Inducements to the Colored People of the United States to Emigrate to British Guiana

TO THE
COLORED PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES
TO EMIGRATE TO BRITISH GUIANA,
Compiled from Statements and Documents furnished by Mr. Edward Carbery, Agent of the Immigration Society of British Guiana, and a Proprietor in that Colony.
BY A FRIEND TO THE COLORED PEOPLE.
BOSTON: PRINTED FOR DISTRIBUTION. KIDDER AND WRIGHT, CONGRESS STREET. 1840.

INDUCEMENTS.
Guiana is a vast tract of territory situated on the north-east coast of South America, between the mouths of those celebrated rivers, the Oronoco and the Amazons.
British Guiana includes a portion of this coast, extending some two hundred miles from east to west, bounded on the east by the river Corentyn which separates it from Dutch Guiana, or Surinam, and on the west by the Morocco creek, or the tract of country adjacent to it, belonging to the republic of Venezuela. British Guiana extends inland from the coast some two hundred miles, in a southerly direction, to a chain of high mountains, by which it is bounded on the south, and which separates it from Brazil. It thus includes an area of upwards of forty thousand square miles, being about equal in extent to the State of New York.

Richard Hildreth
Edward Carbery
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О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2019-01-21

Темы

African Americans -- Colonization; Guyana

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