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What If Eatonville Hadn’t Been Undone?

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In 1887, six miles north of Orlando, a small group of formerly enslaved African Americans did something radical: they built their own town. Not just a settlement, but an incorporated municipality. Eatonville, Florida became the first all-Black incorporated town in the United States.


It wasn’t just a safe haven,  it was a symbol. A town planned, governed and grown by Black people for Black people. In a post-Reconstruction America riddled with racial violence and economic suppression, Eatonville was proof of concept, that freedom, when self-directed, could flourish.


But what’s often missed in the retelling is what Eatonville represented economically. This wasn’t just about survival, it was about enterprise. Eatonville’s early residents purchased land, started businesses, opened schools, ran churches. It produced intellectuals like Zora Neale Hurston, who would immortalise the town in American literature and had it been allowed to grow free from the…


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They Tried to Erase Her – But Her Legacy Still Speaks: The Story of Sarah Rector

“They fear our wealth because they fear our freedom. And they fear our freedom because they cannot control it.” – Inspired by the Teachings of Min. Farrakhan
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Let me ask you a question.


Why is it that the name Sarah Rector isn’t in every textbook; every Black child’s mouth, every economics syllabus across this country?


By the age of 10, this powerful young girl born to formerly enslaved parents became the richest Black child in America. Not because she was chosen by the system, but because she was chosen by God and blessed through reparations from the Creek Nation with land that would change her life.


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JACQUELINE HARVEY
Jul 02, 2025

Amazing story!!!

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