Self-Determination · Brooklyn · Abolition · Survival

Weeksville: The Free Black City Built Inside a City That Didn't Want It

In 1838, a Black longshoreman named James Weeks purchased land in rural Brooklyn and founded one of the most self-sufficient free Black communities in American history. Weeksville built its own church, school, newspaper, hospital, and home for the elderly — a complete parallel society inside a city that denied Black New Yorkers full citizenship. When the 1863 Draft Riots turned Manhattan into a killing ground for Black people, hundreds fled to Weeksville. The community was later absorbed by Brooklyn's expanding street grid and forgotten — until 1968, when a historian in a small plane spotted four wooden houses from the air and realized what he'd found.

Period1838 — Present
LocationCrown Heights / Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, NY
Entries7 documented events
DomainSelf-Determination · Abolition · Memory
The argument

Weeksville is the counterweight to every story in this archive about Black communities destroyed. It is proof that the destruction was not inevitable — that Black communities built institutions of extraordinary sophistication under conditions of extreme hostility and that those institutions did not have to be taken away. Seneca Village, just a few miles away in Manhattan, was demolished in 1857 to build Central Park. Weeksville survived — not because it was less accomplished, but because no one decided to seize it. The difference between survival and erasure was not the quality of what Black people built. It was whether white power chose to destroy it.

Era 1
Founding and the Logic of Land · 1838–1850
1

In 1838, James Weeks — a Black longshoreman from Virginia — purchased a parcel of land on the rural eastern edge of Brooklyn, in a neighborhood that would come to be known as Crow Hill. He was not acting in isolation. He was acting within the logic that shaped free Black property acquisition across antebellum New York: land ownership was political enfranchisement.

The New York State constitution of 1821 had stripped most Black men of the right to vote while extending universal suffrage to white men. The one exception was critical: Black men who owned real property worth $250 or more retained voting rights. In the same years, Andrew Williams and Epiphany Davis were buying lots in upper Manhattan that would become Seneca Village. James Weeks was doing the same in Brooklyn. Both communities were, in part, exercises in building the political standing that the law otherwise denied.

Brooklyn in the 1830s was still partly farmland, with large tracts of affordable land available on its eastern edges. Black families from Manhattan, from New Jersey, and from further south began purchasing lots around Weeks's property. The community that formed was named Weeksville — after its founding buyer — and its boundaries roughly corresponded to what is now the area between Bergen Street and Atlantic Avenue, east of Nostrand Avenue, in what is today Crown Heights and Bedford-Stuyvesant.

"The colored people of Brooklyn and New York are purchasing lots in Weeksville and building houses as fast as their means will allow."

— Contemporary account, cited in historical records of Weeksville

2

What made Weeksville exceptional was not just that it existed but what it built. Within two decades of its founding, the community had developed a complete institutional infrastructure — every institution a city requires for stability, education, health, and social reproduction — created and sustained by Black residents who were denied access to those same institutions in the white city surrounding them.

Weeksville's institutional infrastructure, 1840s–1860s
  • Bethel Tabernacle AME Church — the community's spiritual and organizational anchor, site of abolitionist gatherings, sermons, and political organizing
  • Colored School No. 2 — one of Brooklyn's segregated public schools for Black children, located within Weeksville; its students were among the better-educated Black children in New York
  • Freedom's Torchlight — one of the few Black-owned and Black-edited newspapers in antebellum New York, published from Weeksville; a platform for abolitionist writing, community announcements, and political argument
  • Home for Aged Colored People — an eldercare institution, later relocated to Manhattan; it was one of the first formal care facilities for elderly Black New Yorkers in the city's history
  • Zion Home for Colored Aged — a related institution providing care for elderly Black residents within the community
  • Weeksville's physician network — including Dr. Susan Smith McKinney Steward (see Entry 3), one of the first Black women licensed to practice medicine in the United States, who worked in and around the community

This was not a collection of informal arrangements. These were chartered institutions — incorporated, funded, staffed, and sustained over decades. The school had teachers. The church had a full congregation and organized programs. Freedom's Torchlight had subscribers, editors, and a printing press. The care homes had residents and staff. Weeksville was, in the full sense, a functioning city within a city: a parallel society that Black New Yorkers had constructed because the surrounding city excluded them from participation in its institutions.

3

Weeksville's institutions were not abstract — they were built and run by specific people whose names deserve to be known.

