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Exodusters

Exodusters was a name given to African Americans who migrated from states along the Mississippi River to Kansas in the late nineteenth century, as part of the Exoduster Movement or Exodus of 1879.[1] It was the first general migration of black people following the Civil War.[2]

Exoduster movement
Refugees on Levee, 1879
Date1879
Location United States
Also known asExodus of 1879
CauseDisenfranchisement after the Reconstruction Era
ParticipantsGovernment of the United States
African Americans
Outcome
  • 98,000 sign emigration papers
  • Around 26,000 African Americans arrive in Kansas

The movement received substantial organizational support from prominent figures, such as Benjamin Singleton of Tennessee, Philip D. Armour of Chicago, and Henry Adams[3] of Louisiana. As many as 40,000 Exodusters left the South to settle in Kansas, Oklahoma and Colorado.[4]

Reality of life for blacks in the post-Reconstruction South edit

The number one cause of black migration out of the South at this time was to escape racial violence or "bulldozing" by white supremacist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan and the White League, as well as widespread repression under the Black Codes, discriminatory laws that rendered blacks second-class citizens after Reconstruction ended.[5] Vigilantes operated with almost total impunity, and no other issue was of more importance to the majority of southern blacks living in the countryside. Given the extreme level of discrimination and violent intimidation blacks faced in the rural South, the Exodusters can be accurately described as refugees.[6]

Although blacks greatly outnumbered whites in Louisiana, black armed resistance was practically inconceivable. According to William Murrell in testimony given to the United States Senate, “the white people in Louisiana are better armed and equipped now than during the war.”[7] As evidence of the frightening lawlessness, which empowered the terrorist activities of the White League in the mid-1870s, the League “managed to seize a huge cache of arms from the arsenal in New Orleans…worth about $67,000” stolen directly from the United States government.[7]

The Exodusters were not only fleeing extremist groups like the KKK. In fact, throughout Reconstruction a majority of the southern white population continued to resent black emancipation, resulting in an oppressive environment perpetuated by all segments of white society.[8] Most black migration, including the Exodus of 1879, was spurred on by the dire economic prospects of black labor in the rural South. The depression of the 1870s served to exacerbate the racist policies of white merchants and planters, who sought to offset their agricultural losses by increasing prices and interest rates for blacks.[9]

Most southern states completely undermined federal Reconstruction efforts to promote landowning as the blacks’ ticket to economic freedom and equality. For example, in 1865 the Mississippi Black Code outlawed the selling or leasing of land to blacks.[10] As a result, in large parts of Mississippi, less than 1 in 100 black workers owned land or a house.[11]

In the aftermath of the Compromise of 1877 and the traumatic political campaigns of 1878 in Louisiana, the plight of organized black resistance had reached a point of hopelessness, leading to the Exodus of 1879. Political and economic oppression was enforced by means both legal and illegal, on the streets and in contracts, at both the local and federal levels. Grassroots black political activism, exemplified by the leadership of Henry Adams in Louisiana, functioned only in total secrecy and at great risk of assassination. Such efforts were eventually pushed out of rural communities and into New Orleans, where many organizers including Adams found themselves exiled.[12]

Millenarianism edit

The Exoduster movement has been characterized as an example of millenarianism, in that many Exodusters created settlements they believed to be their new Promised Land. That the journey of these refugees was termed an “exodus,” a word taken from the Old Testament in reference to the Jews’ flight from Egypt, indicates that the movement had spiritual motivations. The millenarian aspect of the Exodus was most realized in Tennessee, where Benjamin "Pap" Singleton’s boisterous proselytizing mostly found an enthusiastic black following and a more amenable white audience.[13]

 
"Ho For Kansas!" Copyprint handbill

Role of black leadership edit

While the roles of community leaders like Singleton and Adams, white facilitators like Thomas W. Conway, formal politicians, and white philanthropists were in some ways crucial to the Exodus, the migration ultimately came about as a result of the collective misery of black southerners and the individual inquiry and initiative taken in response by would-be migrants. Black political leaders at the time, such as Adams and Singleton at the local level and Frederick Douglass and Mississippi Senator Blanche K. Bruce at the national level, were limited in their ability to influence the southern black populace. For this reason, during the post-Reconstruction period, blacks did not enjoy any truly representative national leadership.[6]

