The Exodusters
What's going to be a hundred years
from now ain't much account to us.... The whites has the lands and the
sense, an' the blacks has nothin' but their freedom, an' it's jest like
a dream to them.
Benjamin “Pap” Singleton
When the last Federal troops left the South in 1877 and
Reconstruction gave way to renewed racial oppression, a former slave
named Benjamin “Pap”
Singleton began urging blacks to form their own independent
communities in the West. Those who followed his advice called
themselves “Exodusters,” because they believed the West would prove
their promised land.
"Kansas seemed like an ideal place for people who were
disillusioned with the black codes that had been passed in the South,
the meanness of the Ku Klux Klan, the meanness of the sharecroppers who
really weren't sharing the way they had agreed, and these are the
people who paid five dollars, five bucks to Pap Singleton to come up
the river to a new life in Kansas.”
Bertha Calloway
"The West has always been seen as a place of opportunity.
And this was certainly as true for people of African descent as for
anybody else. Singleton and other leaders weren't necessarily doing it
for purely altruistic reasons. Like a lot of great westerners they were
speculators in land and hoped to make their fortunes. But they did have
a vision of a place where people of color could breathe free..."
Bill Gwaltney
Soon these early Exodusters’ hopeful letters
home were being read aloud in black churches across the South, and in
the spring of 1879, word spread that the Federal government had set all
of Kansas aside for former slaves. The rumor was false, but it sparked
a genuine Exodus that brought more than 15,000 African Americans into
Kansas within the next year.
When I landed on the soil [of
Kansas] I looked on the ground and I says this is free ground. Then I
looked on the heavens and I says them is free and beautiful heavens.
Then I looked within my heart and I says to myself, I wonder why I was
never free before?
John Solomon Lewis
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