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Cape Mount

Kambai Bli

Dei oral traditions cite a town called Kambai Bli (on the current road to Bomi Hills) as one of their oldest and most economically important. This town was the site of a large clay pit for producing pottery products that attracted buyers from afar. 

However, far more important was the production of salt from sea water for sale to northern markets. It was principally their wealth from salt boiling that attracted other groups to join them. Important salt boiling towns were located along the beach from the mouth of the St. Paul to Cape Mount. They included Duojena, Dugbei, Gakpoja and Mbaanwoin.

Footnote: Bureau of Folkways, 1955, pp. 43, 50, 53.

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Cape Mount

Poro drum and other gifts

As expressions of their mutual affection, Zie gave Dewulo a silver coin and she gave him a gold ring. Zie’s dowry for Dewulo was a carved iron drum decorated with brass and copper, which fell from the sky near the town of Millsburg, then called Dalon.

After the original drum disappeared, leaders of the Poro power association created a replica in wood, called foivo, which is the chief musical instrument in all Dei higher-level ceremonies of the Poro power association.

Footnote: Bureau of Folkways, 1955, p. 41.

Categories
Cape Mount

In the beginning …

The earliest know inhabitants of Cape Mount were the ancestors of the Dei. They  migrated from the present-day Guinea down along the St. Paul, then ventured westward.

According to a Dei founding legend told by Gbii Woso, a descendent of the landholding lineage, the group descended from the marriage of a father, Zie, who emerged from the water, and Dewulo, a mother who previously lived with her parents in a cave.

Footnote: Bureau of Folkways, 1955, p. 41.

Categories
Caldwell

Union Club and restored citizens

In 1935, the Union Club was incorporated with the following officers:  J. C. A. Gibson, Sr., general director; C. V. Harris, president; Ellen A. Moulsen, vice president; Sarah Brisbane, secretary; Etta Ricks, sheriff; and A. L. Scott, marshall].

In 1898, resident Asbury B. Scott was restored to the rights and privileges of citizenship. In 1919, the legislature granted the widow of Charles Nelson a $100 pension. In 1924, the pension of resident James A. Wilson was increased from $135 to $150. In 1938, the national legislature granted to resident T. E. Carr, who had fought in 30 skirmishes, a pension of $200 for his natural lifetime.

Footnote: Acts of the Liberian Legislature, Acts 1935, p. 35; Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1898, pp. 3-4; Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1919, pp. 15-16; Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1924-25, pp. 39-40; Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1938, pp. 17-18.

Categories
Caldwell

Ferry companies

In 1923, the Caldwell Ferry Company was incorporated by James A. Wilson and J. C. A. Gibson. In 1927, the legislature granted Doughba Carmo Caranda and heirs of the settlement of Virginia, Montserrado County, across the Saint Paul’s River between Shiloh Baptist Church Wharf, Virginia and the point immediately across the river in Caldwell. Their franchise was approved for ten years, with a maximum charge of 12 cents.

Residents C. K. Clarke and Dolly Bernard were awarded the right to run a ferry across the St. Paul River between the Teep Clarke landing to the opposite side known as the Bromley landing.

Footnote: Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1923-24, pp. 59-60; Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1927-28, pp. 29-30; Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1934, pp. 29-30.

Categories
Caldwell

Gibson Excelsior Brass Band

The fever for brass bands that had swept through coastal Liberian towns in the early 1900s hit Caldwell in 1923. That year, the No. 1 Gibson Excelsior Brass Band was incorporated.

Named as officers were J. C. A. Gibson, ex-officio president; J. H. Sauders, president; James L. Johnson, vice president; C. C. Melton, band master; S. J. Melton, secretary; A. L. Blackledge, assistant secretary; J. W. Melton, speaker; J. P. Davis, treasurer; Joseph George, band leader; and Henry King, boatswain.

Footnote: Acts of the Liberian Legislature, Acts 1923-24, pp. 50.

