List of Owenite communities in the United States

Artist's rendition of Robert Owen's theoretical design of a socialist community.

This is a list of Owenite communities in the United States which emerged during a short-lived popular boom during the second half of the 1820s. Between 1825 and 1830 more than a dozen such colonies were established in the United States, inspired by the ideas of Robert Owen. All of these met with economic failure and rapid disestablishment within one or a comparatively few years.

The Owenite movement of the 1820s was one of the four primary branches of secular Utopian Socialism in the United States during the 19th century, antedating Fourierism (1843–50), Icarianism (1848–98) and Bellamyism (1889–96).

Background

New Harmony, Indiana as it actually appeared, circa 1832.

The communitarian ideas of Welsh reformer Robert Owen (1772–1837) were popularized in the United States by his arrival in America in November 1824. Owen had learned that an already established Rappite religious community at Harmony, Indiana was for sale and set sail for America with a view acquiring it from the Harmony Society and thereby making it a model for his collectivist plans.[1] This initial American community of Owen, a tract of 30,000 acres on the Wabash River which included farmland, dwellings, and factories, would be rechristened "New Harmony" and served as the inspiration for the establishment of other Owenite colonies.[2]

The idea of Owenite communities in the United States was boosted by two widely publicized addresses by Owen made before the United States Congress, dated February 25 and March 7, 1825.[3] The assembled audience included President John Quincy Adams, several members of his cabinet, the justices of the Supreme Court of the United States, and a number of other invited luminaries.[4]

Owen was assisted in his development of New Harmony by Philadelphian William Maclure, himself a wealthy philanthropist as well as the leading American geologist of the day.[2] Other leading American intellectuals directly participated in the project, including preeminent zoologist Thomas Say, painter Charles Alexandre Lesueur, visionary pedagogue Francis Neef, and Scottish-born feminist and freethinker Frances "Fanny" Wright, among others.[5]

A brief fad followed seeking the realization of Owen's ideas in practice, resulting in the formation of over a dozen Owenite communities. All of these proved short-lived, whether owing to internal dissension or an inability to generate a surplus producing manufactured goods and agricultural products sufficient to retire debts incurred. By about 1830 the Owenite movement in America had vanished with little trace, the established village of New Harmony having long since converted to operation on an individualistic basis.

List

Name Location Launched Terminated Comments
New Harmony New Harmony, Indiana May 1825 1827
Macluria New Harmony, Indiana 1826 1827 Also known as "No. 2." Split group of religious Westerners from New Harmony.
Feiba Peveli New Harmony, Indiana 1826 ??? Also known as "No. 3." Split group of English farmers from New Harmony, which survived the original colony's demise.
Blue Spring Community Monroe County, IN 1826 1827 Located about 7 miles SW of Bloomngton.[6]
Forestville Community Coxsackie, NY ??? 1827
Franklin Community Haverstraw, NY 1826 1826
Kendal Community Massillon, OH 1826 1829 "Longest life of any Owenite Project."[7] Voted to terminate Jan. 3, 1829.[8]
Nashoba Community Nashoba, TN 1825 1830 "Emancipation Plantation" conceived by Francis "Fanny" Wright.
Wanborough Community Wanborough, IL 1826 ??? Mentioned in Lockwood (1905) as having been established by May 1826.[9]
Yellow Springs Community Yellow Springs, OH 1825 1825 Launched in July, terminated end of December 1825. Current location of Antioch College.[10]
Source: T.D. Seymour Bassett, "The Secular Utopian Socialists," pp. 160-167 (unless otherwise noted).

See also

Footnotes

  1. Morris Hillquit, History of Socialism in the United States. [1903] Revised Fifth Edition. New York: Funk and Wagnalls, 1910; pg. 53.
  2. 1 2 Hillquit, History of Socialism in the United States, pg. 58.
  3. T.D. Seymour Bassett, "The Secular Utopian Socialists," in Donald Drew Egbert and Stow Persons (eds.), Socialism and American Life: Volume 1. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1952; pg. 162.
  4. George B. Lockwood with Charles A. Prosser, The New Harmony Movement. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1905; pg. 69.
  5. Hillquite, History of Socialism in the United States, pg. 59.
  6. "Aspiring Towards Utopia: Blue Spring Community," Indiana Magazine of History, Sept. 12, 2011.
  7. Bassett, "The Secular Utopian Socialists," pg. 167.
  8. Bestor, Backwoods Utopias, pg. 206.
  9. Lockwood with Prosser, The New Harmony Movement, pg. 144.
  10. Bestor, Backwoods Utopias, pp. 210-211.

Further reading

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