Mar 20 2010

Decreasing African American landownership in rural NW LA

After combing the streets of Belcher on my last roadtrip looking for any remnants of Bradford Chapel, I stumbled across a gentleman sitting on his porch who goes by the name, Floyd, and asked him “Where is Bradford Chapel”? Looking down Belcher Oil City Rd, he eventually pointed to a vacant piece of property that at one time served as church grounds for the chapel but stated it has long since fallen  apart. “Do black folks still live out here?” I asked and Floyd, being of a certain age, smiled and gave me that “I’m glad you asked look” and soon began to unravel the disappearance of black landowners in that neck of the woods. “The old folks started dying out and because their kids started getting city jobs, many of the kids wanted to be closer to their jobs so they began relocating to Shreveport or out of the area into larger places like Dallas and Houston for  jobs or better job possibilities.”
What he said made sense.  When you think about the land passing on to the kids, because they no longer are tied to the area after their parents pass on, they start selling or allow the land to sit stagnated.  However, because of the widely known mineral value of the land, this area has always been attractive to investors and thus non-blacks buy in and before you know it, the landownership gradually migrates back to how it originally started before
Emancipation Proclamation.  Are black folks taking land ownership for granted? I guess when you factor in heirs multiplying  as years pass,
tax bills pieced together by multiple owners, and when no one wants to agree on what to do with the land, selling doesn’t sound like a bad idea right? But is selling the best option on the table? Not only is this scenario in my own family, it’s a reoccuring theme all over rural black america.  Pondering this question made me think about the following…

So after Emanicipation Proclamation some blacks, particularly in NW LA, purchased land or were donated land from former slaveowners.  And then there were some who were not so lucky who ended up share-cropping which usually left mounting debt to the landowners delight in which both parties knew would never get paid off… thus lies your legalize form of slavery. Those that were fortunate like my great-grandparents, purchased land during the 1910’s and together with their labor and the labor of 11 offsprings, made an income from farming to sustain themselves and their family. This was a common  way of life pieced together during those times with the hope and prayers that  everything worked together at the end of the day.  You ran this family farming business and relied on your kids as employees, their kids if they were big enough to hold a crocker sack, good weather, and your faith to carry you through.  Your offsprings were often forced to forfeit their education and attend school only during the months that did not demand their labor.  Times were hard not to mention this time period I’m referring to was on the brink of the Great Depression.  Now during the Depression if it was bad for white folks, it was disastrous  x 5 for blacks when you layer on Jim Crowism, separate but never equal and encounters with ex-confederate formed militias who wanted to take back control of “their country” in the name of God.  Sounds familiar Mr. & Mrs. Teabaggers? But our African American ancestors perservered and somehow manage to withstand the economic pressures and hold on to their rural land.  Not only did they keep their land they also managed to make sure their kids received more education than they did and have better lives.  Often times their kids had their own houses on family acreage and lived in what was considered a family village.  This was a common economic solution and cultural tradition practiced on the continent they descended from.  So fast forward to the 1950’s & 1960’s era…the depression is over, the marches & protests are occurring, our beloved Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is mobilizing and making wonderful speeches and somehow traveling along Highway 71 off the  main roads  you would actually find a black owned gas station, grocery store, funeral parlor, beauty shops, churches, fruit stands, mass farming & etc.  Not only was this prosperity occurring in NW LA but also around the country when you take into consideration the agriculture census of 1910 put black folks owning 15-17 millions of rural acres. But what happened?? A 13 year old USDA agriculture study completed in 1997 reported black rural landownership shrinking to just  1.5 million acres.

to be continued…


Mar 13 2010

Ebenezer Church Graveyard Clean-up Day, May 29th

SAVE THE DATE: May 29, 2010


Mar 12 2010

Hettie Adger Cemetery cont.

Not only can cemeteries serve as the only evidence of a persons existence, they can tell an   untold story.  Based on the data we’ve collected for Hettie Adger cemetery, there are 3 tombstones over 100 years old.  The oldest one, laid in 1906 making it 103 years old is of,  Dora Adger, no doubt kinsman to Hettie Adger.  Her gravemarker said she was born in 1886 which made her 20 years old at death. She was obviously very beloved to her family based on the inscription “Aged 20 yrs, 3 mos and 9 days”.  There’s an emblem with a hand holding the bible embedded at the top of the marker and for this gravestone to be over 100 years old it is still very legible although it has fallen over through the years.  What happened to her…how did she die at the young age of 20 and who were parents?

Here’s a brief snapshot of all 243 visible markers at Hettie Adger:

Hettie Adger graveyard statistics

There are at least 8 metal pipes used as gravemarkers in this cemetery.   The metal pipes would bring the total to 251 gravemarkers.  The metal pipes are always daunting to look at because we will never who those individuals are. I have come across death certificates that claim persons buried at this cemetery but we can not find the gravemarkers.  Folks in the community also claim there are many graves buried on top of graves which isn’t surprising if you think about soil erosion.  This area was once flanked by constant flooding prior to the raft removal of the Red River so the soil is naturally susceptible to sinking.

There are clusters of families, particularly the Bradfords, who have at least 26 markers that are identifiable by surname in addition to other Bradford kinsman who do not carry the name due to marriage.  Another popular family buried here are the Thomases with 13 markers, the Jeffersons with 13 markers and of course the Adgers with 20 markers.  Who were these people and how did  their existence help shape the surrounding communities?

to be continued…


Jan 22 2010

Hettie Adger Cemetery/St. Paul CME Church

I continue to tell people sometimes the only evidence of one’s existence
is found in the graveyard.  If you are of African descent and
you lived in Louisiana and died before 1915, your tombstone was basically your death certificate.  The state of Louisiana did not start issuing death certificates until after 1915 in Caddo/Bossier parishes.  Just think of all of those ancestors we never knew existed.  Just think about all of those ancestors who came and left with no gravemarker at all.

This past May, the parishioners  of St. Paul CME Church, adjacent to Hettie Adger Cemetery, raised just under $5,000 to help maintain the grounds and make some repairs.  There are  gravemarkers seeping into the boardering marsh that empties into the creek, some buried in brush, and some simply sinking into the ground.

gravemarkerThis cemetery is one of the oldest in Northwest LA being one of the first to bury African Americans and survivors of slavery.  The church it is attached to has a vast history that goes all the way back to slavery when it was formed at Rush Point plantation located in present day Belcher, LA.  The enslaved Africans intially organized themselves

while attending Carolina Bluff CME church in Plain Dealing, LA around 1800 with  19 charter members. They mobilized enough resources to branch off and build a log cabin church house at Rush Point plantation in 1815. Rush Point plantation was owned by the Dickson family (of modern day  Morris & Dickson Co.)  and was situated in current day Dixie, LA. In 1897, additional charter members & charter member descendents donated property and deeds to establish and rebuild the sanctuary relocated in Belcher, LA, just north of Dixie. In 1924, a new sanctuary was erected on the same deeded property. In 1961, the present day sanctuary was built and still stands today.  Hettie Adger, a long time parishioner, contributed generously to St. Paul’s C.M.E. Church history by donating additional burial land, which continues to remain the resting ground of many of our ancestors.

Cemetery site: http://www.redriversankofa.org/stpaul.html