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Sugar and coffee: A history of settler agriculture in nineteenth-century Liberia.

机译:糖和咖啡:19世纪利比里亚的定居者农业历史。

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摘要

This dissertation is about commercial agriculture in nineteenth-century Liberia. Based primarily on the archives of the American Colonization Society (founder of Liberia), it examines the impact of environmental and demographic constraints on an agrarian settler society from 1822 to the 1890s. Contrary to the standard interpretation, which linked the poor state of commercial agriculture to the settlers' disdain for cultivation, this dissertation argues that the scarcity of labor and capital impeded the growth of commercial agriculture. The causes of the scarcity were high mortality, low immigration and the poverty of the American “Negroes” who began to settle Liberia in 1822.;Emigration to Liberia meant almost certain death and affliction for many immigrants because they encountered a new set of diseases. Mortality was particularly high during the early decades of colonization. From 1822 to 1843, about 48 percent of all immigrants died of various causes, usually within their first year. The bulk of the deaths is attributed to malaria. There was no natural increase in the population for this early period and because American “Negroes” were unenthusiastic about relocation to Liberia, immigration remained sparse throughout the century. Low immigration, combined with the high death rate, deprived the fledgling colony of its potential human resource, especially for the cultivation of labor-intensive crops, like sugar cane and coffee. Moreover, even though females constituted approximately half of the settlers, they seldom performed agricultural labor.;The problem of labor was compounded by the scarcity of draft animals. Liberia is in the region where trypanosomiasis occurs. The disease is fatal to large livestock. Therefore, animal-drawn plows, common in the United States, were never successfully transplanted in Liberia. Besides, the dearth of livestock obstructed the development of the sugar industry since many planters depended on oxen-powered mills because they could not afford to buy the more expensive steam engine mills.;Finally, nearly half of the immigrants were newly emancipated slaves. Usually these former bondsmen arrived in Liberia penniless. Consequently, they lacked the capital to invest in large-scale plantations. The other categories of immigrants (e.g., those who purchased their freedom), were hardly better off than the emancipated slaves.
机译:本文是关于19世纪利比里亚的商业农业。它主要基于美国殖民协会(利比里亚的创始人)的档案,研究了1822年至1890年代环境和人口限制因素对农业移民社会的影响。与标准的解释相反,标准的解释将商业农业的贫困状态与定居者对耕种的蔑视联系起来,该论文认为,劳动力和资本的稀缺阻碍了商业农业的发展。稀缺的原因是高死亡率,低移民率以及1822年开始在利比里亚定居的美国“黑人”的贫困。移民到利比里亚对许多移民来说几乎肯定是死亡和痛苦,因为他们遇到了一系列新疾病。在殖民的最初几十年中,死亡率特别高。从1822年到1843年,大约48%的移民死于各种原因,通常是在第一年。大部分死亡归因于疟疾。在此早期阶段,人口没有自然增长,而且由于美国的“黑人”对重新安置到利比里亚的热情不高,整个世纪以来,移民仍然很少。低移民率加上高死亡率使刚起步的殖民地丧失了其潜在的人力资源,特别是用于种植劳动密集型作物,如甘蔗和咖啡。此外,尽管雌性只占定居者的一半,但她们很少从事农业劳动。劳动力问题由于缺乏动植物而更加复杂。利比里亚位于发生锥虫病的地区。该病对大牲畜致命。因此,在美国普遍使用的动物牵引犁从未在利比里亚成功移植。此外,牲畜的匮乏也阻碍了制糖业的发展,因为许多种植者依靠牛头工厂来生产,因为他们负担不起购买更昂贵的蒸汽机工厂的费用。最后,近一半的移民是新解放的奴隶。通常,这些前邦德人员毫无顾忌地到达利比里亚。因此,他们缺乏投资大型种植园的资金。其他种类的移民(例如那些购买了自由的人)的状况几乎比解放后的奴隶好。

著录项

  • 作者

    Allen, William Ezra.;

  • 作者单位

    Florida International University.;

  • 授予单位 Florida International University.;
  • 学科 Economics Agricultural.;Economics History.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2002
  • 页码 223 p.
  • 总页数 223
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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