Promised lands edit

Kansas vs. Liberia edit

Before the Exodus of 1879 to Kansas, southern blacks convened to discuss the option of emigration both formally and informally.[14] Delegates from Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Texas, Arkansas, and Georgia met at a New Orleans conference in 1875 and discussed black emigration to western territories and Liberia.[15] Black settlement outside of the South as a result of emigration was termed “colonization,” and the New Orleans committee meeting became a full-fledged organization dubbed “The Colonization Council.” The Council held its first public meetings in 1877.[16] Council meetings consisted of speechmaking and petition writing and signing, with some 98,000 men, women, and children from Louisiana signed onto emigration lists.[16]

Liberia proved an unrealistic destination for black refugees financially and logistically. As the land of John Brown, Kansas had fought bitterly for its Free State status, and took its fair treatment of black immigrants as a point of pride.[17][18] Kansas did not actively encourage the Exodusters, but its equal-opportunity stance was more welcoming than most of the country.

Reality in Kansas edit

The most successful of the Exodusters were those who moved to urban centers and found work as domestic or trade workers.[19] Almost all of the Exodusters who attempted to homestead in the countryside settled in the Kansas uplands, which presented the most formidable obstacles to small-scale farmers.[20] The uplands were the only lands available for purchase after the squatters, railroads, and speculators had taken the best farmland. Given the agricultural challenge of farming these lands, many Exodusters were still destitute a year after their arrival.[21]

Response to the exodus edit

The Exodus of 1879 consisted mostly of refugees fleeing Mississippi and Louisiana between March and May and Texas later in the year.[22] There was considerable uncertainty at the time as to the actual number of Exodusters that arrived in St. Louis. However, the Colored Relief Board estimated that about 20,000 Exodusters reached the city between 1879 and 1880; the St. Louis Globe-Democrat quoted 6,206 arriving between March and April 1879 alone.[23]

Many steamboat captains refused to carry migrants across the Missouri River, and thousands of Exodusters found themselves stranded for months in St. Louis.[24] Black churches in St. Louis, together with eastern philanthropists, formed the Colored Relief Board and the Kansas Freedmen's Aid Society to help those stranded in St. Louis reach Kansas.[5] In contrast to fundraising success in Kansas, “St. Louis officials discouraged the Exodusters whenever possible,”[25] and therefore the burden of providing for stranded Exodusters fell entirely on the St. Louis black community. Other private relief organizations were funded by Quakers and other abolitionists in northern states and England.[26] The Kansas Freedman's Aid Society raised some $70,000 in support of Exoduster migration and settlement, $13,000 of which came from England.[21]

The failure of federal and state governments to financially support black migrants can be attributed to both bureaucratic incompetence (as in the case of the mayor of Kansas being denied temporary assistance from the secretary of war due to congressional jurisdiction) and to nineteenth-century preferences for limited government.[27] At the local level, Topeka Mayor Michael C. Case refused to spend municipal funds to aid Exodusters, believing that the money would be better spent to return them to the South.[21] Moreover, much of the poor white population resented the extent of relief efforts aimed at helping immigrant blacks.[20]

The political response of southern white Democrats, and of some conservative “representative” black men, was one of disgust and incomprehension. They distrusted the intentions of white philanthropy in aiding black migration; in fact, they were convinced of ulterior motives.[28] They denied outright claims of economic hardship and political oppression as motivating factors for black flight. They attributed feelings of discontent to a small group of leading black rabble-rousers and outside white meddling. In solidarity, the Democratic party as a whole “refused to admit to the fact of Southern lawlessness because many of the crimes had been perpetrated by Democrats, usually for their party’s own advancement.”[29] In contrast, the Senate minority opinion, represented in a report by Minnesota Senator William Windom and New Hampshire Senator Henry W. Blair, utilized the direct testimony of prominent black figures and sided with them.[29] Ultimately, though, the Democratic majority in Congress ensured that no legislation would be passed in support of the Exodus Movement.[30] Appropriation bills for refugee aid introduced by Kansas Senator John J. Ingalls and Ohio Representative James A. Garfield died in committee.[31]

