Blackdom, New Mexico, was a township that lasted about thirty years.
While Blackdom\'s civic presence was not lengthy, its significance--and that of the Afro-Frontier--is an important window in the history of Afrotopias, Black Consciousness, and the notion of an American West..
Its history highlights a brief period and space that nurtured Black cowboy culture.
Nelson\'s concept of the Afro-Frontier evokes a Turnerian West, but it is also fruitfully understood as a Weberian Borderland.
Reoriented to Mexico\'s northern frontier, one observes Black ministers, Black military personnel, and Black freemasons who colonized as part of the transmogrification of Indigenous spaces into the American West.
This story has never been fully told or contextualized until now.
Nelson has uncovered new primary source materials that suggest for Blackdom a newly discovered third decade.
During Blackdom\'s boomtimes, in December 1919, Blackdom Oil Company shifted town business from a regenerative agricultural community to a more extractive model.
However, new evidence shows that the scheme to build generational wealth continued to exist throughout the twentieth century in other forms.
Many believed that Blackdom was simply abandoned.
Ferguson decision, formed the Blackdom Townsite Company and set out to make Blackdom a real place in New Mexico, where they were outside the reach of Jim Crow laws.
In 1903, thirteen Black men, encouraged by the 1896 Plessy v.
The idea of creating a Blackdom was refined within Black institutions as part of the perpetual movement of Black Colonization.
Blackdom started as an inherited idea of a nineteenth-century Afrotopia.
Nelson illuminates the set of conscious efforts that helped Black pioneers develop Blackdom Township into a frontier boomtown.
Dr.
Nelson situates the township\'s story where it belongs: along the continuum of settlement in Mexico\'s Northern Frontier.
In this book, Timothy E.
Blackdom, New Mexico, was a township that lasted about thirty years