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Blackland is a historically black neighborhood on the east side of Austin, Texas , located north of Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd, south of Manor Road, east of I-35, and west of Chestnut Street. The neighborhood was originally known as Blacklands and was settled by Swedish immigrants, but evolved into a predominantly African-American neighborhood following the 1928 Austin city plan , which called for the relocation of non-white residents to the east side of the city. Up until the 1980s, the neighborhood was targeted for demolition to make way for an expansion of the University of Texas campus. In 1983, the Blackland Community Development Corporation was formed to build, purchase and maintain housing for low-income families and special populations.

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40-1041: (Redirected from Black Land ) [REDACTED] Look up blacklands in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Blacklands or Blackland may refer to: Places [ edit ] In Texas [ edit ] Blackland, Austin, Texas , a neighborhood in Austin Blackland, Texas , a town in Rockwall County Blackland Army Airfield, a former name of Waco Regional Airport Texas Blackland Prairies , an ecoregion Elsewhere [ edit ] Blackland, Charlotte County , New Brunswick, Canada Blackland, Mississippi , an unincorporated community in Prentiss County, Mississippi Blackland, Restigouche County , New Brunswick, Canada Blacklands (archaeological site) ,

80-507: A Roman site in the parish of King's Sutton , Northamptonshire, England Blacklands, Ayrshire , an area of Kilwinning , Ayrshire, Scotland Blacklands, County Tyrone , a townland in County Tyrone , Northern Ireland Blacklands Parish , a suburban area in the town of Hastings , East Sussex, England Blackland, Wiltshire , a hamlet and former parish Music [ edit ] Blackland Records Blacklands (album) ,

120-490: A crew of 12 federal field agents conducted a 17-year (1889–1905), statewide survey of the natural history of Texas. The survey collected detailed data on the topography , land use, climate , as well as plant, bird, and mammal specimens, and extensive photographs of the landscape. However, because the natural state of the Blackland Prairie region was so altered, even at that time, that little wildlife remained and

160-607: A few of the smaller species include threadfin shad ( Dorosoma petenense ), red shiner ( Cyprinella lutrensis ), blacktail shiner ( Cyprinella venusta ), shoal chub ( Macrhybopsis hyostoma ), ghost shiner ( Notropis buchanani ), pugnose minnow ( Opsopoeodus emiliae ), fathead minnow ( Pimephales promelas ), bullhead minnow ( Pimephales vigilax ), river carpsucker ( Carpiodes carpio ), blackstripe topminnow ( Fundulus notatus ), slough darter ( Etheostoma gracile ), bigscale logperch ( Percina macrolepida ), and dusky darter ( Percina sciera ) and many others. Because of

200-677: A lack of economic investment and disenfranchisement caused by racial discrimination. In 1965, the Texas Legislature granted the University of Texas Board of Regents approval to use eminent domain to acquire land for expanding the university. In the Spring of 1965, the university began buying individual parcels of land to the north, south, and east of the existing campus, including in the Blackland neighborhood, in hopes of using

240-400: A significant increase in pasture for livestock production, ca. 25% tame pasture and 25% rangeland. "As a result of cultivation, overgrazing , and other imprudent land-use practices, there are few if any remnants of climax vegetation in the region." The Blackland Prairie was a disturbance maintained ecosystem prior to the arrival of Europeans. Fires ignited by lightning occasionally swept

280-871: A variety of wildflowers including gayfeathers , asters , Maximilian sunflower , wild indigos and compass plant . Mammals: Some species found in the region include Virginia opossum ( Didelphis virginiana ), nine-banded armadillo ( Dasypus novemcinctus ), Eastern red bat ( Lasiurus borealis ), Brazilian free-tailed bat ( Tadarida brasiliensis ), fulvous harvest mouse ( Reithrodontomys fulvescens ), white-footed mouse ( Peromyscus leucopus ), hispid cotton rat ( Sigmodon hispidus ) ), eastern fox squirrel ( Sciurus niger ), American beaver ( Castor canadensis ), white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus ), northern raccoon ( Procyon lotor ), striped skunk ( Mephitis mephitis ), bobcat ( Lynx rufus ), gray fox ( Urocyon cinereoargenteus ), and coyotes ( Canis latrans ). The large, keystone species that once inhabited