Senate investigations debated whether or not black migration fit into a greater conspiratorial political scheme on the part of Republicans, who were thought to be packing swing states to increase their chances of success in the upcoming 1880 presidential election, which Republicans did win. Such accusations, lobbed in particular at Kansas Governor St. John and Thomas Conway, were only seriously considered at the end of 1879, when more attention was being given to the black migrants from North Carolina, who, unable to reach Kansas, were being redirected to Indiana.[32]

The Exodus was not universally praised by African Americans; indeed, Republican statesman Frederick Douglass, a former slave who escaped captivity, was a critic of the movement.[33] Douglass did not disagree with the Exodusters in principle, but he felt that the movement was ill-timed and poorly organized.[34]

Impact of the Exodusters edit

Although the Exodus of 1879 saw a high volume of black migration during a shorter period of time, most of the black migration to Kansas occurred steadily throughout the decade. The black population of Kansas increased by some 26,000 people during the 1870s.[35] Historian Nell Painter further asserts that “the sustained migration of some 9,500 Blacks from Tennessee and Kentucky to Kansas during the decade far exceeded the much publicized migration of 1879, which netted no more than about 4,000 people from Louisiana.”[36] During the 1870s and the decade that followed, blacks bought more than 20,000 acres (81 km2) of land in Kansas, and several of the settlements established during this time (e.g., Nicodemus, Kansas, which was founded in 1877) still exist today.

Of note, however, western migration of African-Americans was not limited to the Exoduster period, and places like Quindaro, Kansas, thrived for some period before, during, and after the Exoduster movement.[citation needed] Similarly, in the early 20th century, black migrations to the American West and Southwest would continue, and several additional all-black towns would be established, especially in Indian Territory, which would become the state of Oklahoma.[citation needed]

The impact of the Exoduster migration on subsequent white treatment of African Americans was mixed. On the one hand, the exodus did little to alleviate the national propensity for violence towards blacks. From the 1880s through the 1930s, the lynching of African Americans increased, and some 3,000 lynchings took place during that period nationwide.[26] On the other hand, the Exoduster migration seems to have had some impact on labor relations between southern black farm workers and their white employers. Temporary benefits accorded to counties with the highest black labor scarcity included better price terms in leasing contracts and shrinking long-term contract commitments.[37]

Exodusters in fiction edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Van Deusen, JohnG. (1936). "The Exodus of 1879". The Journal of Negro History. Association for the Study of African American Life and History. 21 (2): 111–129. doi:10.2307/2714567. JSTOR 2714567. S2CID 224830636.
  2. ^ Johnson, Daniel M.; Campbell, Rex R. (1981). Black Migration in America: A Social Demographic History. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. p. 51. ISBN 0-8223-0449-X. OCLC 6421175.
  3. ^ Wang, Tabitha (June 24, 2008). "Henry Adams [Louisiana] (1843-?) •".
  4. ^ "Slavery in America Encyclopedia". Retrieved 2007-10-19.
  5. ^ a b Gates, Henry Louis (1999). Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience. Basic Civitas Books. pp. 722. ISBN 0-465-00071-1.
  6. ^ a b Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 27.
  7. ^ a b Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 23.
  8. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 17.
  9. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 62.
  10. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 7.
  11. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 68.
  12. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 133.
  13. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 110–111.
  14. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 89.
  15. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 83.
  16. ^ a b Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 87.
  17. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 159.
  18. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 231.
  19. ^ "Exodusters". www.fofweb.com. Facts on File History Database.
  20. ^ a b Hickey, Joseph V. (Winter 1991). ""Pap" Singleton's Dunlap Colony: Relief Agencies and the Failure of a Black Settlement in Eastern Kansas". Great Plains Quarterly. University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Center for Great Plains Studies. 11 (1).
  21. ^ a b c Quintard, Taylor (1998). In Search of the Racial Frontier: African Americans in the American West, 1528-1990. New York, NY: W. W. Norton.
  22. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 185.
  23. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 184.
  24. ^ White, Richard (1991). "It's Your Misfortune and None of My Own": A History of the American West. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 198.
  25. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 232.
  26. ^ a b Warren, Kim. "Seeking the Promised Land: African American Migrations to Kansas". Civil War on the Western Border: The Missouri-Kansas Conflict, 1854-1865. Kansas City Public Library.
  27. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 233.
  28. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 253.
  29. ^ a b Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 254.
  30. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 255.
  31. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 250.
  32. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 252.
  33. ^ Romero, Patricia W., ed. (1978). I Too Am America: Documents from 1619 to the Present. Publishers Agency. p. 150. ISBN 0-87781-206-3. OCLC 4662987.
  34. ^ Sernett, Milton C. (1997). Bound for the Promised Land: African American Religion and the Great Migration. Duke University Press. p. 14. ISBN 0-8223-1993-4.
  35. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 146.
  36. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 147.
  37. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (1976). Exodusters. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 210.

