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03/20/2026

Four Escaped Slaves Bought Tiny Plots of Land in 1826 — And Built One of America’s First Free Black Towns

Freedom Needed More Than Escape

September 1826.

Four Black men—Wardell Parker, Ezekiel Parker, David Parker, and Hezekiah Hall—did something quietly revolutionary.

They bought land.

Not plantations.
Not estates.

Just small parcels ranging from half an acre to about an acre and a half.

The cost ranged from $8 to $24.

But those tiny plots of land meant something enormous.

They meant ownership.

They meant safety.

They meant a future that slavery could not reach.

The Birth of Timbuctoo

The land was located near Westampton Township, along the north bank of the Rancocas Creek.

The seller was a Quaker farmer named William Hilyard.

The region’s strong Quaker abolitionist influence made it one of the few places where formerly enslaved people could realistically buy land.

From those first purchases grew a community called Timbuctoo.

The name echoed the ancient African city of Timbuktu—a symbol of scholarship, trade, and Black cultural achievement.

Whether the founders chose the name or local Quakers suggested it, the message was powerful.

This community would be rooted in pride, history, and independence.

Building a Free Black Community

Timbuctoo wasn’t just a refuge.

It was carefully constructed.

Residents built:

Two churches

Two schools

A benevolent association that helped families in need

Homes, farms, and businesses

In 1834, Peter Quire and his wife Maria donated land for the African Union School.

The deed included a remarkable clause.

The school’s trustees must always be people of color who lived within ten miles.

Formerly enslaved people were creating legal protections to ensure Black leadership over Black education.

That was not survival.

That was nation-building.

King David of Timbuctoo

One of the original founders, David Parker, became the community’s most respected leader.

Local newspapers called him “King David.”

It wasn’t mockery.

It was respect.

He helped guide the settlement for decades, protecting the people and institutions that had grown from those first land purchases.

By 1860, Timbuctoo’s population had grown to about 125 residents.

When Slave Catchers Came

Freedom in America was never guaranteed.

Even in the North.

In December 1860, an infamous slave catcher named George Alberti arrived with armed men.

Their target was Perry Simmons, a man who had escaped slavery and built a life in Timbuctoo.

The slave catchers intended to drag him back to Maryland.

But they underestimated the community.

Residents armed themselves with axes, knives, and guns.

Led by David Parker, the people of Timbuctoo fought back.

The confrontation became known as the Battle of Pine Swamp.

According to the New Jersey Mirror, the slave catchers fled the area “as if old Satan was after them.”

They never captured Simmons.

The community had defended its freedom.

A Community That Endured

Timbuctoo continued growing through the 19th and early 20th centuries.

During the Great Migration, new Black families arrived, adding to the community’s population.

A cemetery in Timbuctoo still holds the graves of eight soldiers from the United States Colored Troops who fought during the American Civil War.

These men defended a nation that had not yet fully accepted them.

Rediscovering the Past

For many years, Timbuctoo’s story faded from public memory.

But archaeological work changed that.

In 2009, researchers from Temple University and the National Park Service began studying the site.

They uncovered over 15,000 artifacts, including:

Household pottery

Tools

Bottles ordered by mail

Children’s toys

These objects tell the story of ordinary lives lived with dignity and determination.

Recognizing Timbuctoo Today

In 2024, Timbuctoo became one of the first sites included in the New Jersey Black Heritage Trail.

A historical marker now stands in Westampton Township.

But the true monument isn’t the sign.

It’s the legacy.

What Timbuctoo Really Represents

Timbuctoo wasn’t just a place where enslaved people escaped.

It was a place where they built something permanent.

Four men started it.

Small plots of land.

A few dollars.

But what they created was far bigger:

A community.

A school.

Churches.

A defense against slave catchers.

A future for generations.

They weren’t waiting for freedom to be given.

They built it themselves—and when someone tried to take it back, they stood their ground.

That is the true story of Timbuctoo, New Jersey.

These stories are created with care, time, and research. If you’d like to help support this work, you can do so here:

https://buymeacoffee.com/africanamericanhistory

Every coffee helps me keep creating.

03/13/2026
02/25/2026
If you love raising funds for worthy causes abd you good at it, this might be a good job fit.
02/24/2026

If you love raising funds for worthy causes abd you good at it, this might be a good job fit.

We’re hiring an Institutional Giving Officer to help raise and steward five to seven figure grants that power racial justice, climate justice, economic opportunity, and more across the state.

This role leads institutional fundraising strategy, proposal development, and funder relationships in partnership with program, finance, and communications teams.

Salary: $70,000 to $85,000
Remote in Louisiana with travel to Baton Rouge and New Orleans as needed
Generous benefits package

Apply by March 6, 2026: [email protected]

02/18/2026

Just another predatory loan
With $35 trillion in equity sitting in U.S. homes, according to the St. Louis Fed, scammers have a huge incentive to devise novel tactics to steal it. Our friends at National Consumer Law Center (NCLC) recently wrote about a new scheme in which MV Realty, a Florida-based real estate brokerage firm, makes a relatively small payment (less than $800, on average) to a homeowner in exchange for a 40-year commitment to use MV Realty as the listing agent if the property ever goes up for sale. As part of the misleadingly named “Homeowner Benefit Agreement” (HBA) (it’s certainly not the homeowner who benefits), MV Realty puts a lien on the property for the four-decade life of the agreement. The recorded document obligates the homeowner to pay a penalty of at least 3% of the property value (many times the amount of the original payment) if they take out a loan against the equity or if the property is transferred (for example, upon the homeowner’s death) at any time during the 40 years. Listing the property for sale with MV Realty avoids the penalty, but the commission fee is similarly high, and the company allegedly has seldom had qualified staff to perform the services of a listing agent. “In effect, HBA transactions are high-cost loans,” says NCLC. Fortunately, a number of state attorneys general have put a stop to the HBAs and secured judgments against MV Realty. Visit the NCLC website to read more about this and other home equity-stripping schemes. What you should take away from this is that scammers are always looking for ways to take what’s yours. Keep your guard up and assume the worst when someone approaches you with an offer. Before agreeing to or signing anything, confer with someone you trust—a savvy family member or friend, an employee at your bank, your own lawyer or a consumer protection attorney, or a HUD-certified housing counselor

02/17/2026

♻️ Repost from .press

Rev. Jesse Jackson, a civil rights icon, dies at 84. “Our father was a servant leader — not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voiceless, and the overlooked around the world,” the Jackson family said in a statement Tuesday.

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