It may come as something of a surprise that Iowa, of all
states, has a fairly rich Negro league history.
The Algona Brownies were an important professional team in the early
1900s. In 1912 the original All-Nations Club was founded in Des Moines. The Chicago Union Giants barnstormed across
Iowa for decades, and in 1917 an offshoot of that team, Gilkerson’s Union
Giants, got its start as the Lost Island Giants. And then there were the Buxton Wonders.
Buxton was a coal-mining town that sprang up in Monroe
County around mines owned by the Consolidation Coal Company—the largest coal mines
west of the Mississippi at that time. It
was a company town, named after the company president, Ben Buxton, and
populated by a racially diverse group of miners largely drawn from the coal
country of Virginia and West Virginia, but also including Swedish and
Australian immigrants. African Americans
formed the single biggest ethnic group, including a large number of miners but
also lawyers, entrepreneurs, doctors, and other professionals.
Buxton, Iowa, in the early 1900s. (Wayne I. Anderson, Iowa’s Geological Past:
Three Billion Years of Change, p. 255.)
The Buxton Wonders were founded around 1901, and quickly
became one of the town’s main attractions.
Like the town itself, the Wonders peaked around 1909 and 1910, in the
former year playing a number of games against the best black teams in the
Midwest, including the Leland Giants, St. Paul Gophers, and Kansas City
(Kansas) Giants. They managed to win only two games against these clubs while losing six and tying one. But one of their
wins, as well as the tie, came against the mighty Leland Giants (unfortunately
box scores haven’t been recovered yet).
Although Buxton had several newspapers, apparently nothing from 1909
survives (or has been usefully archived yet).
A number of 1909 Wonders players—Lefty Pangburn, Mule
Armstrong, Walter Taylor, Dee Williams—moved on to other major teams, Taylor
switching to Kansas City after the Wonders travelled there in June, Williams
following him in September. The Wonders’
captain was George Neal, who also played for the Chicago Giants and the Leland
Giants.

Buxton Wonders, 1911.
George Neal is standing, far right.
Here’s a fascinating article about the Buxton Wonders from the
Le Mars, Iowa, paper in 1977, featuring interviews with former Buxton
residents:



(Le Mars Daily Sentinel, November 10, 1977, p. 5)
The Wonders continued, even as the black proportion of
Buxton’s population began to decline, and a few white players joined the
team. But they never recovered the
prominence they’d attained in 1909. By the early 1920s coal production in Iowa began to decline,
and the mines were exhausted or shut down. George Neal had long since returned to his
hometown of Springfield, Illinois, where he sometimes managed the Union Giants.

(Daily Illinois State Register, April 4, 1922, p. 10.)
In 1923 Buxton’s post office was closed, and within a few
years nobody was left in Buxton at all.
In the 1980s a major archeological study of the town was conducted, and
much work was done to interview former inhabitants and to reconstruct the
town’s history, including the story of the Buxton Wonders. Now Buxton itself is just a ghost town,
little more than some sparse ruins and an historical marker.

(Le Mars Semi-Weekly Sentinel, December 11, 1923, p. 7)
For more on Buxton, see:
Iowa Pathways: The Great Buxton
Blackpast.org: Buxton, Iowa (1895-1927)
African American Museum of Iowa: No Roads Lead to Buxton
Coal Mining in Iowa
Memories of Minnie London, former Buxton resident
Buxton: A Black Utopia in the Heartland
Recent Comments