CONTENTS
| DESCRIPTION. | |
| Physiography | [1] |
| Political Geography | [21] |
| Society | [25] |
| Government | [36] |
| Economics | [43] |
| HISTORY. | |
| 1821-1828 | [52] |
| 1828-1838 | [71] |
| 1838-1847 | [80] |
| 1847-1913 | [88] |
| PROBLEMS. | |
| Boundary Questions | [100] |
| The Frontier Force | [118] |
| Development of Trade and Transportation | [131] |
| The Native | [144] |
| Education | [160] |
| Immigration | [185] |
| Public Debt and Foreign Loans | [199] |
| Politics | [210] |
| The Appeal to the United States | [221] |
| REPRINT ARTICLES. | |
| The Liberian Crisis (Unity, March 25, 1909) | [229] |
| The Needs of Liberia (The Open Court, March, 1913) | [231] |
| A Sojourner in Liberia (The Spirit of Missions, April, 1913) | [231] |
| Liberia, the Hope of the Dark Continent (Unity, March 20, 1913) | [235] |
| What Liberia Needs (The Independent, April 3, 1913) | [235] |
| Should the African Mission be Abandoned (The Spirit of Missions, August, 1913) | [241] |
| The People of Liberia (The Independent, August 14, 1913) | [244] |
| APPENDICES. | |
| Leading Events in Liberian History | [251] |
| Declaration of Independence in Convention | [257] |
| Constitution of the Republic of Liberia | [261] |
| Suggestions to the United States | [273] |
| Presidents and Vice-Presidents; Secretaries of State | [276] |
| The National Hymn | [277] |
| [Map] of Liberia | |
LIBERIA
A more fertile soil, and a more productive country, so far as it is cultivated, there is not, we believe, on the face of the earth. Its hills and its plains are covered with a verdure which never fades; the productions of nature keep on in their growth through all the seasons of the year. Even the natives of the country, almost without farming tools, without skill, and with very little labor, raise more grain and vegetables than they can consume, and often more than they can sell. Cattle, swine, fowls, ducks, goats, and sheep, thrive without feeding, and require no other care than to keep them from straying. Cotton, coffee, indigo, and the sugar cane, are all the spontaneous growth of our forests, and may be cultivated at pleasure, to any extent, by such as are disposed. The same may be said of rice, Indian corn, Guinea corn, millet, and too many species of fruits and vegetables to be enumerated. Add to all this, we have no dreary winter here, for one-half of the year to consume the productions of the other half. Nature is constantly renewing herself, and constantly pouring her treasures, all the year round, into the laps of the industrious.—Address by Liberians: 1827.