Susan Smith McKinney Steward
Physician · 1847–1918
Born in Brooklyn, became the third Black woman licensed to practice medicine in the United States (1870). Co-founded the Brooklyn Women's Homeopathic Hospital and Dispensary. Treated patients in and around Weeksville throughout her career. A founding figure of Black women's medicine.
Henry Highland Garnet
Abolitionist · Minister · 1815–1882
One of the most radical Black abolitionists of the era. His 1843 "Address to the Slaves of the United States" called on enslaved people to rise up. Active in the Brooklyn and Weeksville abolitionist network. Later served as U.S. Minister to Liberia.
Moses P. Cobb
Physician · Community Leader
A Black physician based in Weeksville who provided medical care to residents and contributed to the community's network of Black professional services during the antebellum period.
Thomas Hamilton
Editor · Publisher
Editor of the Weekly Anglo-African, one of the most important Black newspapers of the antebellum era. Connected to the Weeksville community and the broader network of Black abolitionist media in New York.
Peter Croger
Community Leader · Property Owner
Among Weeksville's major property owners and community organizers in the mid-19th century. His property holdings gave him voting rights under New York's 1821 constitution.
James Weeks
Founder · Longshoreman · c.1800–?
Born into slavery in Virginia, came to Brooklyn as a free man, purchased the founding land in 1838. His name is the community's. Beyond this, the historical record is thin — he is known primarily through his land transaction and the community it spawned.
Era 2
Refuge and Survival · 1863
4

In July 1863, white working-class men in New York City — many of them Irish immigrants furious at a new Civil War draft law that allowed wealthy men to buy exemptions — launched four days of violence that became the deadliest civil unrest in American history. The rioters, who framed the draft as forcing poor white men to fight a "Black man's war," turned their rage against Black New Yorkers with particular ferocity.

The violence was organized and methodical. The Colored Orphan Asylum on Fifth Avenue — home to more than 230 Black children — was burned to the ground on the first day. (The children escaped through a rear entrance while the mob looted the building.) Black men were lynched from lampposts on Clarkson Street, Carmine Street, and Seventh Avenue. Black-owned businesses, homes, and churches were destroyed across lower and midtown Manhattan. The official death toll was listed at approximately 119; most historians believe the actual number was far higher, with Black victims underrepresented in the count.

As the violence spread, hundreds of Black New Yorkers fled the city. Many of them — some estimates place the number between three hundred and a thousand — made their way across the East River to Brooklyn and specifically to Weeksville. Weeksville became a refuge. Its geography — off the main Brooklyn streets, accessible by routes unfamiliar to the Manhattan mob — offered protection. Its community — organized, propertied, and known to be armed — offered something else: the capacity for self-defense.

"The colored people from New York are fleeing to Brooklyn for safety."

— Brooklyn Daily Eagle, July 14, 1863

Weeksville's residents housed the refugees, fed them, and helped them navigate out of danger. When the riots ended and the army restored order, many of the refugees returned to Manhattan. But the event demonstrated something essential about what Weeksville had built: it was not merely a community. It was infrastructure for survival in a city that was, intermittently and lethally, hostile to Black life.

Era 3
Absorption and Forgetting · 1880s–1968
5

Weeksville's decline was not violent — it was gradual and geographic. As Brooklyn urbanized through the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the street grid expanded into its rural eastern edges. New streets were laid over old field paths. New buildings replaced farmsteads and wooden houses. The infrastructure of Weeksville — the church, the school, the care homes — was not demolished in a single act of destruction. It was incrementally absorbed: institutions moved, congregations merged, wooden houses were surrounded and then replaced by brick apartment buildings.

The community's legal organization as "Weeksville" also dissolved. As Brooklyn was consolidated into New York City in 1898, the neighborhood names shifted — the area became part of what would be called Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights. The old street names changed. Hunterfly Road — one of the original paths through Weeksville, running at an angle to the new street grid — was largely buried under new construction. The blocks it had once connected were reorganized according to the grid's orthogonal logic, erasing the old community's geography.

Weeksville vs. Seneca Village — the same city, the same era, different fates
Seneca Village, Manhattan
Founded 1825. Also a Black landowning community. Also built on the logic of property = voting rights. Also had churches and a school. In 1857, the city seized the land through eminent domain to build Central Park. All structures demolished. 264 residents displaced. Erased from history for 130 years.
Weeksville, Brooklyn
Founded 1838. Similar logic, similar institutions, similar population. But Brooklyn did not decide to seize it for a public project. The community was absorbed by urbanization rather than demolished by government order. Four wooden houses survived into the twentieth century. The community was lost — not taken.

