Times-Call (Longmont)

‘Beyond the remnants of a dream’

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Alargely forgotten place with an important history in Weld County is gaining attention in Colorado as groups work to spread that awareness even further.

Dearfield, once a small Black agricultur­al community east of Greeley, is the site of ongoing discovery and study led by two University of Northern Colorado professors who want the former town to one day assume a national profile.

“It’s like a rolling a log downhill,” retired UNC anthropolo­gy professor Robert Brunswig said. “It took a bit to get it started, but I think we’re on a roll now.”

For about 30 years, Brunswig and UNC colleague George Junne, a professor of Africana Studies, have invested their time and sweat into learning more about Dearfield and founder O.T. Jackson, who establishe­d the town in 1910. By 1930, Dearfield was mostly deserted, a ghost town, because of drought and “dust bowl” conditions according to who wrote a 25page guide on the town’s histor y.

“We’re trying to understand what the community was about and what the people were doing,” Junne said. “We have a general idea and a lot of it isn’t earth-shaking.”

In time, Dearfield might become a National Historic Site like Nicodemus, Kansas, because of the significan­ce of the six Black Homestead communitie­s in Great Plains states — where residents were allowed the freedom to own land.

For now, Dearfield is being seen and understood in greater depth at the state level with the hope of financiall­y benefittin­g the archeologi­cal, hisbrunswi­g, torical and environmen­tal studies of the colony, which spans 20 square miles.

Dearfield is the subject of the Dearfield Dream Project, a collaborat­ive research effort by multiple organizati­ons and groups dedicated to the town’s preser vation.

On Wednesday, representa­tives from those groups along with local and state officials came to Dearfield to learn about its past, see it in the present and hear plans for its future. Dearfield is located on U.S. 34, about 2 miles from the South Platte River and 12 miles from Wiggins.

Among the leaders and officials who attended the nearly three-hour-long event were UNC president Andy Feinstein; Weld County Commission­ers Perry Buck, Scott James and Lori Saine; the six members of the legislativ­e Capital Developmen­t Committee; Daphne Rice Allen and Denise Leadon from the American Black West Museum in Denver; and Greeley City Councilman Tommy Butler.

Representa­tives from History Colorado, which is a charitable organizati­on and agency of the state, as well as nonprofit Colorado Preservati­on Inc. also attended.

“This means people are paying attention and starting to understand there is more than one culture in

America,” said Leadon, the vice chair of the American Black West Museum.

“It’s an eye-opener. With the past that’s gone on, with George Floyd, things are not equitable. If we invest in other people’s cultures, we can come together for the U.S.”

The other prominent Black homesteadi­ng communitie­s in the Great Plains were Dewitty, Nebraska; Sully County, South Dakota; Empire, Wyoming; and Blackdom, New Mexico. Dearfield and Nicodemus are the only former Black Homestead communitie­s where structures still remain, according to the National Park Service.

The NPS also reports about 3,500 Black homesteade­rs succeeded in claiming their titles from the General Land Office. The office granted them ownership of about 650,000 acres, where as many as 15,000 people lived on the homesteads, including family members.

Most Black homesteade­rs settled in clusters or colonies with other Black families, the NPS said.

“They also pooled their resources to construct rich cultural and civic lives for themselves,” according to informatio­n on the NPS website.

“They exuberantl­y built churches and schools and organized baseball teams, reading circles, choral groups, newspapers, investment clubs, sewing circles and dances and celebratio­ns.”

In late February, Jackson was honored by The Colorado Chautauqua in Boulder for his work as the organizati­on’s dining hall manager, according to the Daily Camera in Boulder.

Junne outlined the rougher side of settling Dearfield. He said when people started there in 1910, they had to go to the South Platte River for water. The winter of 191011 was brutally cold, leading to the death of several horses.

“That’s how desperate they were to have a place of their own,” Junne said.

In a 2017 UNC magazine story, Junne said the town’s name was attributed to a Denver physician who explained the land and the colony were “very dear” to the residents.

Saine, a former state representa­tive, organized the event and brought Dearfield to the attention of state Rep. Edie Hooton, who chairs the Capitol Developmen­t Committee, a committee responsibl­e for reviewing funding requests for capital projects from all state agencies and making prioritize recommenda­tions to the Joint Budget Committee.

Saine credited Brunswig and Junne with taking charge of the restoratio­n and preser vation at Dearfield.

“They are two men who saw beyond the remnants of a dream,” she said.

One of the goals and objectives is to generate more sources of funding to pay for needed preservati­on work on Dearfield’s remaining structures, including a house that belonged to Jackson. Jackson, who was born in Ohio, went on to work as a messenger for Colorado Gov. John Shafroth in the early 1900s before finding his way to Weld County.

There is also a former filling station and lunchroom on the site. In 2000, a bill was passed in the state senate appropriat­ing $250,000 to create a plan for the Dearfield site and to stabilize Jackson’s home.

Some of the money donated to this point has been marked for security measures, including the fences and protection on windows, Brunswig said. All the Dearfield-era structures stand behind locked fencing to prevent additional vandalism.

PDC Energy donated $15,000 to the American Black West Museum, which owns land in the area, and Occidental Petroleum contribute­d $7,500 to the museum.

Additional­ly, Dearfield advocates are waiting to hear about an applicatio­n for a $500,000 grant from the National Park Ser vice.

The Dearfield Dream Project grew out of a grassroots, Greeley-based group called the Dearfield Committee that formed in 2008.

The committee ser ves as an advisor y group to the Black American West Museum, according to Brunswig’s guide. The committee represents several public and private organizati­ons including Weld County government, UNC, the city of Greeley Museums, Colorado State University and Colorado Preser vation, Inc.

 ?? Anne Delaney Greeley Tribune ?? An inside room of a Dearfield building that was once the home of founder O.T. Jackson.
Anne Delaney Greeley Tribune An inside room of a Dearfield building that was once the home of founder O.T. Jackson.
 ?? Anne Delaney Greeley Tribune ?? The exterior of the former home of Dearfield founder O.T. Jackson, who establishe­d the Black Homestead community in 1910.
Anne Delaney Greeley Tribune The exterior of the former home of Dearfield founder O.T. Jackson, who establishe­d the Black Homestead community in 1910.

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