Further reading edit

  • Campney, Brent M. S. (September 6, 2007) ""This is Not Dixie:" The Imagined South, the Kansas Free State Narrative, and the Rhetoric of Racist Violence." Southern Spaces. ISSN 1551-2754.
  • Davis, Damani. (Summer 2008). "Exodus to Kansas: The 1880 Senate Investigation of the Beginnings of the African American Migration from the South." Prologue Vol. 40, No. 2.
  • Katz, William (1987). The Black West. Seattle: Open Hand Publishing.
  • Moore, Shirley; Taylor, Quintard (2003). African American Women Confront the West, 1600-2000. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press.
  • Ravage, John W. (1997). Black Pioneers. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.
  • Savage, W. Sherman (1976). Blacks in the West. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
  • Woods, Randall B. (1998). "Integration, Exclusion, or Segregation? The "Color Line" in Kansas, 1878-1900." Billington, Monroe Lee; Hardaway, Roger D., eds. African Americans on the Western Frontier. Niwot, CO: University Press of Colorado.
  • Woodson, Carter G. (1969). A Century of Negro Migration. New York: Russell and Russell.

External links edit

  • (PBS The West "Exodusters")
  • (Kansas State Historical Society, Exoduster Flier)
  • Access documents, photographs, and other primary sources on Kansas Memory, the Kansas State Historical Society's digital portal

