Bear Creek is an area of Irving, Texas which was once a freedmen's town. [1]
A mix of white people, enslaved black people, and free black people moved to the areas around the creek that gives the area its name in the late 1850s. [1] Jim Green, a formerly enslaved person, became Bear Creek's first Black landowner in 1878. [1] Other Black families began to move to the area, and Bear Creek became a predominantly Black community. Bear Creek's first church, Shady Grove Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, was established in 1884. [1] Also in 1884, Bear Creek’s Freedom School was founded on a piece of land donated by Jim Green, with materials donated by other community members. [1]
In 1890, the Allen Chapel AME Church was founded. [1] Two other area churches were founded in the 20th century, the Ben Washington Baptist Church in 1941 [2] and the Evergreen Baptist Church in 1948. [1]
In 1903, the city of Irving was founded east of Bear Creek. [3] For much of the 20th century, Bear Creek did not receive the services and amenities provided to Irving residents. Bear Creek lacked utilities including gas, electricity, and water service, which forced them to either dig wells or travel to the city of Irving for water. [1]
Bear Creek's Freedom School later became a part of the Dallas County Common School District, at which point it was called the Sowers Colored School No. 2. After a 1949 fire burned the Sowers School down, the Bear Creek community raised money to build a new school. Still, the new school remained severely under resourced, leading the community to request more support from the county. After their request was denied, the community picketed for fair funding, enlisting the help of the NAACP. [1]
The school would become a part of the Irving Independent School District in 1955. While the 1954 ruling of Brown vs. Board of Education declared school segregation unconstitutional, many school districts, including the Irving Independent School District, did not comply until forced to do so by the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The Irving Independent School District began integration in 1966. [4] Following integration, many of the original Bear Creek schools closed, and Black students in the area were bussed to other Irving schools. Many community members mourned the loss of these schools as a loss of a core part of their community. [1]
In 1964, Bear Creek residents formed he Bear Creek Improvement Association to advocate for civil rights and the annexation of Bear Creek into the city of Irving. Not all Bear Creek residents were in support of annexation, fearing loss of property and the impact of new building codes. The city of Irving annexed Bear Creek in 1969. [1]
Bear Creek resident Jackie Mae Howard became the first Black woman to serve on the Irving City Council following her election in 1977. [5]
As the population of the DFW metroplex grew, Irving and Bear Creek also saw major growth. Many of the new residents were white, and the community was no longer a predominantly Black enclave. [1]
The history of Bear Creek is commemorated at the Jackie Townsell Bear Creek Heritage Center, which features several historical museums and recreation spaces. [6]
Cass County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, its population was 28,454. The county seat is Linden. The county was named for United States Senator Lewis Cass (D-Michigan), who favored the U.S. annexation of Texas in the mid-19th century.
Tullahassee is a town in Wagoner County, Oklahoma, United States. The population was 106 in both the 2010 and the 2000 censuses. It was the location of Tullahassee Mission, an Indian boarding school that burned in 1880. Because their population in the community had declined, the Muscogee Creek gave the school to Creek Freedmen, paying to replace the main building, and relocated with their families to the area of Wealaka Mission.
Irving is a city in Dallas County, Texas, United States. It is part of the Mid-Cities region of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex and is an inner ring suburb of Dallas. Irving is noted for its racial and ethnic diversity. The city had a population of 256,684 according to the 2020 United States Census, making it the twelfth-most populous city in Texas, and the 87th most populous in the U.S. Irving includes the Las Colinas mixed-use master-planned community and part of the Dallas Fort Worth International Airport.
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The Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, usually referred to as simply the Freedmen's Bureau, was a U.S. government agency of early post American Civil War Reconstruction, assisting freedmen in the South. It was established on March 3, 1865, and operated briefly as a federal agency after the War, from 1865 to 1872, to direct "provisions, clothing, and fuel... for the immediate and temporary shelter and supply of destitute and suffering refugees and freedmen and their wives and children".
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John Henry "Jack" Yates was an American freedman, minister, and community leader. Born enslaved in Gloucester County, Virginia, on July 11, 1828, Yates was taught to read at an early age by his enslaver's child. He married Harriet Willis, who was enslaved on a neighboring farm. When her enslaver moved his plantation to Texas to avoid emancipation, Yates, then a free man, asked to be re-enslaved in order to stay with his family. He joined his family in Matagorda County, Texas, until their emancipation in 1865. The family then relocated to Houston, where he helped establish Freedman's Town, purchased property, and began ministering to the community. In 1868, Yates was named the first full-time preacher of the Antioch Missionary Baptist Church, Houston's first Black baptist church. As a community leader, Yates organized Houston Academy, now Booker T. Washington High School; Bethel Baptist Church; and Houston's Emancipation Park. He died in 1897. Yates' original Houston home, the Jack Yates House, was donated to Houston's Heritage Society and first opened to the public in 1996.
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