320-556: The Caddo National Grassland (17,784 acres (71.97 km )) under the multiple-use concept, balancing resource extraction, preservation, and recreation. The State of Texas administers a number of state parks and wildlife management areas in the region, however they are mostly located around human-made lakes and riparian zones of rivers and creeks, focusing on recreation, fishing, and hunting, and not prairie conservation. Many of these areas are leased, not owned, by

360-742: The Edwards Plateau savanna and the Tamaulipan mezquital lie to the southwest. The larger of the two islands is the Fayette Prairie , encompassing 17,000 km (6,600 sq mi), and the smaller is the San Antonio Prairie , with an area of 7,000 km (2,700 sq mi). The two islands are separated from the main belt by the oak woodlands of the East Central Texas forests , which surround

400-567: The Red River in North Texas to San Antonio in the south. The prairie was named after its rich, dark soil. Less than 1% of the original Blackland prairie vegetation remains, scattered across Texas in parcels. The Texas Blackland Prairies ecoregion covers an area of 50,300 km (19,400 sq mi), consisting of a main belt of 43,000 km (17,000 sq mi) and two islands of tallgrass prairie grasslands southeast of

440-419: The 1930s, the neighborhood's growing African-American population constructed new housing, often filling in the gaps between the neighborhood's existing far-apart homes built in the 19th century. In the 1950s, blues musician Robert Shaw moved to the neighborhood and opened a grocery store and barbershop called the "Stop and Swat". By the 1960s, the neighborhood's name became known as "Blackland" and suffered from

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480-640: The American alligator ( Alligator mississippiensis ) ranges into the Blackland Prairies. The ubiquitous red-eared slider ( Trachemys scripta ) is found throughout the region, the river cooter ( Pseudemys concinna ) in the northeast, the Texas cooter ( Pseudemys texana ) in the southwest, the Mississippi map turtle ( Graptemys pseudogeographica ) in the larger rivers, and several records of

520-763: The Blackland Neighborhood Association was formed to protect the Blackland residents' property rights; the neighborhood association later regrouped as the Blackland Community Development Corporation (CDC). Following 12 years of negotiations, the Blackland CDC and the university reached a compromise, which allowed the university to annex the land between I-35 and Leona Street to build the Red and Charline McCombs Field and other auxiliary buildings; at

560-737: The Blackland Prairie. Salamanders include the small-mouthed salamander ( Ambystoma texanum ), central newt ( Notophthalmus viridescens ), and western lesser siren ( Siren intermedia ). Fish: Among the many fish of the region are spotted bass ( Micropterus punctulatus ), white bass ( Morone chrysops ), black crappie ( Pomoxis nigromaculatus ), white crappie ( Pomoxis annularis ), black bullhead ( Ameiurus melas ), blue catfish ( Ictalurus furcatus ), flathead catfish ( Pylodictis olivaris ), freckled madtom ( Noturus nocturnus ), warmouth ( Lepomis gulosus ), orangespotted sundfish ( Lepomis humilis ), longear sunfish ( Lepomis megalotis ), freshwater drum ( Aplodinotus grunniens ). Just

600-472: The Blackland Prairies, before the arrival of Europeans and the destruction of the tallgrass ecosystem, are now extirpated , including American bison ( Bos bison ), gray wolf ( Canis lupus ), red wolf ( Canis rufus ), mountain lion ( Puma concolor ), black bear ( Ursus americanus ), and pronghorn ( Antilocapra americana ) which once ranged into the western areas, and even jaguar ( Panthera onca ) and ocelot ( Leopardus pardalis ) that once occurred in

640-427: The area quickly led to widespread habitat loss. Early Czechoslovakian and German immigrants arrived in the region around 1825 to 1845 and found the rich black soil excellent for farming. By the end of the 19th century 98% of the blackland prairies were cultivated and it was the leading cotton region of the state, also producing sorghum, corn, wheat, and hay. The land was so valuable, crops were planted abruptly up to