exodusters, name, given, african, americans, migrated, from, states, along, mississippi, river, kansas, late, nineteenth, century, part, exoduster, movement, exodus, 1879, first, general, migration, black, people, following, civil, exoduster, movementrefugees,. Exodusters was a name given to African Americans who migrated from states along the Mississippi River to Kansas in the late nineteenth century as part of the Exoduster Movement or Exodus of 1879 1 It was the first general migration of black people following the Civil War 2 Exoduster movementRefugees on Levee 1879Date1879LocationUnited StatesAlso known asExodus of 1879CauseDisenfranchisement after the Reconstruction Era Jim Crow economy Mass racial violence in the United StatesParticipantsGovernment of the United StatesAfrican AmericansOutcome98 000 sign emigration papers Around 26 000 African Americans arrive in KansasThe movement received substantial organizational support from prominent figures such as Benjamin Singleton of Tennessee Philip D Armour of Chicago and Henry Adams 3 of Louisiana As many as 40 000 Exodusters left the South to settle in Kansas Oklahoma and Colorado 4 Contents 1 Reality of life for blacks in the post Reconstruction South 1 1 Millenarianism 1 2 Role of black leadership 2 Promised lands 2 1 Kansas vs Liberia 2 2 Reality in Kansas 3 Response to the exodus 4 Impact of the Exodusters 5 Exodusters in fiction 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Further reading 8 External linksReality of life for blacks in the post Reconstruction South editThe number one cause of black migration out of the South at this time was to escape racial violence or bulldozing by white supremacist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan and the White League as well as widespread repression under the Black Codes discriminatory laws that rendered blacks second class citizens after Reconstruction ended 5 Vigilantes operated with almost total impunity and no other issue was of more importance to the majority of southern blacks living in the countryside Given the extreme level of discrimination and violent intimidation blacks faced in the rural South the Exodusters can be accurately described as refugees 6 Although blacks greatly outnumbered whites in Louisiana black armed resistance was practically inconceivable According to William Murrell in testimony given to the United States Senate the white people in Louisiana are better armed and equipped now than during the war 7 As evidence of the frightening lawlessness which empowered the terrorist activities of the White League in the mid 1870s the League managed to seize a huge cache of arms from the arsenal in New Orleans worth about 67 000 stolen directly from the United States government 7 The Exodusters were not only fleeing extremist groups like the KKK In fact throughout Reconstruction a majority of the southern white population continued to resent black emancipation resulting in an oppressive environment perpetuated by all segments of white society 8 Most black migration including the Exodus of 1879 was spurred on by the dire economic prospects of black labor in the rural South The depression of the 1870s served to exacerbate the racist policies of white merchants and planters who sought to offset their agricultural losses by increasing prices and interest rates for blacks 9 Most southern states completely undermined federal Reconstruction efforts to promote landowning as the blacks ticket to economic freedom and equality For example in 1865 the Mississippi Black Code outlawed the selling or leasing of land to blacks 10 As a result in large parts of Mississippi less than 1 in 100 black workers owned land or a house 11 In the aftermath of the Compromise of 1877 and the traumatic political campaigns of 1878 in Louisiana the plight of organized black resistance had reached a point of hopelessness leading to the Exodus of 1879 Political and economic oppression was enforced by means both legal and illegal on the streets and in contracts at both the local and federal levels Grassroots black political activism exemplified by the leadership of Henry Adams in Louisiana functioned only in total secrecy and at great risk of assassination Such efforts were eventually pushed out of rural communities and into New Orleans where many organizers including Adams found themselves exiled 12 Millenarianism editThe Exoduster movement has been characterized as an example of millenarianism in that many Exodusters created settlements they believed to be their new Promised Land That the journey of these refugees was termed an exodus a word taken from the Old Testament in reference to the Jews flight from Egypt indicates that the movement had spiritual motivations The millenarian aspect of the Exodus was most realized in Tennessee where Benjamin Pap Singleton s boisterous proselytizing mostly found an enthusiastic black following and a more amenable white audience 13 nbsp Ho For Kansas Copyprint handbillRole of black leadership edit While the roles of community leaders like Singleton and Adams white facilitators like Thomas W Conway formal politicians and white philanthropists were in some ways crucial to the Exodus the migration ultimately came about as a result of the collective misery of black southerners and the individual inquiry and initiative taken in response by would be migrants Black political leaders at the time such as Adams and Singleton at the local level and Frederick Douglass and Mississippi Senator Blanche K Bruce at the national level were limited in their ability to influence the southern black populace For this reason during the post Reconstruction period blacks did not enjoy any truly representative national leadership 6 Promised lands editKansas vs Liberia edit Before the Exodus of 1879 to Kansas southern blacks convened to discuss the option of emigration both formally and informally 14 Delegates from Louisiana Mississippi Alabama Texas Arkansas and Georgia met at a New Orleans conference in 1875 and discussed black emigration to western territories and Liberia 