By the early twentieth century, Weeksville had been forgotten by everyone except a small number of local historians and the descendants of its residents. The neighborhood had become majority Black again — but through the Great Migration and the dynamics of residential segregation, not through the original community's continuity. The original Weeksville and the twentieth-century neighborhood it became were in the same place but had no institutional or communal memory connecting them.

6

The rediscovery of Weeksville began not in an archive but from a small plane over Brooklyn. In May 1968, historian James Hurley — who had been researching the history of free Black communities in pre-Civil War New York — was flying over Crown Heights with pilot Joseph Haynes when he spotted something that didn't fit the urban geometry below him.

The discovery

On Bergen Street, between Rochester and Buffalo Avenues, four old wooden houses sat at a slight diagonal to the surrounding street grid — oriented not to the standard Brooklyn blocks but to something older, something that preceded the grid. Hurley recognized the angle immediately: these houses were oriented to Hunterfly Road, the old path that had run through Weeksville before the street grid buried it. The houses had survived because they were on private lots; they had been missed by the developers who rebuilt everything around them. From the ground, they were invisible — just old houses on a block. From the air, their orientation revealed exactly what they were.

Hurley and his colleagues went to the site. The houses — four wooden structures dating to the mid-nineteenth century, sitting at that telltale angle to the modern street — were still standing. They had been lived in continuously, occupied by renters over the decades as the neighborhood changed around them. The historical research that followed confirmed what the aerial view had suggested: these were the surviving physical remains of Weeksville, the last above-ground evidence of the community James Weeks had founded in 1838.

The discovery sparked immediate preservation efforts. The Society for the Preservation of Weeksville and Bedford-Stuyvesant History was founded by Hurley and his collaborators — including Joan Maynard, who became its executive director and spent two decades raising money to restore the houses and establish a permanent cultural institution. The restoration was slow, chronically underfunded, and dependent on the commitment of community volunteers. But it succeeded.

7

In 2005, the Weeksville Heritage Center opened on Bergen Street in Crown Heights — a permanent museum, cultural center, and educational institution built around the four surviving Hunterfly Road Houses and the history they represent. The restored houses are now among the oldest surviving wooden structures in New York City and the only standing physical evidence of a nineteenth-century free Black community in Brooklyn.

The Heritage Center operates as an active community institution — not only a museum of the past but a site of present-day programming, workshops, exhibitions, and educational curricula for students across New York City. Its work is explicitly framed as a recovery project: bringing back the names, the stories, and the meaning of a community that was erased from the city's official memory for more than a century.

What the Weeksville Heritage Center recovered
  • The four Hunterfly Road Houses — restored to their nineteenth-century appearance, now among NYC's oldest surviving wooden structures
  • The names and life records of Weeksville residents — drawn from census data, deed records, church rolls, and newspaper archives
  • The institutional history of Bethel Tabernacle AME Church, Colored School No. 2, Freedom's Torchlight, and the care homes
  • Susan Smith McKinney Steward's story — whose career and connection to Weeksville had been largely absent from mainstream New York history
  • The 1863 Draft Riots refugee account — documented evidence of Weeksville's role as a refuge during the worst anti-Black violence in New York City history
  • Archaeological remains from excavations on the Hunterfly Road site confirming the community's material history

The name James Weeks is back on the map. In 2019, the New York City Department of Transportation renamed a section of Bergen Street near the Heritage Center as "James Weeks Way." It is a small gesture — a street sign — but it is the city's belated acknowledgment that the name of the man who purchased the founding lots in 1838 belongs on the street he helped create.

Weeksville's story is not, at its core, a story of destruction. It is a story of what Black Americans built when left the means to build — and what it takes, against determined forgetting, to bring that story back.

The Chain of Causation

NY strips Black voting rights, 1821
Property = only path to the vote
James Weeks buys land 1838
Weeksville founded
Church, school, newspaper, hospital built
Parallel city within a city
1863 Draft Riots — hundreds take refuge
Weeksville shelters Black New Yorkers
Brooklyn grid absorbs the community
Lost — not taken
James Hurley spots 4 houses from a plane, 1968
Rediscovery
Weeksville Heritage Center opens, 2005
The name returns to the map