The Chuck ToddCast

Interview only w/ Caleb Gayle - Black Moses: The Failed Dream Of Building A “Black State” In Oklahoma

Sep 22, 2025
Caleb Gayle, a journalist and historian from Oklahoma, dives into the untold story of Edward McCabe, dubbed 'Black Moses,' who dreamed of establishing a 'Black state' in Oklahoma. He discusses McCabe's political maneuvering and recruitment of Black settlers during Reconstruction, alongside the challenges posed by Jim Crow laws. Gayle sheds light on the tensions between northern Black elites and freed southern Blacks, and the impact of Oklahoma's distorted history. He connects these themes to today's political climate and envisions future narratives on race and ambition.
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INSIGHT

Race Undermined Political Possibility

  • National Republican interest made McCabe's plan plausible, but racial bias and the fact he was Black undermined elite support and fueled attacks.
  • McCabe's provocative rhetoric about a Black-led state intensified opposition and fears of 'Negro supremacy.'
INSIGHT

Tribes Were Political Actors, Not Monoliths

  • Indigenous nations acted as autonomous political actors with varied responses to Black migration; they were not monolithic allies.
  • Tribal constitutions, internal politics, and concerns about power shaped cross-community dynamics.
INSIGHT

Jim Crow Was Enacted Early In Oklahoma

  • Oklahoma's first laws included Jim Crow measures, signaling the territory's rapid drift into Southern-style racial exclusion.
  • That legal shift and rising white elite power persuaded McCabe the Black-state project had failed.
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