Henderson’s progressive vision of what modern West Africa had to offer African Americans, however, got eclipsed in the late 1970s, thanks largely to African Americans’ newfound desire to explore their past. According to scholar Salamishah Tillet, political instability in the region, the lack of commemorative sites dedicated to slavery in the United States and the popularity of “Roots,” Alex Haley’s book and the adapted miniseries, turned Ghana from a nation with lessons about the future for African Americans into one that helped them understand their past. Ghanaian tourism became synonymous with the slave trade and the fraught quest for a sense of home for the children of the African diaspora.

In 1999, Henderson returned to Ghana one last time. It was a festive occasion replete with African drummers and dancers that must have reminded her of the celebrations that first brought her to the nation in 1957. During a lavish five-hour ceremony, more than 8,000 people watched as Henderson was draped with kente cloth, enstooled as an honorary Ashanti and given the name Nana Akwantu Hemaa, which means the Queen Mother of Travel and Tours, by the Ghanaian Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture for her work pioneering travel to the nation and for sending tens of thousands of travellers to its shores. As civil rights, activist and congressman John Lewis recalled after her death in 2007, “If you wanted to travel especially to Africa … the Freddye Henderson travel agency was the way to go.”

 

As much as Henderson would’ve loved seeing over a million people “return” to Ghana and find themselves dancing to Afrobeats, eating jollof rice and posing for the perfect shot at Elmina Castle in 2019, the Year of Return celebrations were a far cry from the political context of decolonization that first brought her to the new nation. While the Ghanaian Tourism Authority is applauding its successful campaign, Ghanaians and African Americans must learn the lessons Henderson tried to teach concerning not only their linked past but their shared destinies.