Categories
Caldwell

Swamps and streams

Like many towns along the St. Paul, Caldwell found the river and its tributaries to be both a blessing and a curse. To address some challenges posed by meandering waters, the legislature approved $750 to “throw up the worst swamps” and to bridge the running streams in Upper Caldwell.

In 1917, S. F. Brown of Virginia was granted the right to run a ferry across the St. Paul River from Virginia, half mile above his wharf and half mile below to the opposite bank of the Caldwell for half mile above and below. 

Footnote: Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1883, pp. 20-21; Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1917-18, pp. 42-43.

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Uncategorized

Highly productive farms

In 1850, a visitor described Caldwell as stretching about six miles along the river bank, with houses up to a quarter mile apart. Local farms were highly productive, in part due to the rich and moist riverbank soil. The town was already divided between Upper and Lower Caldwell.

In 1867, the local St. Peter’s Episcopal Church was noted as having been “kept open regularly and supplied with religious services.” St. Peter’s operated two outreach missions, one in New Georgia and Virginia.  In 1881, the Methodist Episcopal Church of Lower Caldwell was incorporated. Named officials were Horatio B. Capehart (pastor), Isaac Lawrence (trustee), Francis T. Clark, Jr. (trustee), C.R. Sims (trustee), A.F. Travis (steward), Zeal Prichard (trustee) and James Bunyan (trustee).

Footnote: J. W. Lugenbeel, “Sketches of Liberia – No. 2,” African Repository, July 1850, p. 207; “Religious Services in Mesurado County, African Repository, Nov. 1867, p. 343; Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1881, p. 11-12.

Categories
Caldwell

Historical significance

When Liberia declared its independence in 1847, the country contained 11 towns. Caldwell was one of them.

By prevailing European and Asian standards, a country that small was unusual. But it was the typical size of nearby polities. Most polities in the area at the time were composed of non-continuous towns. In other words, they consisted of settlements widely separated by unclaimed forest and mangrove swamp.

Of the various neighboring examples, Liberia at independence most resembled the Kru polity, which consisted of widely dispersed settlements along the coast.

Categories
Caldwell

Census of 1843

When a census was taken in 1843, 138 residents identified their occupations. Forty-seven worked in agriculture, 15 were artisans, four merchants, two professionals, 32 semiskilled, 37 unskilled and one “miscellaneous.” 

One hundred and fourteen residents were members of two local churches. Twenty were Baptists and 58 Methodists. By the late 1800s, Caldwell was home to a Presbyterian church. Given mission support from abroad, the Methodist church cast the longest shadow. In 1843, the only local school was operated by Martha Harris with 47 students.

Footnote: U. S., Congress, Senate, U. S. Navy Department, tables showing the number of emigrants and recaptured Africans sent to the colony of Liberia by the government of the United States … together with a census of the colony and a report of its commerce, &c. September, 1843: Senate Document No. 150, 28th Cong., 2n sess., 1845.

Categories
Caldwell

Founding

Caldwell was founded in 1828 as a “half-way farm” on the eastern side of the St. Paul’s River about nine miles from Monrovia. Because the land was harder to clear and lacked trees suitable for building houses, Caldwell’s founders received more government help than those at Millsburg, which was starter around the same time.

Despite those disadvantages, a visitor in 1828 expected residents to grow enough food to feed themselves within a year.

Footnote: J. W. Lugenbeel, “Sketches of Liberia – No. 2,” African Repository, July 1850, p. 207; “From Liberia,” African Repository, May 1828, 82; “From Liberia,” African Repository, June 1828, p. 127.

Categories
Brewerville

George Smith, Necoda Ross and Gaddison Freeman

In 1920, the national legislature transferred the $50 pension of resident George Smith to his wife and heirs until his youngest child comes of age.

In 1921, resident Necoda Samuel Ross had his citizenship restored by the legislature in 1921. Two years later, Gaddison Freeman also had his citizenship restored by the legislature in 1923. Both men had apparently lost their civil rights due to previous criminal convictions.

Footnote: Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1920, pp. 17-18; Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1921-22, p. 36; Acts of the Liberian Legislature, 1923-24, p. 52.