More than a dozen rural historically all-black San Joaquin Valley communities grew up around the same time as Allensworth in the Central Valley. Many of these settlements, such as Teviston, South Dos Palos, Lanara, Cookseyville, and Fairmead, were established as a way for Black people to create their own communities where they could feel safe and supported. The communities often grew just outside predominantly white towns.
 
Many of these settlements have strong ties to the development of Central Valley agriculture, and all have their own unique history and characteristics. These settlements had churches and businesses to serve the local community, but not the formal structure of Allensworth, which was founded as an official town, funded and governed by African Americans.
 
At its heyday, up to eighteen freight and passenger trains passed daily through Fairmead, founded four years after Allensworth. Cookseyville continued to thrive into the 1980s. Allensworth residents settled Teviston in the 1930s after Allensworth was deemed unlivable due to water quality concerns.
 
Several of these settlements still exist today, many housing a majority Latino population. While some are thriving, others have experienced a multitude of challenges throughout the years, including inadequate water supply. Learn more by visiting the links below.
 
Sources/Learn More:
Article: Black Farmworkers in the Central Valley: Escaping Jim Crow for a Subtler Kind of Racism | KQED
Podcast: Remembering Cookseyville, A Black Settlement In Atwater (kvpr.org)