15 Black settlement outside of the South as a result of emigration was termed colonization and the New Orleans committee meeting became a full fledged organization dubbed The Colonization Council The Council held its first public meetings in 1877 16 Council meetings consisted of speechmaking and petition writing and signing with some 98 000 men women and children from Louisiana signed onto emigration lists 16 Liberia proved an unrealistic destination for black refugees financially and logistically As the land of John Brown Kansas had fought bitterly for its Free State status and took its fair treatment of black immigrants as a point of pride 17 18 Kansas did not actively encourage the Exodusters but its equal opportunity stance was more welcoming than most of the country Reality in Kansas edit The most successful of the Exodusters were those who moved to urban centers and found work as domestic or trade workers 19 Almost all of the Exodusters who attempted to homestead in the countryside settled in the Kansas uplands which presented the most formidable obstacles to small scale farmers 20 The uplands were the only lands available for purchase after the squatters railroads and speculators had taken the best farmland Given the agricultural challenge of farming these lands many Exodusters were still destitute a year after their arrival 21 Response to the exodus editThe Exodus of 1879 consisted mostly of refugees fleeing Mississippi and Louisiana between March and May and Texas later in the year 22 There was considerable uncertainty at the time as to the actual number of Exodusters that arrived in St Louis However the Colored Relief Board estimated that about 20 000 Exodusters reached the city between 1879 and 1880 the St Louis Globe Democrat quoted 6 206 arriving between March and April 1879 alone 23 Many steamboat captains refused to carry migrants across the Missouri River and thousands of Exodusters found themselves stranded for months in St Louis 24 Black churches in St Louis together with eastern philanthropists formed the Colored Relief Board and the Kansas Freedmen s Aid Society to help those stranded in St Louis reach Kansas 5 In contrast to fundraising success in Kansas St Louis officials discouraged the Exodusters whenever possible 25 and therefore the burden of providing for stranded Exodusters fell entirely on the St Louis black community Other private relief organizations were funded by Quakers and other abolitionists in northern states and England 26 The Kansas Freedman s Aid Society raised some 70 000 in support of Exoduster migration and settlement 13 000 of which came from England 21 The failure of federal and state governments to financially support black migrants can be attributed to both bureaucratic incompetence as in the case of the mayor of Kansas being denied temporary assistance from the secretary of war due to congressional jurisdiction and to nineteenth century preferences for limited government 27 At the local level Topeka Mayor Michael C Case refused to spend municipal funds to aid Exodusters believing that the money would be better spent to return them to the South 21 Moreover much of the poor white population resented the extent of relief efforts aimed at helping immigrant blacks 20 The political response of southern white Democrats and of some conservative representative black men was one of disgust and incomprehension They distrusted the intentions of white philanthropy in aiding black migration in fact they were convinced of ulterior motives 28 They denied outright claims of economic hardship and political oppression as motivating factors for black flight They attributed feelings of discontent to a small group of leading black rabble rousers and outside white meddling In solidarity the Democratic party as a whole refused to admit to the fact of Southern lawlessness because many of the crimes had been perpetrated by Democrats usually for their party s own advancement 29 In contrast the Senate minority opinion represented in a report by Minnesota Senator William Windom and New Hampshire Senator Henry W Blair utilized the direct testimony of prominent black figures and sided with them 29 Ultimately though the Democratic majority in Congress ensured that no legislation would be passed in support of the Exodus Movement 30 Appropriation bills for refugee aid introduced by Kansas Senator John J Ingalls and Ohio Representative James A Garfield died in committee 31 Senate investigations debated whether or not black migration fit into a greater conspiratorial political scheme on the part of Republicans who were thought to be packing swing states to increase their chances of success in the upcoming 1880 presidential election which Republicans did win Such accusations lobbed in particular at Kansas Governor St John and Thomas Conway were only seriously considered at the end of 1879 when more attention was being given to the black migrants from North Carolina who unable to reach Kansas were being redirected to Indiana 32 The Exodus was not universally praised by African Americans indeed Republican statesman Frederick Douglass a former slave who escaped captivity was a critic of the movement 33 Douglass did not disagree with the Exodusters in principle but he felt that the movement was ill timed and poorly organized 34 Impact of the Exodusters editAlthough the Exodus of 1879 saw a high volume of black migration during a shorter period of time most of the black migration to Kansas occurred steadily throughout the decade The black population of Kansas increased by some 26 000 people during the 1870s 35 Historian Nell Painter further asserts that the sustained migration of some 9 500 Blacks from Tennessee and Kentucky to Kansas during the decade far exceeded the much publicized migration of 1879 which netted no more than about 4 000 people from Louisiana 36 During the 1870s and the decade that followed blacks bought more than 20 000 acres 81 km2 of land in Kansas and several of the settlements established during this time e g Nicodemus Kansas which was founded in 1877 still exist