The African Civilization Society was an emigration organization founded in 1858 by several prominent members of the historic African-American
Weeksville community located in central
Brooklyn, New York.

Following the Civil War and emancipation of slaves, it changed its focus to helping provide basic needs to the millions of freedmen in the South, and to establishing schools to educate them. It recruited 129 teachers to go to the South to teach.
History
Founded in 1858, the organization was intended to promote emigration to
Liberia
Liberia (), officially the Republic of Liberia, is a country on the West African coast. It is bordered by Sierra Leone to Liberia–Sierra Leone border, its northwest, Guinea to its north, Ivory Coast to its east, and the Atlantic Ocean ...
, which gained independence in 1847, and create a competing "free-labor" cotton industry to the slavery-based cotton industries of the United States. In part the emphasis on emigration was prompted by great disappointment about the US Supreme Court's
Dred Scott decision, which ruled that blacks had no standing as citizens in the country. This decision resulted in the disenfranchisement of many tax paying, landowning, and successful black and African American professionals and entrepreneurs.
While its philosophy was similar in some ways to the "Emigration to Africa" concept of such 19th-century groups as the
American Colonization Society, the African Civilization Society was founded and led exclusively by blacks or African Americans.
Leadership
"The Society is composed of ministers and gentlemen of known and tried integrity..." including
Henry Highland Garnet
Henry Highland Garnet (December 23, 1815 – February 13, 1882) was an African-American abolitionist, minister, educator and orator. Having escaped as a child from slavery in Maryland with his family, he grew up in New York City. He was educat ...
,
Martin Delany,
Junius C. Morel, Rev.
R. H. Cain, Rev.
A. A. Constantine,
Robert Campbell,
Theodore Cuyler
Theodore Ledyard Cuyler (January 10, 1822 – February 26, 1909) was an American Presbyterian minister and writer.
Biography
Theodore Ledyard Cuyler was born on January 10, 1822 in Aurora, Erie County, New York. His father died before he was f ...
(European American),
George W. LeVere
George Washington LeVere (October 9, 1820 – October 10, 1886) was an African American pastor, educator, abolitionist, and civil rights activist. As president of the African Civilization Society, LeVere met with President Abraham Lincoln and disc ...
, James Myres, James Morris Williams, Peter Williams, Rev. Amos N. Freeman,
Rufus L. Perry, John Sella Martin, Henry H. Wilson and many others. Abolitionist leader
Fredrick Douglass strongly opposed such colonization, but he was otherwise close to several members of the society, with whom he had collaborated on efforts to gain rights for American blacks.
"Self-Reliance and Self-Government on the Principle of an African Nationality..." was featured as a founding value statement in the original constitution of the society. Following the Civil War and emancipation of slaves, the mission of the organization shifted to providing basic needs to freed people. The Society raised funds to establish schools and sent some 129 teachers to the South to take up educating the freedmen.
Publications
The institution was also known for printing two publications that circulated among communities of blacks and African Americans, a monthly called the ''Freedman's Torchlight'' and a weekly called the ''People's Journal.''
References
{{Reflist
African-American organizations