Cities/Towns/Counties in the US that are named after Black people

Benjamin Sisko

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The only one I know of that was founded by black people was Nicodemus Ks.

I know CHicago was founded by a blackman, but it wasn't named after him. IF anyone know any, please post them. WIki isn't giving me any answers.
 

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Benjamin Sisko

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Sugarland, MD

The old people used to say that Sugarland, Md., one of the hundreds of all-black towns and communities established by freed slaves after the Civil War, got its name because its founders believed that “the women here were as sweet as sugar.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/loca...cb5e63819d2_story.html?utm_term=.d124ee95cdf4

Thanks for those. People would probably have to do some digging in their local archives to create an extensive list.

The state of California is the only one thats prominent that's named after a black person and shes was a myth.
 

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lcoiEFh.jpg


Lyles Station, Indiana


Lyles or Lyles Station is an unincorporated community in Patoka Township, Gibson County, Indiana. The community dates from 1849, although its early settlers first arrived in the 1830s, and it was formally named Lyles Station in 1886 to honor Joshua Lyles, a free African American who migrated with his family from Tennessee to Indiana around 1837. Lyles Station is one of Indiana's early black rural settlements and the only one remaining. The rural settlement reached its peak in the years between 1880 and 1912, when major structures in the community included the railroad depot, a post office, a lumber mill, two general stores, two churches, and a school. By the turn of the twentieth century, Lyles Station had fifty-five homes, with a population of more than 800 people. The farming community never fully recovered from the Great Flood of 1913, which destroyed much of the town. Most of its residents left for economic reasons, seeking opportunities for higher paying jobs and additional education in larger cities. By 1997 approximately fifteen families remained at Lyles Station, nearly all of them descended from the original settlers.

Although most of Indiana's black rural settlements no longer exist as self-contained communities, Lyles Station continues. The restored Lyles Consolidated School building, which serves as a local living history museum and a community center, and the Wayman Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church, are two remaining points of interest in Lyles Station.

The "Power of Place" exhibition in theSmithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., which opened in 2016, features Lyles Station as part of its exhibition on black rural communities in the Midwest.[3] The exhibit includes hundreds of items from the Lyles Station area, including a horse-drawn plow used by Joshua Lyles, clothing, a quilt, and soil from the Greer family farm which has been farmed by the Greer family for over 150 years. [4]

The Greer property is in Lyles Station, a little-known farming community in Indiana where free African-Americans began buying land in the 1800s. The hundreds of acres of farmland Greer's grandfather bought in 1855 is among the oldest in the community.

Beginning Saturday, Lyles Station will be one of the regions featured in the "Power of Place" exhibition when the Smithsonian opens its National Museum of African American History and Culture on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

The museum collected hundreds of items to illustrate life in Lyles Station, including the plow that founder Joshua Lyles used and a Mason jar full of soil from the farm.

Smithsonian curator Paul Gardullo says areas like Lyles Station were part of a broader wave of black settlements in what was then the country's northwest.

"These communities were born in freedom," Lyles says. "The old Northwest was chartered as a free territory and there was no slavery. So you can imagine the desire to move there on the part of not just white Americans, but certainly African-Americans as well."

The people buying land were former slaves and others who had long been free. In the 1840s, Joshua and Sanford Lyles traveled from Tennessee to purchase land. It's a story that Stanley Madison knows well. He's the chairman of the Lyles Station Historic Preservation Corporation and is also a farmer.

In the restored Lyles Consolidated School, a house that's now a heritage learning center, Madison uses a map from the 1800s to describe the black farming community's geography.

"The largest piece of ground here would have been owned by Joshua Lyles; 1,040 acres," Madison says. "That was unheard of for an African-American to own that type of land."

Joshua Lyles donated some of that land to establish a rail station, which helped him and the other settlers sell and export the crops they grew. From the late 1880s to the early years of the 20th century, Lyles Station flourished.

"You would have saw 800 residents around here," Madison says. There was a post office, two churches, two general stores, a lumber mill and a school.

The decline of Lyles Station began in 1913 when a devastating flood left most of the town under water. Later, the railroad would end its passenger service, and racist laws and practices would make life tough for everybody. Norman Greer says he couldn't get a loan anywhere in the region. Instead, he had to go out of state.

Today, there are very few homes in Lyles Station and about 10 black families, mostly descendants from the original settlers. In addition to the scattered houses, the Wayman African Methodist Episcopal Church, a grain elevator and the school house — all saved from ruin — still stand.

There's a sense of pride in the hearts of the people trying to keep the history of the town alive, but Denise Greer Jamerson, Norman's daughter, says she fears that the farming ways of her father and Lyles Station are just about over.

"It's going to be a thing of the past; the way that he farmed," she says. "Down here he was huge. As a kid it would excite me at night to see them coming home from the field with two or three trucks with lights on. ... But people don't know that exists, and I think it's an important piece of how we survived."

In Indiana, The Last Remnants Of America's Free African-American Settlements


 

Benjamin Sisko

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Ah yes it just came to me:

King County, WA was originally named after a slave owner and now it's renamed to the Black icon.

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800px-Flag_of_King_County%2C_Washington.svg.png


On February 24, 1986, a motion to change the namesake to Martin Luther King Jr.[5] was passed by the King County Council five votes to four.[6][7] The motion stated, among other reasons for the change, that "William Rufus DeVane King, like George Washington was a slaveowner and a ‘gentle slave monger’ according to John Quincy Adams."[8] Because only the state can charter counties, the change was not made official until April 19, 2005, when Governor Christine Gregoire signed into law Senate Bill 5332, which provided that "King county is renamed in honor of the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King, Jr." effective July 24, 2005.[9][10][11


King County, Washington - Wikipedia
 
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