John Brown Russwurm

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John Brown Russwurm
John Brown Russwurm
Born 1799
Port Antonio, Jamaica
Died 1851
Cape Palmas, Liberia

John Brown Russwurm (1799-1851) was an African American abolitionist from Jamaica, known for his newspaper, Freedom's Journal. He moved from the United States to Liberia to govern the Maryland section of an African American colony there, dying in Liberia in 1851.

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[edit] Early life

Russwurm was born in 1799 in Port Antonio, Jamaica to a white merchant father and an unknown black mother. The family stayed in Jamaica until 1807 when Russwurm was sent to Quebec for his education. In 1812, father and son moved to Portland, Maine, where the elder Russwurm married widower Susan Blanchard in 1813. Blanchard (now Russwurm) insisted her husband grant 'John Brown', as he was then known, his full birth name. His father did so, and the now named 'John Brown Russwurm' lived with his father, step-mother and her children from a previous marriage, accepted as part of the family. The elder Russwurm died in 1815 but his son stayed close to his step-mother, even after she re-married to become Susan Hawes.

[edit] Education

Russwurm attended Hebron Academy in Maine, focusing on his studies to finish his education and earning the nickname "Honest John". Graduating in his early 20's, he taught at an African-American school in Boston. Several years later relocated back to Maine to live with his step-mother and her new husband. They helped Russwurm pay for further education when he enrolled in Bowdoin College in 1824, graduating in 1826. Russwurm was the first African American to graduate from Bowdoin College, and thought to be the third African American to graduate from an American college.

[edit] Freedom's Journal

Russwurm moved to New York City in 1827, becoming the junior editor of Freedom's Journal, an abolitionist newspaper dedicated to opposition of slavery. Freedom's Journal was also the first newspaper in the United States to be owned, operated, published and edited by Afrian Americans. Upon becoming senior editor, Russwurm used his position to change the paper's initially negative stance on the colonialization of Africa by African Americans to a positive advocacy for this position. These strong views forced Russwurm's resignation in 1829, after which he emigrated to Liberia.

[edit] Africa

Upon emigrating to Liberia, Russwurm started work as the colonial secretary for the American Colonization Society between 1830 and 1834. He also worked as the editor of The Liberia Herald, though Russwurm resigned his post in 1835 to protest America's colonization policies. In 1833 he married Sarah McGill, the daughter of the Lieutenant-Governor of Monrovia, with whom he had a daughter and three sons. In 1836 he became the first black governor of the Maryland section of Liberia, a post he held until his death, encouraging the immigration of African-Americans to Maryland and supporting agriculture and trade. In 1850, shortly before his death, Russwurm returned to Maine for a visit. He brought two of his sons with him and enrolled them at North Yarmouth Academy between 1850 and 1852 where they lived with their step-grandmother, Susan Hawes.

During his time in Liberia, Russwurm learned several of the native languages, encouraging trade and diplomatic relations with neighboring countries as well as whites. There is a statue of John Russwurm at his burial site at Harper, Cape Palmas, Liberia.

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