680-403: The area, clearing or reducing the encroachment of trees and shrubs on the prairie, while stimulating the native herbaceous prairie species of forbs and grasses which are pyrophytic , adapted and resistant to wildfires. The exact frequency of fires is unknown but estimated to have occurred at intervals of 5 to 10 years. Herds of bison , and to a lesser extent pronghorn and deer, grazed on

720-436: The biological survey crew spent little time there, ca. 4% of the total fieldwork. The human population of Texas in 1900 was less than 3,000,000 (ca. 11 people per square mile), in 2001 it was over 20,000,000 (ca. 78 people per square mile), in 2019 it was nearly 29,000,000 (96 people per square mile). Although 98% of the land was cultivated around 1900, after 1950 a shift in land use occurred, with about 50% in cultivation and

760-520: The city of Austin unveiled its 1928 City Plan , which mandated that social services such as schools and hospitals be made available to African-Americans, but only on the east side of East Avenue (present-day Interstate 35 ). Additionally, many neighborhoods in North and West Austin adopted restrictive covenants that prevented home sales to non-whites. These measures drove many African-American families to East Austin neighborhoods, including Blacklands. In

800-520: The clay, which can cause damage to buildings and infrastructure. Soil management problems also include water erosion, cotton root rot, soil tilth , and brush control. The rich black 'waxland' soil of these prairies is almost proof against burrowing rodents, which penetrate the region only along some sandy stream bottoms, while the open country tempts jack rabbits, coyotes, and other plains species eastward slightly beyond their usual bounds. Few, if any, species are restricted to these prairie, however, and

840-802: The copperhead ( Agkistrodon contortrix ), cottonmouth ( Agkistrodon piscivorus ), timber rattlesnake ( Crotalus horridus ), and the Texas coralsnake ( Micrurus tener ). Amphibians: Frogs and toads in the region include the American bullfrog ( Lithobates catesbeianus ), southern leopard frog ( Lithobates sphenocephalus ), Woodhouse's toad ( Anaxyrus woodhousii ), Hurter's spadefoot toad ( Scaphiopus hurterii ), Great Plains narrow-mouthed toad ( Gastrophryne olivacea ), Blanchard's cricket frog ( Acris blanchardi ), Cope's gray treefrog ( Hyla chrysoscelis ), green treefrog ( Hyla cinerea ), spotted chorus frog ( Pseudacris clarkii ), Strecker's chorus frog ( Pseudacris streckeri ), and another ten species recorded from limited areas or marginal counties of

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880-530: The cost of acquisition. During the talks of annexation, the university and the City of Austin referred to Blackland neighborhood as the "Winn Tract" (named after an elementary school in the area), the "University East Project", or the Eastern Renewal Area". In 1980, the university announced plans to annex all the land between I-35 and Chicon Street, nearly half of the Blackland neighborhood. In 1981,

920-820: The effect on distribution is mainly negative." The negative effect on distribution is evident in the Texas distribution of many wide-ranging species of both eastern and western North American fauna reaching their respective distributional limits in the region of the Texas Blackland Prairies and East Central Texas forests [e.g. eastern: American alligator ( Alligator mississippiensis ), eastern gray squirrel ( Sciurus carolinensis ), southern flying squirrel ( Glaucomys volans ),; western: American badger ( Taxidea taxus ), western diamondback rattlesnake ( Crotalus atrox ); and other fauna listed below]. Important prairie plants included little bluestem , yellow indiangrass , big bluestem , tall dropseed , and

960-709: The grasses and trampled and fertilized the soil, stimulating the growth of the tallgrass ecosystem. Bison were extirpated from the area by the 1850s. The soil of the Blackland Prairies, from which the "blackland" gets its name, contains black or dark-gray, alkaline clay in both upland and bottomland areas. Some western areas have shallow soils over chalk, while some soils in eastern areas are slightly acidic to neutral, grayish clays and loams over mottled clay subsoils (occasionally referred to as graylands). "Black gumbo" and "black velvet" are local names for this soil. The soils have vertisols properties, shrinking and swelling with moisture content. In dry weather, deep cracks form in

