jQuery11240701645215317412_1711903427550({ "responseHeader":{ "status":0, "QTime":2, "params":{ "q":"*", "json.wrf":"jQuery11240701645215317412_1711903427550", "defType":"edismax", "fl":"Title,Abstract,Subtype,Sites,Sites_Item,Image_URL,Image_Alt_Text,PageURL", "start":"0", "fq":"Category:\"Articles\" AND Type:\"Place\" AND Tags_Item:\"homestead colony\" AND -Allow_Listing_Display:false", "sort":"Date_Last_Modified desc", "rows":"10", "wt":"json"}}, "response":{"numFound":6,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[ { "Title":"Nicodemus Kansas", "Abstract":"Nicodemus is the longest-lasting black homesteader colony in America. In 1877 six black entrepreneurs in Topeka joined with a local white developer to form the Nicodemus Town Company. They located their town in the Solomon River valley in north-central Kansas. Most who stayed filed homestead claims. By 1899 they had received 114 homestead patents, making them owners of 18,126 acres. Nicodemus still stands as a small village and is designated as a National Historic Site.", "PageURL":"/places/nicodemus-kansas.htm", "Image_URL":"/common/uploads/cropped_image/6E2E2360-EFFB-F7A8-B5559D5DF0471E5E.jpg", "Image_Alt_Text":"Black and white image of town street with many people gathered in front of general store.", "Sites_Item":["Homestead National Historical Park", "Nicodemus National Historic Site"], "Sites":"Homestead National Historical Park,Nicodemus National Historic Site"}, { "Title":"Dearfield Colorado", "Abstract":"Dearfield, in Weld County, about 70 miles northeast of Denver, was the largest black homesteading settlement in Colorado. At its peak between 1917 to 1921, Dearfield may have housed as many as 300 residents.", "PageURL":"/places/dearfield-colorado.htm", "Image_URL":"/common/uploads/cropped_image/9A8ABF43-C14E-CFD4-3227884DC35BF467.jpg", "Image_Alt_Text":"Two men, a woman, and a child in a melon patch near a corn field", "Sites_Item":["Homestead National Historical Park"], "Sites":"Homestead National Historical Park"}, { "Title":"Empire Wyoming", "Abstract":"Empire was the most important community of African American homesteaders in Wyoming. Although small, it was closely linked to similar communities in other states. The founders of Empire arrived with substantial financial resources and farming experience. Ten claimants proved up homesteads, supporting a population of approximately forty.", "PageURL":"/places/empire-wyoming.htm", "Image_URL":"/common/uploads/cropped_image/6C6CCD2A-EF7E-C2D6-3D88C29870B369B6.jpg", "Image_Alt_Text":"Abandoned farm buildings", "Sites_Item":["Homestead National Historical Park"], "Sites":"Homestead National Historical Park"}, { "Title":"Sully County Black Homesteader Community", "Abstract":"Sully County’s black homesteader community prized education as well as owning land. Soon the “Sully County Colored Colony” numbered as many as one hundred residents. Members of the colony successfully claimed 22 homesteads, and with purchased lands, became owners of perhaps 7,000 to 8,000 acres. The Sully County black homesteader community remains a powerful reminder of generations of African Americans who sought opportunity in the Great Plains.", "PageURL":"/places/sully-county.htm", "Image_URL":"/common/uploads/cropped_image/37065A15-9ABA-16D1-8FED613475F95DD3.jpg", "Image_Alt_Text":"An abandoned weathered wood-frame home sits in a green flat meadow that stretches to the horizon.", "Sites_Item":["Homestead National Historical Park"], "Sites":"Homestead National Historical Park"}, { "Title":"Blackdom New Mexico", "Abstract":"Blackdom, New Mexico was the most important black homesteader colony in New Mexico. Located fifteen miles south of Roswell, Blackdom was incorporated by thirteen African Americans from Roswell, New Mexico, in 1903.", "PageURL":"/places/blackdom-new-mexico.htm", "Image_URL":"/common/uploads/cropped_image/937A730C-D3C0-A429-EEB548792C0D1187.jpg", "Image_Alt_Text":"Woman with a microphone standing next to a \"Blackdom Townsite\" sign", "Sites_Item":["Homestead National Historical Park"], "Sites":"Homestead National Historical Park"}, { "Title":"DeWitty Nebraska", "Abstract":"DeWitty began forming in 1904 with the Kinkaid Act. This act expanded the Homestead Act allowing individuals to claim 640 acres of land in Nebraska's sand hills. It grew to be the most populous, long-lived, and successful settlement of black homesteaders in Nebraska.", "PageURL":"/places/dewitty-nebraska.htm", "Image_URL":"/common/uploads/cropped_image/CD093F97-C871-04EC-21A8873C74CFA572.jpg", "Image_Alt_Text":"Large group of people standing outside of a church", "Sites_Item":["Homestead National Historical Park"], "Sites":"Homestead National Historical Park"}] }})