The all-Black Utopian Ghost City that Lost its Soul

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Rising Star
BGOL Investor
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In the heart of what was North Carolina’s old tobacco and cotton-field industry, lies the remains of Soul City, an unrealized utopia born in the midst of America’s 1970s urban crisis, intended to encourage black empowerment in a new all-African American planned community. Bankrolled by Nixon’s Republican government, “built by black people and for black people”, Soul City was projected to have 44,000 inhabitants by the year 2004. As you’re about to see from photographs of the half-empty town, things didn’t exactly go as planned…


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(c) Mike Legeros
The dream died when Soul City filed for bankruptcy in 1979. Housing units, a health clinic, fire station, small commercial businesses, sporting facilities, a church, the region’s first real water system and sewage infrastructure had all already been built. A newly mobilized political base had been established but there were less than 150 people actually living in the city.

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(c) Mike Legeros
The community had disastrously failed in reaching its planned growth targets and in the years following its foreclosure, the Soul City became a ghost town.

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(c) Mike Legeros
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Many of the small businesses were and still are deserted, a few residents occasionally use the abandoned fire house for cookouts and there are miles of roads going nowhere.

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(c) Mike Legeros
The model community is a distant memory, now officially an incorporated part of Warren County. While the dwindling population has improved over the years, Soul City is certainly devoid of any real soul.

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To add insult to injury, the one industrial building, known as “Soul Tech 1”, designed to be an incubator for new business steered by African American interests, was purchased by the Warren County Correctional Institution in 1993. Prison labourers now make janitorial products there for $3 a day.

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Soul City’s founder, an early leader in the civil rights movement, Floyd McKissick, is probably rolling over in his grave. He first pitched the idea for his all-black town in 1969 when the Black Power movement was reaching its peak in the United States. He believed African Americans should own and run their own capitalist organisations, free of racism, and the only plausible way to do this was in a situation where the black community outnumbered the white population.

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President Nixon liked capitalism of course, and he liked the idea of black capitalism too. In 1972, the city received a grant of $14 million based on plans of attracting industry and developing residential housing– (as well as the alleged promise of McKissick’s endorsement in Nixon’s 1972 presidential election).

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The press however, challenged McKissick on the ideas behind Soul City, accusing him of encouraging a trend towards separatism and taking steps backwards from integration. McKissick’s response was to suggest Soul City was no different from what the Chinese communities had in Chinatowns within cities across the world.

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Soul City, however, was to be America’s first free-standing community built for African Americans (though not exclusively) out in a rural setting and separate from any other municipalities. In the late 1960s, the Black Power Movement had begun to diverge and the general feeling was that the time for idealism was over.

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Soul City was built from the ground up on 3,600 acres of land where 59 slaves had once worked on an old tobacco plantation. Warren County was known as one of the most destitute counties in the state, a hot bed for Ku Klux Klan activity, and while African Americans made up more than 60 percent of the population in the area, all their elected officials were white. That McKissick was even able to get as far as he did with Soul City was an achievement in itself.

It was time for African Americans to claim their piece of the American dream. The community placed emphasis on providing jobs and opportunities for minorities and the poor, with mixed income housing. You can find the original pamphlet which explains a lot of the hopes for Soul City here.

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McKissick envisioned Soul City as a community where all races could live in harmony, organized by African-American businesses. The roads today still have names like “Liberation,” “Freedom,” and “Soul City.” One street is even called White Street and another Brown.

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There was a 30 year plan to reach over 18,000 residents by 1989 and over 40,000 residents by 2004 but in reality, only 150 people were living in Soul City when bankruptcy was filed in ’79.

A lot of things went wrong for Soul City. There were plenty of racist elected officials still around scaring off corporations from locating there, as well as a looming economic slump. The press held nothing back in going after McKissick’s planned community, publishing numerous articles accusing Soul City of political payoffs, nepotism and financial misappropriation which resulted in lawsuits and investigations into the use of funds by the the city’s developers.

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There were even swipes about Soul City’s name being “too black”. Without the industry, potential residents stayed away and without the residents, industry stayed away. Soul City failed to hit its targets and despite eventually being cleared by a Government Accountability Office audit, there was one more nail in the coffin to come…

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The very same month the city foreclosed, Warren Country was notoriously selected by North Carolina as the site for dumping thousands of gallons of toxic waste into a landfill just feet away from the area’s local groundwater source. The untreated soil, tainted by the cancer-causing chemical compound, PBC, had previously been illegally dumped elsewhere in the state, and the state’s decision would finally cripple the community.

