1]

In Monrovia, Roberts and his two brothers established a business with the help of their friend William Colson of Petersburg. The company exported palm products, camwood, and ivory to the United States, and traded imported American goods at the company store in Monrovia. In 1835, Colson emigrated to Liberia, but died shortly after his arrival. Expanding into coastal trade, the Roberts family became successful members of the local establishment.[2] During this time, Joseph's brother John Wright Roberts entered the ministry of the Liberia Methodist Church, founded by Americans. Later he became a bishop. After starting as a trader, the youngest son, Henry Roberts, studied medicine at the Berkshire Medical School (now part of the University of Massachusetts Medical School) in Massachusetts. Joseph Roberts was successful enough to pay for his brother's studies. Henry returned to Liberia to work as a physician.[8]

In 1833, Joseph Roberts became high sheriff of the colony. One of his responsibilities was to organize settler militias to travel to the interior to collect taxes from the indigenous peoples and put down their rebellions against colonial rule. In 1839, the American Colonization Society appointed Roberts vice governor. Two years later, after the death of governor Thomas Buchanan, Roberts was appointed as the first mixed-race governor of Liberia. In 1846, Roberts asked the legislature to declare the independence of Liberia, but also to maintain cooperation with the American Colonization Society. The legislature called for a referendum, in which voters chose independence. On July 26, 1847, Roberts declared Liberia independent. He won the first presidential election on October 5, 1847, and was sworn into office on January 3, 1848, with Stephen Allen Benson as vice president.[1]

Ìgbà Ààre àkọ́kọ́ (1847-1856)

àtúnṣe

Roberts was re-elected three more times to serve a total of eight years, until he lost the election in 1855 to the vice president Benson.[1]

Attempts to found a state based upon some 3000 settlers proved difficult. Some coastal tribes converted to Christianity and learned English, but most of the indigenous Africans retained their traditional religion and language. The slave trade continued illicitly from Liberian ports, but the British Navy finally closed it down in the 1850s.

Ìbáṣepọ̀ òkèrè

àtúnṣe

Roberts spent the first year of his presidency attempting to attain recognition from European countries and the United States. In 1848 he traveled to Europe to meet Queen Victoria and other heads of state. Great Britain was the first country to recognize Liberia, followed by France in 1848 or 1852 (accounts differ). In 1849, the German cities of Hamburg, Bremen and Lübeck recognized the new nation, as did Portugal, Brazil, the Kingdom of Sardinia and the Austrian Empire. Norway and Sweden did so in either 1849 or 1863, Haiti in either 1849 or 1864, Denmark in either 1849 or 1869 (accounts differ).

The United States withheld recognition until 1862, during the presidency of Abraham Lincoln. Reportedly the government feared that the southern congressmen would not accept a black ambassador in Washington, D.C.

Ìbáṣepọ̀ pẹ̀lú áwọn ẹ̀yà-ènìyàn abínibí àti ìfẹ̀si

àtúnṣe

Maryland Colony declared in 1854 its independence from the Maryland State Colonization Society but did not become part of the Republic of Liberia. It held the land along the coast between the Grand Cess and San Pedro Rivers. In 1856, the independent state of Maryland (Africa) requested military aid from Liberia in a war with the Grebo and Kru peoples. They were resisting the Maryland colonists' efforts to control their trade. Roberts assisted the Marylanders, and a joint military campaign by the two groups of African-American colonists resulted in victory. In 1857, the Republic of Maryland joined Liberia as Maryland County.

During his presidency, Roberts expanded the borders of Liberia along the coast and made attempts to integrate the indigenous people of Monrovia into the Republic. By 1860, through treaties and purchases with local African leaders, Liberia extended its boundaries to include a 600-mile (1000 km) coastline.

Òkòwò

àtúnṣe

The settlers built schools and Liberia College (which later became the University of Liberia). During these early years, agriculture, shipbuilding, and trade flourished.

Assessment

àtúnṣe

Roberts has been described as a talented leader with diplomatic skills. His leadership was instrumental in giving Liberia independence and sovereignty. Later in his career, his diplomatic skills helped him to deal effectively with the indigenous people and to maneuver in the complex field of international law and relations.[2]

Between presidencies

àtúnṣe
 
Lithograph of the former home of Joseph Roberts in Monrovia

After his first presidency, Roberts served for fifteen years as a major general in the Liberian army, as well as a diplomatic representative in France and Great Britain. In 1862, he helped to found and became the first president of Liberia College in Monrovia, where he served as president until 1876.[9] Roberts frequently traveled to the United States to raise funds for the college. Until his death he held a professorship in jurisprudence and international law.[4]

Second presidency (1872-1876)

àtúnṣe

In 1871, president Edward James Roye was deposed by elements loyal to the Republican Party on the grounds that he was planning to cancel the upcoming elections. Roberts, one of the Republican Party's leaders, won the ensuing presidential election and thus returned to office in 1872. He served for two terms until 1876. While he was incapacitated by illness from 1875 until early 1876, Vice-President Anthony W. Gardiner was acting president.

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

Inheritance and legacy

àtúnṣe

Roberts died on February 24, 1876, less than two months after his second term had ended. In his testament, he left $10,000 and his estate to the educational system of Liberia.[1]

  • Liberia's main airport, Roberts International Airport, the town of Robertsport and Roberts Street in Monrovia are named in honor of Roberts.
  • His face is depicted on the Liberian ten dollar bill introduced in 1997, and the old five dollar bill in circulation between 1989 and 1991.
  • His birthday, March 15, is a national holiday in Liberia.[4]



E tun wo

àtúnṣe
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Pham, John-Peter (April 2004). Liberia — Portrait of a failed state. Reed Press. ISBN 1594290121. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Matthews, Pat (Autumn 1973). "The father of Liberia". Virginia Cavalcade: pp. 5–11 
  3. Karnga, Abayomi Wilfrid (1926). History of Liberia. D. H. Tyte. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Evans Brown, Judith (March 17, 1968). "Virginia's other presidents". The Virginian-Pilot .
  5. Mary Tyler-McGraw, "The Roberts Family", 2008, Virginia Emigrants to Liberia, Virginia Center for Digital History, University of Virginia, accessed 4 Jun 2010
  6. Mary Tyler-McGraw, "The Roberts Family" and "Harriet Graves: Reluctant Founding Mother", 2008, Virginia Emigrants to Liberia, Virginia Center for Digital History, University of Virginia, accessed 4 Jun 2010
  7. "Search Emigrants", Virginia Emigrants to Liberia, Virginia Center for Digital History, University of Virginia, accessed 4 Jun 2010
  8. Davis, Stanley A. (1953). This is Liberia. William-Frederick Press. 
  9. Livingston, Thomas W. “The Exportation of American Higher Education to West Africa: Liberia College, 1850-1900”. The Journal of Negro Education, Vol. 45, No. 3 (Summer, 1976), pp. 246-262.

Ijapo lode

àtúnṣe