Not really the weekend, but since I was in the simulator Saturday and Sunday I’m keeping the thread going LOL.
58*F and no wind Tuesday morning at 52F.
No hurry flight around the local area.
No autopilot. No ATC. Just counting deer, turkeys and feral pigs from a chair in the sky.
Some pics and a video of the track below.
- Lefts and rights enjoying the morning sun.
- Turn around the Icarian Colony of 1848 (more below).
- Around the N side of KDTO’s class D.
- Checked out the condition of a friend’s grass runway (wet).
- Along the dam of Lake Ray Roberts (the pic).
- Turn south down Lake Lewisville and Lakeview airport. Viz was nice. You could see the centerline of DFW’s 18R from 10 n.m. away.
- Under DFW’s 2000’ shelf of class B and Lake Grapevine.
- Circled ‘the beach’…..underwater due to recent rains
- Back over the top to land 35.
- Socialize for a bit with the usual suspects. Back home to get on the keyboard.
.8 logged and mental gyros re-aligned. Urge to move to Montana and be a dental floss tycoon pushed back down in a hole. ;^)
v/r,dr
The Icarian Colony in Denton County, Texas (1848)
Name: Officially called “Icaria” or “Icarian Community” (sometimes referred to as the “Advance Guard” or “Texas Icarians”)
Exact location
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About 4–5 miles north of present-day Justin, Texas
Roughly 10–12 miles south of Rhome
Near the modern intersection of FM 156 and County Road 1017 (formerly part of the old Peters Colony land grants)
On the east bank of Oliver Creek, in the rich blackland prairie just west of the Cross Timbers
Key facts
Founded: February 1848
Abandoned: July–August 1848 (only ~6 months)
Size: ~69–75 French settlers (men, women, and a few children), mostly artisans and workers from Paris and surrounding areas
Leader: Étienne Cabet (remained in France; sent an “advance guard” to prepare land for thousands more)
Land: Approximately 1,200–3,000 acres (accounts vary) purchased through agents in the Peters Colony
What they planned
To create the first outpost of Cabet’s utopian communist society based on his novel Voyage en Icarie (1840). All property was communal, work was shared equally, meals were taken together, and everyone was to wear identical simple clothing. The Texas site was meant to be temporary until the main body arrived from Nauvoo, Illinois.
Why it failed so quickly
Malaria and dysentery epidemics (several died, including the colony’s doctor)
Severe spring/summer flooding of Oliver Creek that destroyed crops and gardens
Lack of timber on the open prairie (they had to haul wood from miles away)
Extreme heat and isolation
Disagreements over leadership and Cabet’s strict rules
Hostile or indifferent local Anglo settlers (some theft of livestock reported)
End of the colony
By midsummer 1848 the survivors voted to abandon the site. Most traveled back up the Trinity River, then overland to rejoin Cabet’s larger group in Nauvoo, Illinois. A few stayed in Texas (one family reportedly settled near Dallas).
What remains today
Nothing physical. The land is private ranch/farmland. There is no marker or sign. The Denton County Historical Commission and local historians know the approximate spot, but it is not open to the public.
Sources for deeper reading
Texas State Historical Association Handbook article: “Icarians”
The Icarian Community in Texas by Emile Vallet (one of the survivors)
Denton County historical journals (available at the Denton Public Library or Emily Fowler Central Library archives)
So yes, there really was a tiny French communist utopia attempted right there between Justin and Rhome… and it lasted less time than a modern Netflix subscription.