Children, Education and Empire in Early Sierra Leone

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A01=Katrina Keefer
abolitionist history
Author_Katrina Keefer
Baptist Missionary Society
Berlin Seminary
british empire
Bunce Island
Category=JNB
Category=N
Category=NHH
childhood history
childhood studies Africa
children africa
Cm Mission
Cm School
Cm System
colonial education
colonial West Africa
early Sierra Leone educational networks
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fourah Bay College
Freetown Peninsula
Granville Town
liberated Africans
Liberated Children
Madras System
missionary education
Nova Scotian Settlers
Plantain Island
Protestant missions research
Pupil Lists
Rio Pongo
Sierra Leone Colony
Sierra Leone Company
Sierra Leone Experience
Sierra Leone Hinterland
Sierra Leone Peninsula
Sierra Leone River
sierre leone
Thomas Coke
Vice Admiralty Court
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815353966
  • Weight: 612g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Jul 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Nineteenth-century Sierra Leone presented a unique situation historically as the focal point of early abolitionist efforts, settlement within West Africa by westernized Africans, and a rapid demographic increase through the judicial emancipation of Liberated Africans. Within this complex and often volatile environment, the voices and experiences of children have been difficult to trace and to follow. Enslaved children historically are a challenging narrative to highlight due to their comparative vulnerability. This book offers newly transcribed data and fills in a lacuna in the scholarship of early Sierra Leone and the Atlantic world. It presents a narrative of children as they experienced a set of circumstances which were unique and important to abolitionist historiography, and demonstrates how each element of that situation arose by analyzing the rich documentary evidence. By presenting the data as well as the individuals whose lives were affected by the mission schools (both as teacher or pupil) this study has sought to be as complete as possible. Underlying the more academic tone is a recognition of the individual humanity of both teachers and students whose lives together shaped this early phase in the history of Sierra Leone. The missionaries who created the documents from which this study arises all died in Sierra Leone after having profound impacts on the lives of many hundreds of pupils. Their students went on to become important historical figures both locally and throughout West Africa. Not all rose to prominence, and the book reconstructs the lives of pupils who became local tradespeople in addition to those who had a greater social stature. This book attempts to offer analysis without forgetting the fundamental human trajectories which this material encompasses.

Katrina Keefer is Adjunct Professor of History at Trent University, Canada.

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