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Gone But Not Forgotten: A Black Utopia in Buxton, Iowa
August 22, 2008 - March 20, 2009
Buxton, Iowa was founded in 1900, and at its peak had as many as 6,000
residents, the majority of whom were African American. The Consolidation
Coal Company, a subsidiary of the Chicago and North Western Railroad, in
Monroe County north of Albia used the town as a base of operations for its
pit mines.
The story of Buxton diverges from what one might expect of a small town
with a high population of African Americans in the early 1900's. Rather
than segregation, integration and opportunity mark the history of this
remarkable town.
One historian noted, "In Buxton, there were African American doctors,
dentists, druggists, lawyers, mine engineers, music teachers, school
teachers, school principals, merchants, farm owners, newspaper editors,
and ministers, in addition to railroad workers, coal miners, midwives,
cooks, seamstresses, farmers, hair dressers, teamsters, and blacksmiths.
African Americans were active members of the United Mine Workers of
America union
. Among Buxton's African American population were veterans
of the U.S. Army."
The union insisted that African American members be paid the same rate as
whites, which contributed to the prosperity of the town. Life was so much
better for African Americans in Buxton than, by comparison, most places in
the United States, that the Southern Workman, a journal published by the
Hampton Institute of Virginia, called it "The Black Man's Utopia."
The Consolidation Coal Company abandoned the town in the early 1920's.
Many of the African Americans who lived in Buxton moved to cities across
Iowa, such as Des Moines, Waterloo, Davenport, and Cedar Rapids. These
people had become accustomed to decent wages, opportunity, and
integration, and they became an important part of Iowa's African American
middle class, taking pro-union sentiments into new industries and
spreading organized labor. Many also became prominent in social circles,
business, and civil rights organizations.
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