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Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington.

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Page 1: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Dearfield, Colorado“Get a home of your own. Get some

property….get some of the substance for yourself.”

Booker T. Washington.

Page 2: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Washington’s advice, coinciding with an African-American “back to the land”

movement at the turn of the 20th Century, inspired O.T. Jackson to invest his own money

to buy land for a black colony located on Highway 34, ninety miles north of Denver.

Photo Source: Colorado Historical Society

• Jackson established Dearfield as a self-sufficient all-black agricultural colony.

Page 3: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

In 1910, Dearfield’s first seven homesteaders established land claims, initially living in tents, dugouts, and even caves.

Page 4: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Source: http://hollyhockfarms.com/coweld/communities/dearfield/photo_gallery.htm

The colony’s first recruit was an elderly man and friend of Jackson, J.M. Thomas. On August 20th, 1910, James Smith and J.M. Thomas of Denver planted 100 acres of winter wheat.

Home of late J.M. Thomas, first settler of Dearfield

Page 5: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

• In 1911, the first full year of settlement, seven families moved to Dearfield surviving that year’s severe winter in only two frame houses.

• By 1915, the town’s population had grown to include 27 families, 44 wood cabins, a concrete block factory, dance pavilion, lodge, restaurant, grocery store, and boarding house.

Page 6: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington
Page 7: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

• Settlers dry farmed corn, oats, barley, alfalfa, hay, potatoes, Mexican beans, sugar beets, cantaloupes, strawberries, and a wide variety of truck garden products.

• They also raised cattle, horses, hogs, turkeys, geese, ducks, and chickens.

• Some farmers went beyond subsistence farming and grew crops for the Kuner’s factory, the Beatrice Creamery, and Green Brothers in Denver.

Page 8: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington
Page 9: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Grain, both Wheat and Corn (seen here), were

Dearfield’s Most Important Cash Crops

Source: http://hollyhockfarms.com/coweld/communities/dearfield/photo_gallery.htm

Page 10: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Photo Source: Denver Public Library

A Dearfield farmingfamily in theircornfield

Dr. Jones and three women,

viewing a cornfield

Page 11: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

• In 1920, Dearfield farmers produced the colony’s largest crop, one third greater than in the previous year.

• By 1921, 200 to 300 people lived in Dearfield. It’s net worth that year was appraised at $1,075,000 USD.

• By 1921, 15,000 of the community’s 20,000 total farm acres were farmed by sixty families and the town had two churches and a gas station.

Page 12: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

• Many Dearfield colonists came from Denver, others from as far away as Missouri, Arkansas, and Virginia.

• Aside from farming, people worked in retail businesses and truck gardening.

Page 13: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

• Many Dearfield residents worked in Denver during weekdays and farmed their homesteads on weekends.

• Advertisements of Dearfield’s entertainment offerings were placed throughout Denver’s Historic Five Points. Many Denver residents traveled to Dearfield on weekends for great food, fun, and dances at the Barn Pavilion.

Page 14: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Source:http://www.rockymountainnews.com/photos/2008/jul/04/48051/

Advertisement on a Greeley Museums Collection poster

Page 15: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Photo Source: http://hollyhockfarms.com/coweld/communities/dearfield/photo_gallery.htm

Barn Pavilion

Page 16: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Photo Source: Denver Public Library

(Left) The boarding house and (Right) the

store.

Page 17: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Source: http://hollyhockfarms.com/coweld/communities/dearfield/photo_gallery.ht

m

Dearfield’s Dining Hall 1920 - 1930

Page 18: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Source: http://hollyhockfarms.com/coweld/communities/dearfield/photo_gallery.

htm

Post Office (relocated from Chapelton)

Page 19: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Source: http://hollyhockfarms.com/coweld/communities/dearfield/photo_gallery.h

tm

Service Station

Page 20: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Photo Source: http://hollyhockfarms.com/coweld/communities/dearfield/photo_gal

lery.htm

Minerva Jackson and an unidentified man at the Dearfield Conoco Gas

Station

Page 21: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Photo Source: http://hollyhockfarms.com/coweld/communities/dearfield/photo_ga

llery.htm

Dearfield Public School

Page 22: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Union Presbyterian Church

Photo Source: http://hollyhockfarms.com/coweld/communities/dearfield/photo_ga

llery.htm

Page 23: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Pentecostal Minister Thomas Russell and his wife.

Photo Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dearfield_co_3.jpg

Page 24: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Photo Source: http://hollyhockfarms.com/coweld/communities/dearfield/photo_ga

llery.htm

Dearfield residents dressed in their finery

Page 25: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Photo Source: Denver Public Library

Dr. W.A. Jones and his patients

Mrs. T.H. Bailey and her sister

Page 26: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

• Jackson’s dreams turned to dust as eastern Colorado farming communities suffered economic downturns beyond their control.

• Inflated food prices of World War I fell suddenly when the war ended and over 400,000 U.S. farmers lost their land.

• In Dearfield, those who lived through the 1920s suffered economic downturns as their soil dried up and blew away in the hot, dry winds of the Dust Bowl.

Page 27: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

• Dearfield residents drifted away to find better opportunities and, by 1940, the town’s population had decreased to twelve, only two percent of the town’s greatest (1921) population.

• O.T. Jackson desperately attempted to revive interest, even offering Dearfield for sale, but there were not takers.

• Jackson lived on at Dearfield until his death on February 18th, 1948.

Page 28: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

• Today, little evidence remains of the tenacious individuals who brought life to Dearfield.

• In 1995, Dearfield became a National Register of Historic Places site.

• In 1999, Colorado Preservation, Inc. (CPI) listed Dearfield as an endangered site.

Page 29: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

•The Black American West Museum, with other community and university partners, is actively working to preserve Dearfield’s heritage by stabilizing existing structures and features and documenting its past. An archaeological research program is planned in the coming year.

• With care and support, Dearfield’s past can be preserved for future generations and, hopefully, may will become a future tourist destination.

•With stabilization of existing structures, creation of a historic park and working farm is a dream by 2010, the 100th anniversary of the town.

The Preservation of Dearfield

Page 30: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Photo Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dearfield_CO_1.jpg

In 2002, the Black American West Museum joined CPI and Colorado State University’s Architectural Preservation Institute in stabilizing Jackson’s home, and, in 2004, BAWM acquired the site.

O.T. Jackson House

Page 31: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Dearfield Today

Source: http://www.rockymountainnews.com/news/2008/jul/04/dearfield-gets-second-chance-life/

Page 32: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Photo Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dearfield_co_3.jp

g

Page 33: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

Service Station

Photo Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dearfield_co_3.jp

g

Page 34: Dearfield, Colorado “Get a home of your own. Get some property….get some of the substance for yourself.” Booker T. Washington

• For more information on how to help preserve the Dearfield heritage, contact the Black American West Museum at 303-482-2242

• Donations to help preserve and study Dearfield and its contribution to the American West can be made online through the Black American West Museum web link at: http://www.blackamericanwestmuseum.com/Donate.html