La Réunion, Texas
Ghost Town
La Réunion is located in Texas
La Réunion
La Réunion
Location within Texas
La Réunion is located in the United States
La Réunion
La Réunion
La Réunion (the United States)
Coordinates: 32°45′33.22″N 96°51′24.8″W / 32.7592278°N 96.856889°W / 32.7592278; -96.856889
CountryUnited States
StateTexas
CountyDallas
Settled1855
Founded byBelgian, French, Swiss Colonists
Elevation
429 ft (131 m)
Time zoneUTC-6 (CST)
FIPS code48113
GNIS feature ID2034083

La Réunion was a utopian socialist community formed in 1855 by French, Belgian, and Swiss colonists on the south bank of the Trinity River in central Dallas County, Texas, United States. The colony site is a short distance north of Interstate 30 near downtown Dallas.[1] The founder of the community, Victor Prosper Considerant, was a French democratic socialist who directed an international movement based on Fourierism, a set of economic, political, and social beliefs advocated by French philosopher François Marie Charles Fourier. Fourierism subsequently became known as a form of utopian socialism.[2]

Initially, plans for the colony were loosely structured as Considerant intended to make it a "communal experiment administered by a system of direct democracy."[1] The crux of the plan was to allow participants to share in profits derived from capital investments and the amount and quality of labor performed. La Réunion existed for only eighteen months, with its demise attributable to financial insolvency, a shortage of skilled participants, inclement weather, inability to succeed at farming, and rising costs.

History

The founders of La Réunion intended it to become a socialist utopian colony; they were inspired by the writings of the French philosopher Charles Fourier, who advocated communal production and distribution for communal profit. Unlike other early communist systems, both men and women could vote and individuals could own private property.

Founding

La Réunion was founded in Texas by Victor Prosper Considerant, a member of the Fourier movement in Lyon, France. He had been forced into exile after staging protests against Napoléon III's military expedition to Rome. After personally inspecting an area near the three forks of the Trinity River in Texas, he returned to Europe where he formed a group of future settlers.

Land purchase

Advance agent François Cantagrel was sent ahead to buy 2 acres (8,100 m2) at $700 per acre to establish the location of the colony. As the land was not good for farming, the property was a poor choice for the intended colony, although most of the would-be colonists were not farmers. Approximately 200 colonists arrived by ship near present-day Houston. They walked overland to the site of their new colony approximately 250 miles (400 km) northward, with their possessions hauled by ox carts, and arrived on April 22, 1855.

Original population

The general area surrounding the three forks of the Trinity River had about 400 inhabitants at the time. The addition of the French colonists nearly doubled the population. The new arrivals spoke a different language from the settlers, believed in a different system of government and Catholic faith, and brought with them skills that the existing farmers did not possess. The watchmaking, weaving, brewing and storekeeping skills of the new colonists were ill-suited to the establishment of a colony, since they lacked the experience and ability to produce food for themselves.

Texas weather

Although the colonists cultivated wheat and vegetables, they did not produce enough for their needs or in time; their biggest handicap was the uncooperative weather of Texas.[3] A blizzard in May 1856 destroyed the colony's crops and covered the Trinity River with ice. That summer the Texas heat created drought conditions, and what was left of the crops became eaten by an invasion of grasshoppers.

Decline

Although more than 350 European colonists eventually made La Réunion their home, the experiment was already beginning to fail as the population began to leave due to the community's financial troubles.[4] Some returned to Europe while others moved out of the area.[4][5]

On January 28, 1857, Allyre Bureau, one of the society leaders, gave formal notice of the colony's dissolution. By 1860, what most of the remaining land was incorporated into the expanding city of Dallas.[1] The last La Réunion house collapsed in the 1930s. By 1940, the city of Dallas incorporated the remaining unoccupied land that was once La Réunion.[4]

Legacy

La Reunion Cemetery historical marker in West Dallas
La Reunion historical marker on a golf course in Oak Cliff

Shortly before the demise of La Réunion, botanist and pharmacist Jacob Boll arrived and taught Julien Reverchon. The latter man became celebrated in his own right as a professor of botany at Baylor University College of Medicine and Pharmacy in Dallas. The first brewery and butcher shops in Dallas were established by former colonists from La Réunion; Maxime Guillot opened a carriage factory that operated for 50 years.

Eventually what had been cultivated as farmland at La Réunion was discovered to be covering large deposits of limestone; it was gradually quarried and transported to build the growing state of Texas.[6]

The cemetery on the old colony site still serves as the final resting place for some of the colonists. It is maintained by the City of Dallas and is located in west Dallas. The La Réunion Cemetery received a historic marker in 1974.[7][8] The Daughters of the American Revolution placed a small memorial to the colony at a nearby golf course. The La Réunion Dallas historical site received a historic marker on April 10, 1924.[9][10]

The Reunion District and Reunion Tower were named after the colony and are located a few miles east of where La Réunion once existed.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Davidson, Rondel V. "La Réunion". TSHA Handbook of Texas Online. Archived from the original on October 26, 2012. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
  2. Keith Taylor (1982). Political Ideas of the Utopian Socialists. Taylor & Francis. p. 23. ISBN 9780714630892. Archived from the original on 2018-02-23. Retrieved 2016-03-06.
  3. Pratt, James (2020). Sabotaged : Dreams of Utopia in Texas. University of Nebraska Press. pp. 172–175. ISBN 978-1-4962-0792-0. OCLC 1162655230.
  4. 1 2 3 "LA REUNION - Texas State Historical Association (TSHA)". The Handbook of Texas Online. 2010-06-15. Archived from the original on 2018-11-07. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
  5. Barton, Julia (2016-03-24). "The failed socialist utopian dream that helped Dallas become a major city". Public Radio International. Archived from the original on 2018-11-07. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
  6. "Cement City Collection". University of Texas Libraries. 1908-04-28. Archived from the original on 2021-10-22. Retrieved 2019-06-15.
  7. "Details for La Reunion Cemetery Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5113006756". Atlas: Texas Historical Commission. Archived from the original on February 3, 2022. Retrieved June 15, 2019 via atlas.thc.state.tx.us.
  8. La Réunion Cemetery: 3300 block of Fish Trap Road; in West Dallas, Housing Park: Texas marker #6756 | Archived 2013-04-21 at archive.today
  9. "Details for La Reunion Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5113006755". Atlas: Texas Historical Commission. Archived from the original on February 3, 2022. Retrieved June 15, 2019 via atlas.thc.state.tx.us.
  10. La Réunion - Dallas: Stevens Park Golf Course, Tee #6; on Hampton Road at intersection with Old Orchard: Texas marker #6755 | Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  • Santerre, George H. White Cliffs of Dallas. The Book Craft, Dallas, 1955. Dallas Public Library Reference: R.976.428 S234W. The Story of La Reunion, the Old French Colony.
  • Considerant, Victor. Au Texas. New York, 1855. Dallas Public Library Reference: REF R334.683 C755A 1975. In French.
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