John Brown Russwurm, born on October 1, 1799, and died on June 9, 1851, exemplifies the multifaceted historical figures who shaped the paths of anti-slavery, journalism, and anti-colonialism in the Atlantic during the first half of the nineteenth century. His career was marked by radical intellectual and practical shifts, moving from the struggle against slavery and the demand for civil rights within the United States to embracing immigration and assuming colonial administration in West Africa.
Russwurm was born in Port Antonio, Jamaica, then a British colony entirely dependent on the slave economy. His birth was the result of a relationship between an English merchant named John Russwurm and a Black Jamaican woman who had been enslaved, whose identity is not precisely documented in historical records. The child was initially named John Brown, and his legal status during his early years remained ambiguous, hovering between freedom and slavery due to the strict racial laws in place in Jamaica at the time.
In 1807, his father sent him to Quebec City, Canada, for his primary education. In 1812, father and son moved to Portland, Maine. There, his father married a white widow named Susan Blanchard, who insisted that her husband formally acknowledge his son and give him his family name, thus making him John Brown Russwurm. Despite his father’s death in 1815, Rosswurm maintained a strong relationship with his stepmother, who provided him with both financial and moral support for his education.
Russwurm attended Hebron Academy in Maine, where he demonstrated rigorous academic discipline. After graduating in his early twenties, he briefly moved to Boston to work as a teacher at a school for African American children. He then returned to Maine at the request and with the support of his stepmother and her new husband to enrol at Bowdoin College in 1824. In September 1826, Russwurm graduated with a bachelor’s degree, becoming the first Black graduate in the college’s history and the third African American to earn a college degree in the entire United States. His commencement address, delivered publicly, focused on the Haitian Revolution, which he saw as proof of the ability of people of African descent to determine their own destiny and establish self-government.
After graduating, Russwurm moved to New York City, which was experiencing a growing concentration of free African Americans and intense debates about slavery and civil rights. At that time, white-run newspapers, even those not explicitly supportive of slavery, published articles and reports that vilified free Black people and diminished their social and political standing.
In response to this situation, Russwurm collaborated with the Presbyterian minister and reformer Samuel Cornish to establish an independent media outlet. On March 16, 1827, the first issue of “Freedom’s Journal” was published from its Manhattan office, making history as the first newspaper owned, operated, and edited by African Americans in the United States. Its inaugural issue featured a clear slogan: “We wish to plead our own cause. Too long have others spoken for us.”
The newspaper served as a weekly platform aimed at opposing the institution of slavery in the Southern states and demanding its abolition; countering negative stereotypes perpetuated in the mainstream press by showcasing the achievements of Black figures both internationally and locally; encouraging education, literacy, and economic organisation among free people as a means of elevating their social standing; and publishing local and international news relevant to the lives and interests of the Black community.
Cornish and Russwurm served as co-editors. However, this collaboration was short-lived; Cornish resigned after six months due to differing visions regarding the best course of action for the future of African Americans. Russwurm continued to manage and develop the newspaper single-handedly until March 1829, publishing a total of 103 issues and successfully expanding its distribution by hiring agents and distributing subscriptions that reached various states and even Europe.
During his sole management of the Liberty Gazette, Russwurm underwent a radical shift in his political convictions, sparking considerable controversy. Initially, he embraced the traditional stance of the Northern abolitionist movement, advocating complete assimilation and the struggle for civil rights and citizenship within the United States. However, his constant observation of deep-seated racial prejudice, discriminatory laws, and the lack of genuine political prospects for Black people even in states that had abolished slavery (such as New York, which ended slavery entirely in July 1827) led him to despair of the possibility of achieving equality on American soil.
In his newspaper editorials, Russwurm began expressing support for the efforts of the American Colonisation Society, an organisation founded and led by white politicians and clergymen with the goal of resettling free African Americans in a new colony in West Africa (later known as Liberia). Russwurm believed that Africa was the only place where Black people could enjoy complete freedom and sovereignty without being subject to white domination.
This shift was met with fierce opposition and widespread condemnation from the Black liberal community and abolitionist leaders in the North, who viewed the society’s project as a conspiracy to rid America of its educated Black elite and secure the system of slavery in the South. As a result of mounting public pressure and harsh criticism accusing him of betraying the cause, Russwurm resigned from editing the newspaper, and “Freedom’s Journal” ceased publication in late March 1829. That summer, he earned his master’s degree from Bowdoin College and began making arrangements for his final departure from the United States.
In November 1829, Russwurm arrived in Monrovia, the capital of the colony of Liberia, under the auspices of the American Colonisation Society. He quickly integrated himself into the political and administrative life of the colony, leveraging his exceptional educational qualifications. He was initially appointed head of the public schools and later served as the colony’s colonial secretary.
In addition to his administrative duties, in 1830 he founded the Liberia Herald newspaper and served as its editor for five years. The newspaper focused on documenting the social and economic life of the new colonists and tracking the slave trade and ships off the African coast. He resigned from his position in 1835 in protest against attempts at interference and censorship by the white administrators of the Colonisation Society.
His personal life was stable during this period; in 1833 he married Sarah McGill, the daughter of the Deputy Governor of Monrovia, and they had three sons and one daughter.
Due to his administrative excellence and the growing demands for African-American leadership to manage the affairs of the colonists, the Maryland Colonisation Society (an organisation independent of the parent society that administered a neighbouring colonial enclave) appointed him Governor of the Maryland in Africa Colony, based at Cape Palmas, in 1836. Russwurm thus became the first Black governor to administer a colony in that region.
Russwurm served as governor of the Maryland Colony from 1836 until his death in 1851. His fifteen-year tenure was characterised by political pragmatism and administrative firmness, as he faced complex challenges related to economic survival and security.
He worked to establish diplomatic and trade relations with the African tribes and kingdoms bordering the colony. While he successfully negotiated peace treaties that maintained stability, his administration used military force and called upon local militias to protect the colony’s borders and enforce order in cases of land or trade disputes. He encouraged settlers to develop sustainable agriculture, particularly coffee and vegetable cultivation and cattle ranching, with the goal of reducing financial dependence on foreign aid from the United States.
He oversaw the drafting of local laws to regulate the judiciary and commerce, and in 1843 he conducted a comprehensive and accurate census of the population and resources to assess the colony’s developmental status.
Russwurm recognised early on the vulnerability of small, scattered colonial entities. During the 1840s, he led political and diplomatic negotiations aimed at uniting the Colony of Maryland with the neighbouring Republic of Liberia (which had declared its independence in 1847) to create a unified, viable, and prosperous nation.
John Brown Russwurm died on June 9, 1851, at Cape Palmas and was buried there, five years before his vision of formally uniting the Colony of Maryland with the Republic of Liberia was realised in 1857. A memorial was erected at his burial site in recognition of his administrative role.

























