1000-744: The islands on all sides but the northeast, where the Fayette Prairie meets the East Texas Piney Woods . Texas counties that once supported blackland prairies include all or most of Collin , Dallas , Delta , Ellis , Hunt , Kaufman , Navarro , and Rockwall counties, as well as portions of Bastrop , Bell , Bexar , Caldwell , Denton , Falls , Fannin , Franklin , Freestone , Grayson , Guadalupe , Henderson , Hill , Hopkins , Johnson , Lamar , Limestone , McLennan , Milam , Rains , Red River , Tarrant , Titus , Travis , Van Zandt , and Williamson counties, all in

1040-429: The land to relocate the university's intramural fields, baseball field, tennis courts, and parking lots. Speculators bought much of the neighborhood's devalued property in order to sell it at a profit to the university. This led to cheaper rent for residents at the expense of deteriorating housing conditions. The University Board of Regents focused on expansion eastward, as the east side's lower property values would lower

1080-425: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Blacklands&oldid=1191703781 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Blackland, Austin, Texas Blackland

1120-540: The main Blackland Prairie belt; both the main belt and the islands extend northeast–southwest. The main belt consists of oaklands and savannas and runs from just south of the Red River on the Texas- Oklahoma border through the Dallas–Fort Worth metropolitan area and southward to the vicinity of San Antonio , Bexar County . The central forest-grasslands transition lies to the north and northwest, and

1160-480: The maintenance of the prairie through controlled burns to make more land suitable for hunting bison and other game. Hunter-gatherers continually inhabited the prairie since pre-Clovis times over 15,000 years ago. In historic times, they included the Wichita , Waco , Tonkawa , and Comanche , each of whom were gradually replaced by settled agrarian society. The advent of large-scale irrigated farming and ranching in

1200-749: The most diverse group of reptiles in the region, species include the North American racer ( Coluber constrictor ), eastern hog-nosed snake ( Heterodon platirhinos ), prairie kingsnake ( Lampropeltis calligaster ), speckled kingsnake ( Lampropeltis holbrooki ), coachwhip ( Masticophis flagellum ), yellow-bellied watersnake ( Nerodia erythrogaster ), diamond-backed watersnake ( Nerodia rhombifer ), rough greensnake ( Opheodrys aestivus ), western ratsnake ( Pantherophis obsoletus ), Graham's crayfishsnake ( Regina grahamii ), flat-headed snake ( Tantilla gracilis ), western ribbonsnake ( Thamnophis proximus ), and several others. Venomous species include

1240-423: The northwestern band of the region. The smaller southeastern band includes much of Grimes and Washington counties as well as portions of Austin , Colorado , Fayette , and the northwestern half of Lavaca county. Sources and maps vary on the exact boundaries of the Blackland Prairie, and some may include or exclude different portions of peripheral counties. Native American hunter-gatherers contributed to

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1280-768: The rare chicken turtle ( Deirochelys reticularia ). Others include eastern snapping turtle ( Chelydra serpentina ), three-toed box turtle ( Terrapene triunguis ), ornate box turtle ( Terrapene ornata ), Mississippi mud turtle ( Kinosternon subrubrum ), eastern musk turtle ( Sternotherus odoratus ), spiny softshellturtle ( Apalone spinifera ). Lizards include Green Anole ( Anolis carolinensis ), Six-lined Racerunner ( Aspidoscelis sexlineatus ), Prairie Lizard ( Sceloporus conssbrinus ), Western Slender Glass Lizard ( Ophisaurus attenuatus ), Five-lined Skink ( Plestiodon fasciatus ), Broad-headed Skink ( Plestiodon laticeps ), Prairie Skink ( Plestiodon septentrionalis ), and Ground Skink ( Scincella lateralis ). Snakes are

