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Progress Denied : Quakertown, White Supremacy, and the Illusion of Democracy in Denton, Texas, 18501925 - Teague

Progress Denied

Quakertown, White Supremacy, and the Illusion of Democracy in Denton, Texas, 18501925

By: Teague, Hollie A.

eBook | 15 February 2026

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Sometimes, history isn't what it appears to be. For instance, in the early 1920s, a thriving Southern Black community was literally voted out of existence by local white citizens. The North Texas city of Denton, which was sometimes described as a "Ku Klux Box," was also home to the Quakertown neighborhood. There, Black Texans worked hard to overcome the legacy of slavery, build financial success and family stability, educate their children, and worship God as they saw fit. And they did it all right in the middle of town. A model of "racial uplift" for over forty years, the community was eventually targeted by their white neighbors. Rather than using the torches and nooses often associated with the Jim Crow era, Denton's white supremacists perpetrated a devastating act of civic violence. Cloaking themselves in the legitimacy associated with city government, institutions of higher learning, fraternal orders, and civic improvement groups, they were able to cover their tracks while they planned a large-scale racist dispossession. Then, in 1920, they got access to the most destructive weapon they'd deploy—the vote for women. Quickly, the very existence of Quakertown was put on the (whites-only) ballot, disguised as a beautification measure. By a narrow margin, the Black community was slated for destruction in 1921. Once the community removal was complete, Denton's white community used the language of democracy and majority rule to cover up the whole thing. This is the story of Black success amid the challenges of Jim Crow Texas, the way that white supremacists were able to manipulate democratic ideals to oppress their neighbors, and the legacy a deformed social memory left behind.

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