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List of Fourierist Associations in the United States

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Harbinger (formerlyThe Phalanx), was the primary organ of the Fourierist movement in the United States.

This is alist of Fourierist Associations in the United States which emerged during a short-lived popularboom during the first half of the 1840s. Between 1843 and 1845 more than 30 such "associations" – known to their adherents as "phalanxes" – were established in the United States, all of which met with economic failure and rapid disestablishment within one or a comparatively few years.

TheFourierist movement of the 1840s was one of the four primary branches ofsecularutopian socialism in the United States during the 19th century, succeedingOwenism (1825–27) while antedatingIcarianism (1848–98) andBellamyism (1889–96).

Background

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Thecommunitarian ideas ofCharles Fourier (1772–1837) were popularized in the United States in an 1840 book by the AmericanAlbert Brisbane as well as through a column by Brisbane in the pages ofHorace Greeley'sNew York Tribune in 1842 and 1843.

The Fourierist movement followed an earlier attempt to remake society through exemplary socialist communities attempted on American soil byRobert Owen from 1825 until 1827.John Humphrey Noyes, a historian of these movements in addition to being a communal leader in his own right, noted the difference in the following way:

The main idea on which Owen and Fourier worked was the same. Both proposed to reconstruct society by gathering large numbers into unitary dwellings. Owen had as clear sense of the compound economies of Association as Fourier had, and discoursed as eloquently, if not as scientifically on the beauties and blessings of combined industry. ... The difference in their methods is this: Owen's plan was based onCommunism [communalism]; Fourier's plan was based on theJoint-stock principle.[1]

List

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NameLocationLaunchedTerminatedComments
Alphadelphia AssociationKalamazoo County, MI18441848
Bloomfield AssociationOntario County, NY18441846
Brook Farm Institute of Agriculture and EducationWest Roxbury, MA18411847UnitarianTranscendentalist until 1844, Fourierist thereafter.
Bureau County PhalanxBureau County, IL18431843
Clarkson Industrial AssociationMonroe County, NY18441844Also known as the “Western New York Industrial Association.”
Clermont PhalanxUtopia, OH18441846Established in aftermath of Sept. 1843 Pittsburgh "Western Fourier Convention."[2]
Columbia PhalanxMuskingum County, OH18441845?
Goose Pond CommunityPike County, PA18441844Formerly theSocial Reform Unity
Hopedale CommunityHopedale, MA1843???Mentioned in Frederic Heath (ed.),Social Democracy Red Book [1900], pg. 15.
Integral PhalanxMiddletown, OH18451845Established in aftermath of Sept. 1843 Pittsburgh "Western Fourier Convention."[2] Residents later moved to Illinois and established theSangamon Phalanx.
Iowa Pioneer PhalanxMahaska County, IA18431845Founded by members of theJefferson County Industrial Association.
Jefferson County Industrial AssociationWatertown, NY18431844
LaGrange PhalanxLaGrange County, IN18431847described in Ch. 8 & 9 ofThe Salt and the Savor, Howard W. Troyer, 1950.
Le Raysville PhalanxBradford County, PA18441844
McKean County AssociationMcKean County, PA18431844Also known as “Teutonia.”
Marlboro AssociationStark County, OH18411845
Moorehouse UnionHamilton County, NY18431844Straddled and crossed county line withHerkimer County.
North American PhalanxPhalanx, NJ18431856Last surviving Fourierist Association from the 1840s boom.
Northampton AssociationFlorence, MA18421846
Ohio PhalanxBellaire, OH18441845Established in aftermath of Sept. 1843 Pittsburgh "Western Fourier Convention."[2]
One-Mentian CommunityMonroe County, PA18431844
Ontario PhalanxMonroe County, NY1844???
Prairie Home CommunityLogan County, OH1843???Also known as "Grand Prairie Community."
Raritan Bay UnionPerth Amboy, NJ18531860
La RéunionDallas, TX18551857
Sangamon PhalanxSangamon County, IL18451848Continuation of theIntegral Phalanx
SilkvilleWilliamsburg, KS18691892Sericulture farm in Kansas that was founded on Fourierian principles. Later shifted away from Fourierism before its collapse.
Skaneateles CommunitySkaneateles, New York18431846
Social Reform UnityPike County, PA18421843Later theGoose Pond Community
Sodus Bay PhalanxWayne County, NY18441844
Spring Farm AssociationSheboygan County, WI18461848
Sylvania AssociationGreeley, Pennsylvania18421845Horace Greeley was Treasurer of this phalanx.[3]Link to Sylvania Association webpage.
Trumbull PhalanxPhalanx, OH18441847Established in aftermath of Sept. 1843 Pittsburgh "Western Fourier Convention."[2]
Utilitarian AssociationWaukesha County, WI18441844
Wisconsin PhalanxCeresco, WI (now Ripon)18441850One of the longest-lived phalanxes of the 1840s boom.
Zanesfield PhalanxLogan County, OH1843???Also known as "Upper Domain" or "Highland Home." Small offshoot of Prairie Home Community, visited by MacDonald in August 1843.[4]
Source: William Alfred Hinds,American Communities. Second edition. Chicago, IL: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1908; pg. 250. (unless otherwise noted)

See also

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Footnotes

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  1. ^John Humphrey Noyes,History of American Socialisms. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott & Co., 1870; pp. 193-194.
  2. ^abcdCarl J. Guarneri, The Utopian Alternative: Fourierism in Nineteenth-Century America. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1991; pg. 230.
  3. ^Noyes,History of American Socialisms, pg. 208.
  4. ^Noyes, History of American Socialisms, pp. 318-320.

Further reading

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  • T.D. Seymour Bassett, "The Secular Utopian Socialists," in Donald Drew Egbert and Stow Persons (eds.),Socialism and American Life: Volume 1. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1952; pp. 153–211.
  • Herman J. Belz,The North American Phalanx: An Experiment in Fourierist Socialism, 1843-1855. PhD dissertation. Princeton University, 1959.
  • Herman Belz, "The North American Phalanx: An Experiment in Socialism,"Proceedings of the New Jersey Historical Society, vol. 81 (Oct. 1963), pp. 215–247.
  • Carl J. Guarneri,The Utopian Alternative: Fourierism in Nineteenth-Century America. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1991.
  • Morris Hillquit,History of Socialism in the United States. [1903] Revised Fifth Edition. New York: Funk and Wagnalls, 1910.
  • William Alfred Hinds,American Communities and Co-operative Colonies, Second Edition. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1908.
  • John Humphrey Noyes,History of American Socialisms. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott & Co., 1880.
  • Samuel M. Pedrick,"Sketch of the Wisconsin Phalanx,"Proceedings of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin at its 50th Annual Meeting held Dec. 11, 1902. Madison, WI: Wisconsin Historical Society, 1903; pp. 190–226.
  • Charles Sears,The North American Phalanx: An Historical and Descriptive Sketch. Prescott, WI: John M. Pryse, 1886.
  • Edward K. Spann,Brotherly Tomorrows: Movements for a Cooperative Society in America, 1820-1920. New York: Columbia University Press, 1988.
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