Buxton Historic Townsite

Buxton Historic Townsite
Nearest city Lovilia, Iowa
Coordinates 41°09′30″N 92°49′16″W / 41.15833°N 92.82111°W / 41.15833; -92.82111Coordinates: 41°09′30″N 92°49′16″W / 41.15833°N 92.82111°W / 41.15833; -92.82111
NRHP Reference # 83000392[1]
Added to NRHP August 9, 1983

The Buxton Historic Townsite is a historical site located east of Lovilia, Iowa, United States in rural Monroe County. The unincorporated community was founded in 1895, and by 1927 it had lost all of its residents. It was a racially integrated community with a large African American population built in the southern Iowa coalfields. The town site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.[1]

History

Consolidation Mine No. 10, c. 1908.

J.E. Buxton came to Iowa in the mid-1880s as an agent for the Consolidation Coal Company. Consolidation was a division of the Chicago and Northwestern Railway, and it mined coal in Iowa to fuel the company's trains. His son Ben succeeded him, and he was faced with a lack of Caucasian workers, strikes, and the increased demand for workers from his competitors.[2] The company sent H.A. Armstrong to the Southern United States to recruit African American workers and workers from nearby coal mines as strike breakers and cheap labor. As the mines in Muchakinock in adjacent Mahaska County started to decline, the railroad extended its line to Monroe County. Ben Buxton, who became president of Consolidation Coal, founded his namesake town in 1895. All the coal mined there was bought by the railroad, which led to constant work for the workers and high wages.

Ackers Coal Company and the Regal Coal Company opened mines near Buxton in the early 20th century. By that time Buxton grew to be the largest coal town west of the Mississippi River, and the largest unincorporated community in the United States.[2] In 1905 there were 2,700 blacks and 1,991 whites. The European-Americans came from places such as Belgium, Bohemia, France, Germany, Norway, Russia, Sweden, and Wales. Even though Buxton had a mix of races and ethnic groups, there was no overt segregation and little racial or ethnic discrimination.[3][4]

Buxton YMCA c. 1915.

Buxton was a company town. Consolidation Coal's headquarters were located there. They built houses, schools, parks, a YMCA and other establishments. The company's security guards acted as a police force. A department store, the Monroe Mercantile Company, was established in 1901. It employed 100 people until it burned down in 1911. The department store opened the same year as the post office.[5] The town also had its own baseball team, known as the Buxton Wonders.

Several African American citizens from Buxton rose to prominence. E.A. Carter became the first black graduate from the University of Iowa College of Medicine. He returned to Buxton to become assistant chief surgeon for Consolidation Coal in 1907, and chief surgeon in 1915.[4] Attorney George H. Woodson co-founded the Niagara Movement in 1905. It became the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in 1909.[2] Woodson and fellow Buxton attorney Samuel Joe Brown went on to co-found with three others the National Bar Association in 1925.

Coal production reached its peak in 1914. African Americans had started to leave the town in 1911, and by 1915 Caucasians were in the majority.[2] More residents left when large fires destroyed parts of the town in 1916. By 1919 there were only about 400 people left in Buxton. Most of the nearby mines were closed in the early 1920s because there was a decreased demand for coal to power locomotives.[4] Consolidation's headquarters were moved to Haydock in western Monroe County in 1923. The same year the Buxton post office closed.[5] The company dissolved in 1925 and sold all its stock to Superior Coal Company of Gillespie, Illinois. Buxton mine No. 18 was closed in 1927, and the rest of the town was vacated.[4] The last mine in the Buxton area was closed in 1932.[6] The Chicago and Northwestern Railway ceased operations in the area in 1935, and the tracks were removed the following year. Subsequently, most of the remaining buildings in the town were torn down, and much of the land is either forested or farmed. A few structures from the town remain as ruins.[7]

References

  1. 1 2 National Park Service (2009-03-13). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Robert V. Morris. "The Great Buxton". Iowa Public Television. Retrieved 2016-02-27.
  3. "African-American Communities". Iowa Public Television. Retrieved 2016-02-27.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Buxton, Iowa (1895-1927)". BlackPast.org. Retrieved 2016-02-27.
  5. 1 2 "Buxton Post Office (historical)". SGS Geographic Names Information System. Retrieved 2016-02-27.
  6. "Chronology of Consolidation Coal Company in southern Iowa". Buxton Iowa.com. Retrieved 2016-02-27.
  7. "Buxton Iowa's 1918 Railroad Viaduct". Buxton Iowa.com. Retrieved 2016-02-27.
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