Robert Field Stockton and the American Colonization Society
Founded by Princeton alumni in 1816, the American Colonization Society (ACS) sought the removal of freed slaves to Africa. One of the society’s founding architects, Reverend Robert Finley, had been the Commodore’s teacher at Basking Ridge Classical School. While the society first attracted freed Africans and abolitionists, it evolved as a nativist and racist group seeking to rid the country of freed slaves and to diminish the association of races.
In 1820, Congress granted the ACS use of the U.S.S. Alligator. Aided by influential friends in Washington, Stockton was granted command of the ship. He set sail for the west coast of Africa with the task of securing land for the creation of a successful colony of freed slaves. He identified Cape Mesurado, a strip of land south of Sierra Leone, and forced local Bassa chief Zolu Duma (also known as King Peter) to sell. With this land, ACS founded the colony of Liberia.
In 1824, the New Jersey Colonization Society was chartered and Stockton was chosen to serve as its first president. Founding members included his father, the Duke, father-in-law John Potter, and important faculty at Princeton University. Stockton opened the inaugural meeting denouncing the evils of slavery while simultaneously lambasting the African race, “That vast continent is said to contain fifty millions of Inhabitants; whose pleasures are sloth, and idleness; their employments, rapine and murder...that immense population, vitiated and debased by the most profound ignorance, and unrestrained barbarism.”
Land Contract for Liberia
In 2021, Liberian historian C. Patrick Burrowes uncovered the original land purchase agreement, signed by then-Captain Stockton, Eli Ayres (an agent of the ACS) and six African leaders, including King Peter. The two-page document details the sale of the tract of 140 acres of West African land that later became the Liberian capital, Monrovia, for $300 worth of weapons, rum and other items. Missing since 1835, this land contract shows formal approval of the land sale from 6 African signatories: King Peter, King George, King Zoda, King Long Peter, King Governor, and King Jimmy—all of whom signed with an “X.”
The missing document was found in the papers of Elias Boudinot Caldwell (1776–1825), a secretary of ACS, and the namesake and adopted child of Stockton’s great-uncle Elias Boudinot (1740–1821). Note the towns of Stockton and Caldwell on the map at the top of this page.