Harper, Liberia

Coordinates: 4°22′N 7°43′W / 4.367°N 7.717°W / 4.367; -7.717
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Harper
Harper in 2004
Harper in 2004
Harper is located in Liberia
Harper
Harper
Location in Liberia
Coordinates: 4°22′N 7°43′W / 4.367°N 7.717°W / 4.367; -7.717
Country Liberia
CountyMaryland County
Population
 (2008)
 • Total17,837
ClimateAf
Masonic Lodge
, Harper, Liberia

Harper, situated on Cape Palmas, is the capital of Maryland County in Liberia. It is a coastal town situated between the Atlantic Ocean and the Hoffman River. Harper is Liberia's 11th largest town, with a population of 17,837.[1]

Name

The town is named after Robert Goodloe Harper, a prominent U.S. politician and member of the American Colonization Society. It was he who proposed the name Liberia for the American Colonization Society's settlement in Africa, and the town of Harper was named in honor of him.[2] Harper was the capital of the short-lived Republic of Maryland (1834–1857).

Geography

A warm ocean temperature is present year round.

Tabou
.

Local landmarks are the old, ruined mansion of

Masonic Lodge, also built by Tubman.[3]

History

Americo-Liberian period

Harper was the capital of the Republic of Maryland, an independent country (1834–1857), the last component of modern Liberia.

Americo-Liberians, descendants of free people of color and freed slaves from the United States who settled in Liberia and declared it an independent country in 1847. John Brown Russwurm, an African-American abolitionist
and governor of Monrovia, was buried in Harper after his death. There is a statue to commemorate his gravesite.

Harper as it existed prior to the Civil Wars was based on the

plantation architecture of the southern United States, where many of the Americo-Liberians came from.[4] "Today [2016], no place captures the ambiguous world of the Americo-Liberians better than Harper, whose oldest neighborhoods are reminiscent of New Orleans. Once occupied by the ruling elite, houses in the style of plantation mansions now stand silent and ghostly."[4]

One of the town's most famous citizens is President William Tubman (1895-1971), who was born in Harper. In 2021, his mansion lies in ruins and is occupied by squatters.[4]

Civil War and after

Before the First Liberian Civil War, Harper was an important administrative centre.

During the 1970s, Harper was terrorized by Maryland ritual killings. The crimes have been regarded as "Liberia's most notorious ritual killing case" due to the number of murders, the involvement of high ranking government officials, and their subsequent public executions.[5]

Tubman University, one of only two public universities in Liberia, is located in Harper.

Harper is also home to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cape Palmas, one of three dioceses of the Catholic Church in Liberia.

See also

References

  1. ^ 2008 National Population And Housing Census. Archived 2012-02-13 at the Wayback Machine Government Of The Republic Of Liberia.
  2. ^ "Maryland Historical Society Library: Harper-Pennington Papers, 1701-1899, MS. 431". Archived from the original on 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2008-10-27.
  3. ^ "William Tubman mansion | Harper, Liberia Attractions". Lonely Planet. Archived from the original on 2020-04-06. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  4. ^
    Smithsonian Magazine. Archived
    from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 23 June 2021.
  5. from the original on 3 November 2020. Retrieved 10 January 2019.

Further reading

External links

Media related to Harper, Liberia at Wikimedia Commons

4°22′N 7°43′W / 4.367°N 7.717°W / 4.367; -7.717