Any last-ditch efforts to attract new companies to save Soul City were foiled as a huge poison pit near the water supply was planned for the area. To the residents, it felt like racial discrimination; picking a site in a predominantly African-American and mostly poor county to dump hazardous waste. A report released in 1987, which analyzed location data on hundreds of hazardous waste sites around the nation, “revealed that these facilities were far more often situated near communities with large minority populations than communities with majority-white populations, even after controlling for income”.

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When the trucks filled with toxic waste came down the road headed for Soul City in 1982, residents lay down in the street in an act of civil disobedience that marked the birth of the civil-rights-based environmental justice movement. Even Floydd McKissick himself was arrested during the protest, but the trucks could not be stopped from entering.

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The federal government didn’t get around to cleaning up the PCBs in the soil until 2003, but it was far too late for Soul City by that point.

The rusting Soul City sign, with its unmistakable 1970s design, is still standing, albeit in a different spot in town, near an old historic building. A number of new homes have reportedly since been built by newcomers to the area and while the streets may be eerily empty, there’s clearly something salvageable in the community formerly known as Soul City.

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(c) Mike Legeros
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With present day activist movements such as ‘Black Lives Matter’, could Soul City ever be an idea brought to the table again? Could this utopian ghost town ever see a revival?


http://www.messynessychic.com/2016/04/19/the-all-black-utopian-ghost-city-that-lost-its-soul/
 
If we had our own Corporation's to employ us it could of worked. Seems kind of naive to think you could start a whole black city and expect white owned Corporation's to support that.
I feel you, but cac expect the global majority to do it everyday
 
Another great story to learn strategy from that I knew nothing about. I have stopped getting mad.

Yes, this can be salvaged now and replicated.

Gotsta be black from top to bottom, though. No excuses.

REALLY appreciate this drop fam. It could be a blueprint. We have to remember: none of this has to be done from scratch.
I remember this story. There are also entire towns you can buy out West. No moves made though...
Spill it. I have vaguely heard of this over the years, but I need an update. My Dad tried to get me to go to Phoenix after college but I wouldn't listen.
 
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Another great story to learn strategy from that I knew nothing about. I have stopped getting mad.

Yes, this can be salvaged now and replicated.

Gotsta be black from too to bottom, though. No excuses.

REALLY appreciate this drop fam. It could be a blueprint. We have to remember: none of this has to be done from scratch.

Spill it. I have vaguely heard of this over the years, but I need an update. My Dad tried to het me to go to Phoenix after college but I wouldn't listen.

Old article but right around the time I heard the story (2012):
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/12-towns-sale-toomsboro-georgia-latest-town-sale/story?id=16243378#2

A few towns in places like GA, CO, etc. Mind you some of them used to be old mining towns that dried up but I'm sure someone with the right vision and capital can make it work. If many of them already have firestations, post offices, etc, then you've already got and infrustructure in place. Some were even for sale under a million dollars. Imagine you get 10 families together, put up $100K a piece and then start building from there. I might be wishful but I think it can be done.
 
if its posed to be by black for black

it can't have no white hands in it

at all

we need to boycott these evil motherfuckers for life

:cool:
 
This just shows new Jacks that the difference is just time. ..there was marches, riots,killing police,politricks,communes,communities,schools...there was more than just talking going on...

:yes::yes:
 
If it was in the middle of cotton and tobbaco country, why didn't they build on that? Farming, mills, poultry(?), etc. You can't make a town based on a field of dreams. Move a HBCU there.

But then they poisoned it. Shit.
 
Good read on how even with governments funds and approval they still try to sabotage shit we do. Then you go over to the Tulsa Real Estate fund thread and niggas shitting on it cause Dwight Man hasn’t given his stamp of approval.

“I need to his McDonalds receipts!”
“ I need to see pictures of his real estate licenses”
“I need know why he’s taking pictures and looking happy in em”

:smh:
 
Again if you study law it wouldnt make sense how a town and just close and nothing is done on the state level to keep it going.


A corporation or a business can only file for a bankruptcy...

There are towns in texas with less than 50 people there and it still thrives...post office, general store, court, jail and city hall all in the same building.

They always make sure they link slaves to everything.

59 slaves that worked on the tobacco farm. So the owner of the farm family just so happen to give 3600 acres of that land so it csn be turned into Soul City.

Bullshit
 
It is hard to establish a community from scratch in the middle of nowhere.How can you establish businesses to create jobs? The only way is if the community has a distinct advantage in their location so they have a monopoly on a business. The best way to establish separate communities is to do them in already existing cities or cities/towns in close proximity to cities that are already thriving.
 
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