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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ExodustersExodusters - Wikipedia

    Exodusters was a name given to African Americans who migrated from states along the Mississippi River to Kansas in the late nineteenth century, as part of the Exoduster Movement or Exodus of 1879. It was the first general migration of black people following the Civil War.

  2. Jul 12, 2022 · He called himself the “Moses of the Colored Exodus,” and the people he led the Exodusters. In 1873, he led a group of 300 southern Blacks to settle in Cherokee County, Kansas, founding what became known as “Singleton’s Colony.”

  3. Though some African-Americans did continue to head for Kansas, the massive movement known as the exodus basically ended with the decade of the 1870s. That ten-year period had witnessed great changes for blacks both in the South and in Kansas.

  4. Jan 31, 2023 · In 1879, Singletons tireless appeal helped encourage some 20,000 African Americans from the Deep South to migrate to Kansas over the next two years in what became known as the Great Exodus...

    • Farrell Evans
    • 5 min
  5. The Exodus of 1879 was the first mass migration of African Americans from the South after the Civil War. These migrants, most of them former slaves, became known as exodusters, a name which took inspiration from the biblical Exodus, during which Moses led the Hebrews out of slavery in Egypt and into the Promised Land.

  6. Exodusters were African American homesteaders who moved westward during the last decades of the nineteenth century to settle the Great Plains. After federal troops withdrew from the South in 1877 at the end of the twelve-year period of Reconstruction (1865 – 1877), civil rights for African Americans began to erode.

  7. Mar 7, 2019 · The so-called Exodusters moved west to Kansas. Some settled in cities like Topeka and Kansas City, and others established towns like Bogue and Nicodemus in the western part of the state. By 1880,...

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