today Of note however western migration of African Americans was not limited to the Exoduster period and places like Quindaro Kansas thrived for some period before during and after the Exoduster movement citation needed Similarly in the early 20th century black migrations to the American West and Southwest would continue and several additional all black towns would be established especially in Indian Territory which would become the state of Oklahoma citation needed The impact of the Exoduster migration on subsequent white treatment of African Americans was mixed On the one hand the exodus did little to alleviate the national propensity for violence towards blacks From the 1880s through the 1930s the lynching of African Americans increased and some 3 000 lynchings took place during that period nationwide 26 On the other hand the Exoduster migration seems to have had some impact on labor relations between southern black farm workers and their white employers Temporary benefits accorded to counties with the highest black labor scarcity included better price terms in leasing contracts and shrinking long term contract commitments 37 Exodusters in fiction editGabriel s Story by David Anthony Durham Paradise by Toni Morrison Justin and the Best Biscuits in the World by Mildred Pitts Walker Why the Dark Man Cries by Connie FredricksSee also editFreedmen s town Camp Nelson Heritage National Monument African American settlements in Western Canada Great Migration African American References edit Van Deusen JohnG 1936 The Exodus of 1879 The Journal of Negro History Association for the Study of African American Life and History 21 2 111 129 doi 10 2307 2714567 JSTOR 2714567 S2CID 224830636 Johnson Daniel M Campbell Rex R 1981 Black Migration in America A Social Demographic History Durham NC Duke University Press p 51 ISBN 0 8223 0449 X OCLC 6421175 Wang Tabitha June 24 2008 Henry Adams Louisiana 1843 Slavery in America Encyclopedia Retrieved 2007 10 19 a b Gates Henry Louis 1999 Africana The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience Basic Civitas Books pp 722 ISBN 0 465 00071 1 a b Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 27 a b Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 23 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 17 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 62 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 7 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 68 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 133 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company pp 110 111 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 89 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 83 a b Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 87 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 159 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 231 Exodusters www fofweb com Facts on File History Database a b Hickey Joseph V Winter 1991 Pap Singleton s Dunlap Colony Relief Agencies and the Failure of a Black Settlement in Eastern Kansas Great Plains Quarterly University of Nebraska Lincoln Center for Great Plains Studies 11 1 a b c Quintard Taylor 1998 In Search of the Racial Frontier African Americans in the American West 1528 1990 New York NY W W Norton Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 185 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 184 White Richard 1991 It s Your Misfortune and None of My Own A History of the American West Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press p 198 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 232 a b Warren Kim Seeking the Promised Land African American Migrations to Kansas Civil War on the Western Border The Missouri Kansas Conflict 1854 1865 Kansas City Public Library Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 233 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 253 a b Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 254 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 255 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 250 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 252 Romero Patricia W ed 1978 I Too Am America Documents from 1619 to the Present Publishers Agency p 150 ISBN 0 87781 206 3 OCLC 4662987 Sernett Milton C 1997 Bound for the Promised Land African American Religion and the Great Migration Duke University Press p 14 ISBN 0 8223 1993 4 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 146 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 147 Painter Nell Irvin 1976 Exodusters New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 210 Further reading edit Campney Brent M S September 6 2007 This is Not Dixie The Imagined South the Kansas Free State Narrative and the Rhetoric of Racist Violence Southern Spaces ISSN 1551 2754 Davis Damani Summer 2008 Exodus to Kansas The 1880 Senate Investigation of the Beginnings of the African American Migration from the South Prologue Vol 40 No 2 Katz William 1987 The Black West Seattle Open Hand Publishing Moore Shirley Taylor Quintard 2003 African American Women Confront the West 1600 2000 Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press Ravage John W 1997 Black Pioneers Salt Lake City University of Utah Press Savage W Sherman 1976 Blacks in the West Westport CT Greenwood Press Woods Randall B 1998 Integration Exclusion or Segregation The Color Line in Kansas 1878 1900 Billington Monroe Lee Hardaway Roger D eds African Americans on the Western Frontier Niwot CO University Press of Colorado Woodson Carter G 1969 A Century of Negro Migration New York Russell and Russell External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Negro Exodus PBS The West Exodusters Kansas State Historical Society Exoduster Flier Access documents photographs and other primary sources on Kansas Memory the Kansas State Historical Society s digital portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Exodusters amp oldid 1183642025, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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