Online Encyclopedia

FREETOWN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 88 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FREETOWN  ,

capital of the
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British colony of Sierra Leone, West Africa, on the south side of the Sierra Leone estuary, about 5 M. from the cape of that name, in 8° 29' N., 13° to' W . Pop . (1901) 34,463 . About 500 of the inhabitants are Europeans . Freetown is picturesquely situated on a plain, closed in behind by a succession of wooded hills, the Sierra Leone, rising to a height of 1700 ft . As nearly every house is surrounded by a courtyard or garden, the
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town covers an unusually large
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area for the number of its inhabitants . It possesses few buildings of architectural merit . The
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principal are the governor's residence and government offices, the barracks, the
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cathedral, the missionary institutions, the fruit market, Wilberforce Hall, courts of justice, the railway station and the grammar school . Several of these institutions are built on the slopes of the hills, and on the highest point,
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Sugar
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Loaf Mountain, is a sanatorium . The botanic gardens form a pleasant and favourite place of resort . The roads are wide but badly kept . Horses do not live, and all wheeled
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traffic is done by
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manual labour—hammocks and
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sedan-chairs are the customary means of locomotion .

Notwithstanding that Freetown possesses an abundant and pure

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water-supply,
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drawn from the adjacent hills, it is enervating and unhealthy, and it was particularly to the capital, often spoken of as Sierra Leone, that the designation "White Man's
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Grave" applied . Since the beginning of the 20th century strenuous efforts have been made to improve the sanitary condition by a new
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system of drainage, a better water service, the filling up of marshes wherein the malarial mosquito breeds, and in other directions . A
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light railway 6 m. long, opened in 1904, has been built to Hill Station (goo ft. high), where, on a healthy site, are the residences of the government officials and of other Europeans . As a consequence the public
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health has improved, the highest
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death-
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rate in the years 1901-1907 being 29.6 per 1000 . The town is governedby a
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municipality (created in 1893) with a mayor and councillors, the large majority being elective . Freetown was the first place in British West Africa granted
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local self-government . Both commercially and strategically Freetown is a place of importance . Its harbour affords ample accommodation for the largest fleets, it is a coaling station for the British
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navy, the head-quarters of the British military forces in West Africa, the sea
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terminus of the railway to the rich oil-palm regions of Mendiland, and a
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port of call for all steamers serving West Africa . Its inhabitants are noted for their skill as traders; the town itself produces nothing in the way of exports . In consequence of the character of the
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original settlement (see SIERRA LEONE), 75% of the inhabitants are descended from non-indigenous Negro races . As many as 150 different tribes are represented in the Sierra Leonia of to-day . Their semi-Europeanization is largely the result of missionary endeavour .

The only

language of the
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lower class is
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pidgin-English—quite incomprehensible to the, newcomer from
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Great Britain,—but a large proportion of the inhabitants are highly educated men who excel as lawyers, clergymen, clerks and traders . Many members of the upper, that is, the best-educated, class have filled official positions of great responsibility . The most noted citizens are Bishop Crowther and
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Sir
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Samuel Lewis, chief justice of Sierra Leone 1882-1894 . Both were full-blooded Africans . The Kru-men form a distinct section of the community, living in a
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separate quarter and preserving their tribal customs . Since 1861-1862 there has been an
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independent Episcopal Native Church; but the Church Missionary Society, which in 1804 sent out the first missionaries to Sierra Leone, still maintains various agencies . Furah
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Bay College, built by the society on the site of General Charles Turner's estate (11 m . E. of Freetown), and opened in 1828 with six pupils, one of whom was Bishop Crowther, was affiliated in 1876 to Durham University and has a high-class curriculum . The Wesleyans have a high school, a theological college, and other educative agencies . The Moslems, who are among the most law-abiding and intelligent citizens of Freetown, have several state-aided
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primary
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schools .

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