“A Free Republic, Like Our Own”: The US Navy and the Colonization Movement in Public Discourse, 1819-60

Authors

  • Roger A. Bailey

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/2561-5467.1409

Keywords:

Liberia, colonization movement, United States Navy, officer corps, black Atlantic, slavery

Abstract

This article examines how US naval officers’ attitudes about slavery, race, and American empire led many to support for America’s African colonization movement in the antebellum era. It argues that beyond the well-documented support they provided in Africa, many American naval officers joined colonization societies, gave speeches, published in newspapers, and authored books to advocate for colonization in the United States. Drawing on their firsthand experience, they provided credibility to the movement at a time when it was sorely needed in response to attacks from both sides of the political spectrum.

Author Biography

Roger A. Bailey

Roger A. Bailey is an assistant professor of history at The Citadel. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Maryland, College Park. Recently, he served as Class of 1957 Postdoctoral Fellow in American Naval Heritage at the US Naval Academy and Copie Hill Civil War Fellow at the American Battlefield Trust. His scholarship focuses on how the US Navy shaped American foreign relations and domestic discourse in the decades leading up to the Civil War. This article won the Clark G. Reynolds Student Paper Award in 2020.

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Published

2026-07-08

How to Cite

Bailey, R. A. (2026). “A Free Republic, Like Our Own”: The US Navy and the Colonization Movement in Public Discourse, 1819-60. The Northern Mariner Le Marin Du Nord, 35(3-4), 345–360. https://doi.org/10.25071/2561-5467.1409