This article considers role conflicts for Africans who occupied leadership positions in the colonial governance structure of the Sierra Leone Protectorate in the late nineteenth century. In particular it examines the source of conflicting identity issues for Western-educated or mission-converted indigenous leaders. It focuses these general issues through the example of the Rev. D.F. Wilberforce, who was both a missionary and a colonial appointee to a paramount chieftaincy. Wilberforce exemplifies the kinds of problems faced by colonial appointed chiefs, problems exacerbated by his role as an American missionary. It examines the pressures inherent in the contradictory roles he was required to fulfil. More generally it suggests that economic shifts in agricultural practice resulting from the late colonial desire to make West African colonies self-funding exacerbated already declining relations between the colonial authorities and indigenous rulers in the Protectorate. It examines the...
Comments
(Leave your comments here about this item.)