... aims to be something more than a biographical dictionary of
missionaries, academics, artists, leaders, diplomats, educators,
soldiers, engineers, etc. (dead and alive), who established
relationships between the US and Africa. The entries include
information on institutions, organizations, business firms, even
ships that were involved in these contacts. . . . recommended for
most libraries. "Choice"
Contacts between the United States and Africa began in the
seventeenth century when American slavers arrived on the West
African Coast. They were quickly followed by a multitude of
colonists, traders, missionaries, soldiers, diplomats, engineers,
scientists, authors, artists, explorers, and hunters, among others,
as well as a range of American institutions, societies, and
businesses.
This unique reference work provides in one alphabetical format a
resource on more than 700 people, organizations, and events that
have affected the relations between the United States and Africa
from the 1600s to the present. The focus is primarily on those
individuals and organizations that were actually in Africa and that
have left written or visual records of their stay. Each entry is
followed by a short bibliography of major sources, including
information on existing manuscript material; a useful index
completes the text. Of special interest to scholars of African
studies, world history, American foreign policy, and colonialism,
this comprehensive reference tool will be a valuable aid in
understanding American involvement in Africa.
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