AfroFrontierism: Blackdom (1900 - 1930)
Timothy E. Nelson, Ph.D., Historian

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Opal "Dolly" Hayes, Why Observe Black History Month? | Roswell Daily Record Friday, February 2, 1996
Friday, February 2, 1996, Roswell, New Mexico-page-001.jpg

3. Francis Boyer and Daniel Keyes, founders of the Townsite of Blackdom in southeast Chaves County, 18 miles south of Roswell and eight miles west of Dexter in 1897.

4. Mrs. Hazel (Taylor) Parker, Roswell, Jan. 8, 1996, states she was born to Caleb and Mary Taylor on Nov. 20, 1921, in Blackdom, N.M. Her parents moved to Blackdom from Austin, Texas, to improve her father's health in 1913. They moved to Roswell when the schools were closed in Blackdom in 1926. She was five years old and began school in Roswell, in an integrated school. Later, the schools were segregated and the blacks attended Carver School on East Hendricks Street at the present site of the Head Start Center. In 1948, the last class graduated from Carver. Hazel Parker is the seventh of nine children born to her parents. A sister, Johnnie Moseley also lives in Roswell. Five other siblings live elsewhere and three are deceased along with her parents. Ms. Parker is a retired cosmetologist, secretary of the Roswell Branch of the NAACP and a faithful member of her church, Emmanuel Church of God in Christ.

5. Mrs. Christine (Wagoner) Bowe, Jan. 11, 1996, states she was born in Roswell, to Loney K. and Sarah Wagoner. Her father is deceased. Her mother still lives here. She also says: "I attended Carver High School until I went to Roswell High my last year of school in 1953. Schools were segregated then. I was the first black to finish that year. I married Edward Bowe in 1958 and traveled as an Air Force wife until I moved back (to Roswell) in 1968. (I) became involved with the Head Start program when I enrolled my daughter, Michelle Bowe. I worked as a volunteer, an aide and became a teacher. I received an associate degree in child development while at Head Start. I retired in May 1995 after working 25 years. (The Roswell Daily Record ran an article on Christine Bowe on Monday, Feb. 6, 1989, on page 1, Vol. 101, No. 32. Christine (Wagoner) Bowe's parents were also early settlers in Blackdom. History is on-going. This article is now history. People who have no sense of their history do not know their true identity. In order to know where you are going, you must know where you are and from where you have come. This is especially crucial for those of us who receive skewed versions of our ancestry. (This is not limited to black Americans).

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Blackdom, New Mexico (1903-1930)- BlackPast.org article Aug 21, 2017
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Sunday School Class

In the early 1900s, the Pecos Valley Region of Southeastern New Mexico Territory experienced an economic boom because of an influx of settlers into the area. African American families were among those settlers.  They built Blackdom, the only all-black town in the territory and situated it about 20 miles south of Roswell in Chaves County. Today little remains of this ambitious frontier scheme that within a 20-year period became an oil-producing town.

In September 1903, thirteen black men led by Isaac W. Jones and Francis M. (Frank) Boyer, signed the Articles of Incorporation to establish the Blackdom Townsite Company to build the town. Blackdom was located on a direct route to the Dexter train station to the East, and Artesia, another New Mexico Territory boom town 20 miles south. West of Blackdom was Apache land.

A few of the early founders were former soldiers in the all-black 24th Infantry which served throughout New Mexico Territory in the 1880s and 1890s.  Frank Boyer was the most influential of them having trained as a minister at Atlanta (GeorgiaBaptist College (now Morehouse College) following his discharge from the military. Boyer and his wife Ella, also brought black freemasonry to the county establishing the first masonic lodge in 1914.

A frontier town relying on dry-farming proved difficult to maintain. Survival depended on the rain that often didn’t come.  Between 1909 and 1916, however, the rains came and Blackdom was prosperous. In 1917, Blackdom saw many of its young men conscripted into the military as the U.S. entered World War I.

When oil was discovered in 1919, Blackdom residents created the Blackdom Oil Company. The single largest investor, however, was Mittie Moore Wilson, an African American brothel owner in nearby Roswell.  Blackdom Oil contracted with the New York-based National Exploration Company to drill wells in the area. Current research doesn’t provide exact numbers of working wells but a 1947 interview with Frank Boyer revealed that some Blackdom residents still received royalties from Gulf Oil for producing wells on their property.

Frank Boyer in a 1947 interview recalled a peak of about 800 black residents in the town and surrounding township in the early 1920s. U.S. Census records, however, revealed that only 400 African Americans lived in Blackdom and Chaves County by 1930. Many of those residents owned a home in town and a desert homestead (ranch).  Others resided exclusively outside the town limits.  In fact, town leaders ran ads in state and national newspapers and Crisis Magazine that said, “farmers preferred.”

In 1927, the town gathered and celebrated Juneteenth where they hosted their white neighbors with a baseball game and barbecue.  Despite the continuing oil revenues for some residents, the 1929 Stock Market Crash and Great Depression effectively ended Blackdom’s future as an independent town. Town leaders dissolved Blackdom in 1930.

by Dr. Timothy E. Nelson ©

NOTICE: The original article appeared on BlackPast.org until August 2, 2021. [Blackpast.org began a process for all contributors to transfer licensing to their institution “Assignee licenses back to Assignor a non-exclusive, royalty-free, perpetual license to use the Work in portfolio as representative sample of Assignor’s work; and, subject to Assignee’s approval, to use the work for other purposes not competitive with Assignee’s website, sponsorship, and licensing programs”. Instead, BC&P generously offered to provide an “Open Access under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License" that was DENIED and Dr. Nelson's contributions were removed.]

NOTICE: The original article appeared on BlackPast.org until August 2, 2021. [Blackpast.org began a process for all contributors to transfer licensing to their institution “Assignee licenses back to Assignor a non-exclusive, royalty-free, perpetual license to use the Work in portfolio as representative sample of Assignor’s work; and, subject to Assignee’s approval, to use the work for other purposes not competitive with Assignee’s website, sponsorship, and licensing programs”. Instead, BC&P generously offered to provide an “Open Access under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License" that was DENIED and Dr. Nelson's contributions were removed.]