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AfriGeneas Western Frontier Forum
Negro Hills, California
In Response To: Re: African-Americans in CA timeline
() Historical Legacy of Negro Hills, California
Can you feel the vibration of “unknown” pioneering souls who cry out
Desecrated burial grounds of earyl Negro Hills pioneers offer a key sign of a people who have forgotten there past, thus face a limiting future. i’ve been down so longgggg, gettin’up never much crosses my mind… Ole’ Tyme Sayin’s… Negro Hills, California history comes alive. The Sesquicentennial Celebration of the California Colored Convention will be held in Sacramento, CA, November 2005. The history of Negro Hills, CA is an excellent place to begin to share our 150+ year Nationwide celebration. In 1854, Newton Miller noted that in his racially mixed Methodist Church at Negro Hills, “Negroes constitute nearly all the church members and are a majority of the congregation.” Negro Hills was founded in early 1848 along the American River, east of Leidesdorff Ranch, near today’s City of Folsom. 1830 – 1850 Negro Seamen Acts were established at most major southern
Negro Hills, CA is an extraordinary early Gold Rush community and maintains a golden historical legacy of the free migration of American citizens of African ancestry. In 1849 three enterprising men from the New England seaboard named Vosey, Long and French opened a store and boarding house called the Civil Usage House. Business was
Early success was assured in Negro Hills and brought global attention to El Dorado County. Charles Crocker, brother of Edwin Crocker and Dewitt Stanford, brother of Leland Stanford, joined the Negro Hill business
In 1853, Negro Hills population exceeded 1200 and could boast of a multiethnic community unmatched outside the Port of San Francisco. Negro Hills was the hub of a regional community that included Salmon Falls, Massachusetts Flat, Chile Hill, Mormon Island and many mining camps along the American River. By 1854, portions of the deeply religious community of Negro Hills had deteroriated into a Wild West saloon and place of ill repute. The California State Legislature passed laws prohibiting Blacks from testifying in court, homesteading land, voting and public education, these and other environmental hazards helped to destroy the harmonious beginnings of Negro Hills, CA. A group of drunken, broke and destitute white citizens of the village of Negro Hills began to terrorize the Negro business community. Theft, fights and lynching were often encouraged because of the legal prohibition of equal access to the law in early California State History. In 1855, the first
Today, California State Historical Landmark No. 570 of Negro Hill is missing. A small portion Negro Hills Cemetery was relocated during the 1954 construction of Folsom Dam; however, our U.S. Bureau of
An effort to establish the City of El Dorado Hills could bring a fresh new perspective towards a more inclusive historical legacy that reconciles the pioneering spirit of all citizens of early Negro Hills, CA. A people, who have forgotten their past, will have a limited future.
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