1320-790: The region. Various seasonal and migratory species appearing in the region include Bufflehead ( Bucephala albeola ), Hooded Merganser ( Lophodytes cucullatus ), Little Blue Heron ( Egretta caerulea ), Yellow-crowned Night Heron ( Nyctanassa violacea ), Northern Harrier ( Circus hudsonius ), Inca Dove ( Columbina inca ), Yellow-billed Cuckoo ( Coccyzus americanus ), Ruby-throated Hummingbird ( Archilochus colubris ), Scissor-tailed Flycatcher ( Tyrannus forficatus ), American Pipit ( Anthus rubescens ), Orange-crowned Warbler ( Leiothlypis celata ), Blue Grosbeak ( Passerina caerulea ), Indigo Bunting ( Passerina cyanea ), Painted Bunting ( Passerina ciris ), Harris's Sparrow ( Zonotrichia querula ), and Dickcissel ( Spiza americana ). A few of

1360-556: The roadsides, seldom fenced, and riparian areas were cleared right to the creek banks. Several of the larger cities in the state, such as Austin , Dallas , Fort Worth , San Antonio , Temple , and Waco , are located in the region and the agricultural activity in the area was a significant factor in their growth in the 19th century. The U. S. Bureau of Biological Survey [now the United States Fish and Wildlife Service ], led by chief field naturalist Vernon Bailey with

1400-469: The same time, the university divested all of its previously acquired property east of Leona Street back to the Blackland CDC. 30°16′52″N 97°43′20″W  /  30.280991°N 97.722097°W  / 30.280991; -97.722097 Texas blackland prairies The Texas Blackland Prairies are a temperate grassland ecoregion located in Texas that runs roughly 300 miles (480 km) from

1440-416: The second and final album from Music for Pleasure, released in 1985 See also [ edit ] Black earth (disambiguation) Blacklands Railroad The Barsac Mission Mordor (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Blacklands . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

1480-445: The soil and climate, this ecoregion is ideally suited to crop agriculture. This has led to most of the Blackland Prairie ecosystem being converted to crop production, leaving less than one percent remaining. Some groups estimate that less than 0.1% of the area is remaining. Small remnants are conserved at sites such as The Nature Conservancy 's 1,400-acre Clymer Meadow Preserve near Celeste, TX . The U.S. Forest Service manages

1520-462: The southern regions. Invasive species include nutria or coypu ( Myocastor coypus ), house mouse ( Mus musculus ), roof rat ( Rattus rattus ), and Norway rat ( Rattus norvegicus ). Feral house cats ( Felis catus ) and feral pigs ( Sus scrofa ), are of conservation concerns and pose serious threats to native fauna. Birds: With spring and fall migrants, wintering species, breading and summer species, well over 325 species of birds occur in

1560-978: The year round resident species include wood duck ( Aix sponsa ), blue-winged teal ( Anas discors ), black vulture ( Coragyps atratus ), cooper's hawk ( Accipiter cooperii ), red-shouldered hawk ( Buteo lineatus ), American kestrel ( Falco sparverius ), great horned owl ( Bubo virginianus ), barred owl ( Strix varia ), greater roadrunner ( Geococcyx californianus ), belted kingfisher ( Megaceryle alcyon ), red-bellied woodpecker ( Melanerpes carolinus ), hairy woodpecker ( Leuconotopicus villosus ), loggerhead shrike ( Lanius ludovicianus ), red-winged blackbird ( Agelaius phoeniceus ), eastern meadowlark ( Sturnella magna ), eastern bluebird ( Sialia sialis ), tufted titmouse ( Baeolophus bicolor ), Carolina wren ( Thryothorus ludovicianus ), chipping sparrow ( Spizella passerina ), lark sparrow ( Chondestes grammacus ), and grasshopper sparrow ( Ammodramus savannarum ). Reptiles: Although not particularly abundant,

1600-506: Was originally a farming community founded and organized in the 1800s by Swedish immigrants who settled in the area due to the rich, dark soil that was good for growing crops. The neighborhood was originally known as "Blacklands", named for the Blackland Prairie . By the turn of the 20th century, much of the farmland in the neighborhood was developed with streets and houses, most of which were built far apart on large lots. In 1928,

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