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Historical Barbadian-Liberian communityBarbadian-Liberian community · Historical archivePhoto: TABHI Archive
Crozierville

The settlement they founded.

The community the 1865 emigrants founded — named Crozierville — became one of Liberia's most significant settlements. Three Liberian heads of state traced their lineage to Barbados: two elected presidents (Arthur Barclay and Edwin Barclay) and Charles Gyude Bryant, who served as Chairman of the National Transitional Government and Head of State following the country's second civil war. In May 2025, Presidents Boakai and Mason convened at Crozierville to mark the 160th anniversary and formally acknowledge the Barbadian contribution to Liberian nationhood.

All diplomatic milestones
Crozierville and the Liberian State

From settlement to government within a generation.

Liberia was founded in 1822 under the auspices of the American Colonization Society and declared its independence on 26 July 1847 — the first sovereign Black republic in Africa. The 347 Barbadians who arrived on the brig CORA on 10 May 1865 disembarked into a state that was eighteen years old. President Daniel Bashiel Warner, the third President of the Republic, had issued the formal invitation that brought them.

Of the 347 emigrants, 260 settled at Crozierville on the St. Paul River — named in honour of the wealthy Barbadian Crozer brothers who had supported the emigration.

Welcome to the Township of Crozierville, Founded 1865
Township of Crozierville · founded 1865St. Paul River, Montserrado County, Liberia
Christ Episcopal Church
The Episcopal Church welcomes you to Christ Church Crozierville
Christ Episcopal Church, CroziervilleThe spiritual centre of the Barbadian settlement, named for the parish in Barbados

The settlers built Christ Episcopal Church — named for Christ Church parish in Barbados from which many had come — opened schools, and within a single generation moved into Liberian government, law, education, and the press. Three of their descendants would lead the nation as heads of state: Arthur Barclay (15th President, 1904–1912) and Edwin Barclay (18th President, 1930–1944) by election, and Charles Gyude Bryant by selection as Chairman of the National Transitional Government and Head of State (2003–2006) following the country's second civil war.

The church remains in active use today. Its congregation includes the descendants of the original Barbadian settlers, members of the wider Crozierville community, and pilgrims who travel from Barbados, the United States, and the United Kingdom to worship in the building their families built.

A Capital, A Century Later
Waterside, Monrovia, 1937
Waterside (Water Street), Monrovia · 1937The customs-house tower visible at centre dates to the late nineteenth century. By 1937 the descendants of the 1865 emigrants were active across Liberian commerce, government, and the press.
Three Liberian heads of state were of Barbadian descent. This is not a footnote. It is the centre of the story. TABHI · Heritage Diplomacy Programme
Modern Liberia

A republic, a recovering state, a partner.

Liberia covers approximately 43,000 square miles — some 259 times the area of Barbados — and is home to roughly 5.4 million people. Monrovia, named for U.S. President James Monroe, is the capital and chief port. The country was governed continuously by the True Whig Party from 1878 until the 1980 coup, endured two civil wars between 1989 and 2003, and has held competitive multi-party elections since the 2005 victory of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Africa's first elected female head of state. President Joseph Boakai, inaugurated in January 2024, has placed the bilateral relationship with Barbados at the centre of Liberia's heritage and South–South diplomacy.

Record

The institutional connection.

CapitalMonrovia
Settlement foundedCrozierville, 1865
Liberian heads of state of Barbadian descentArthur Barclay (15th President), Edwin Barclay (18th President), Gyude Bryant (Chairman of the National Transitional Government / Head of State)
Presidential SummitCrozierville 160th Anniversary, May 2025
TABHI recognitionKnight Grand Band Award to Ambassador Witherspoon, 2025
Visa Waiver signed18 March 2026 · Barbados–Liberia Visa Waiver Agreement, Monrovia
Continuing Ties

The Liberian institutions that anchor the work.

01
State Recognition
Government of Liberia

Conferred the Knight Grand Band of the Humane Order of African Redemption — Liberia's highest state honour — upon Ambassador Witherspoon in 2024. Appointed him Special Envoy for Cultural and Heritage Diplomacy in 2025.

02
Heritage Site
Christ Episcopal Church, Crozierville

The spiritual home of the Barbadian settlers in Liberia. Restoration efforts have been supported by TABHI under the leadership of Ambassador Witherspoon and other citizens of Crozierville.

03
Institutional Partner
Center for National Documents and Records Agency (CNDRA)

Custodian of Liberian arrival, settlement, and civic records relating to the 1865 emigrants and the founding of Crozierville.

04
Diplomatic Milestone
Crozierville Presidential Monument

Unveiled by Presidents Boakai and Mason on 10 May 2025. Donated by TABHI in honour of three Liberian heads of state of Barbadian descent — Presidents Arthur Barclay and Edwin Barclay, and Chairman / Head of State Charles Gyude Bryant — and the original Barbadian settlers whose legacy shaped Crozierville.

All institutional partners
The Crozierville Monument

The plaques.

The Crozierville Presidential Monument carries individual plaques for each of the three Liberian heads of state of Barbadian descent, unveiled jointly on 10 May 2025 by President Joseph Boakai of Liberia and President Sandra Mason of Barbados. Two of the plaques are shown below.

Edwin James Barclay monument plaque, Crozierville
Edwin James BarclayPresident of Liberia · 1930–1944 · elected
Charles Gyude Bryant monument plaque, Crozierville
Charles Gyude BryantChairman of the National Transitional Government / Head of State · 2003–2006 · selected
Sources

Footage, scholarship, and credits.

Hero footage“LIBERIA Drone Footage 4K,” aerial of Sinkor (Monrovia), Firestone Plantation (Margibi), and Edina (Grand Bassa) by Anson Nyemah, January 2026. Watch on YouTube.
Archival photographWaterside (Water Street), Monrovia, 1937. The clock-tower visible at centre is the late-nineteenth-century customs house. From the African Archive collection; surfaced via Liberian History Rewrite, contemporary research project of historian Anthony Barclay Morgan, Jr.
ScholarshipCaree A. Banton, More Auspicious Shores: Barbadian Migration to Liberia, Blackness, and the Making of an African Republic, Cambridge University Press, 2019.
Press“Liberia, Barbados Mark 160 Years of Shared History in Crozierville,” AllAfrica/Liberian Investigator, May 2025.
RecordsCenter for National Documents and Records Agency (CNDRA), Liberia
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