Early in 1820, Daniel Coker sailed for Africa on board the
Elizabeth. He was among 86 African-American emigrants assisted by the ACS. Made up of various leaders from the northern and southern United States, the ACS advocated resettling free African Americans in West Africa. Both enslavers and some abolitionists supported the enterprise, the former believing that free people of color threatened the stability of the southern slave society. The passengers on the
Elizabeth were the first African-American settlers of the
Colony of Liberia, a private colony organized by the ACS with financial support from the United States government. The ACS planned to settle a colony at
Sherbro Island, now within
Sierra Leone, which was then a British colony. The newcomers were not used to the local diseases and quickly became ill. The area was swampy, resulting in many mosquitoes that carried disease. All but one of the twelve white colonists and one-third of the African Americans died, including three of the four missionaries. Just before dying, the expedition's leader (
Samuel Bacon) asked Coker to take charge of the venture. He helped the remaining colonists get through their despair and survive. Coker led the group to seek another location on the mainland. He and his family settled in
Hastings, Sierra Leone, a newly founded village about 15 miles from the first settlement of
Freetown. It was intended for
Liberated Africans freed by the British Navy from illegal slave ships, as Britain and the United States had banned the transatlantic slave trade. Hastings was one of several new villages developed by the
Church Missionary Society, which was active in the colony. Coker became the patriarch of a prominent
Creole family, the Cokers. Coker's son, Daniel Coker Jr., became a leader in the town of Freetown. Coker descendants still reside in Freetown and are among the prominent Creole families. Other members of the expedition settled in what became Liberia. In 1891
Henry McNeal Turner, the 12th bishop of the A.M.E. Church, elaborated on Coker's achievements, writing, "It would seem, from all I can learn, that Coker played a prominent part in the early settlement of Liberia. The first Methodist Church established here was the African M. E. Church; but by whom established I cannot say. Tradition says it was afterward sold out to the M. E. Church. Besides the probability of Rev. Daniel Coker's having established our church here, he also played a mighty part among the early settlers of Sierra Leone. His children and grandchildren are found there to-day." ==See also==