Betty Kimble and her brother William Clark are descendants of those who lived Quakertown in Denton, Tex., and attended the relocated school. (Photo courtesy of the Betty Kimble collection and Denton County Office of History and Culture)
For many Black people, the racist mass shooting that killed 10 in a Buffalo grocery store echoed a far too familiar history of White supremacist violence, as survivors’ testimonies showed. The 1921 Tulsa massacre was not exceptional, except, perhaps, for its size. For more than a century, Black communities have lived with the constant threat of deadly attacks.
This is the story of one lesser-known incident of violence wreaked on Black communities. In the 1880s, formerly enslaved people established a prosperous community in Denton, Tex., called Quakertown. In 1921, the city demolished it — ostensibly to protect White female students at the nearby College of Industrial Arts (now the Texas Woman’s University) from being raped by Black men of Quakertown. Two of this article’s co-authors, Ms. Alma Clark, 94, and Ms. Betty Kimble, 90, live in Denton and are documentarians and tellers of Quakertown’s history.