How a libertarian utopia was ended by bears and other political emigration experiments

A town free of government
2020 book
Free Town Project
Reduced city hall budget
Several new issues
A trash problem
Highly stimulated bears
Bear attacks
Emigration as a tool for control
Mainzer Adelsverein
Jamestown Seventy
A response to dissatisfaction
Other attempts
Loving County, Texas
Wanted by Loving County police
Ongoing projects
A town free of government

In 2004, a group of libertarians decided to try building a free-town utopia by taking over Grafton, New Hampshire. The project sought to reduce government control over almost every aspect of citizen life.

2020 book

The attempt died in 2016, and in 2020, local journalist Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling described it in a book. According to Hongoltz-Hetling, a few hundred libertarians moved into the town, with around 1,000 residents.

Free Town Project

Hongoltz-Hetling told Vox that the project was an attempt by the American Libertarian Movement to show the world how their no-government principles worked in real life.

Reduced city hall budget

When they arrived, they started advocating to cut government funding. They convinced some previous residents to reduce police, road and fire services, and the public library.

Image: Cristina Gottardi / Unsplash

Several new issues

A few years went by, and the problems from the lack of services started to show: neighbor complaints went up, as well as the number of sex offenders and the legal costs for the town hall that had to fight Libertarian suits. The city had its first murders.

A trash problem

They also had a trash problem. Since many lived in tents, containers, or trailers near the woods, and there were no clear rules on how to dispose of trash, bears started to take notice of their waste.

Highly stimulated bears

Black bears are not usually violent. However, they started to understand that where humans lived, there was food, and they became increasingly comfortable around people to the point of danger.

Bear attacks

Hongoltz-Hetling explained that every person chose to deal differently with the bears, contributing to the problem: some shot them, others placed traps, and others fed them. The issue caused the first bear attack in the community in 100 years.

Emigration as a tool for control

Despite the Free Town Project being one of the most famous examples, political emigration experiments (flooding a town, state, or country with people who share ideals to change that place) are not new.

Mainzer Adelsverein

The Mainzer Adelsverein is one example of how old that practice is. In 1846, a group of German noblemen organized a colonizer attempt to create a new Germany through controlled migration to what was the Republic of Texas back then. The war between the US and Mexico frustrated their plans.

Image: Jamie Morrison / Unsplash

Jamestown Seventy

In 1970, a Yale law professor proposed something similar in an essay titled  "The Jamestown Seventy," after the first British settlers. He evoked the importance of the American frontier in the country's foundation and the "local control" logic of federalism.

A response to dissatisfaction

He claimed that the dissatisfaction experienced by young people, or the "Woodstock generation" could be solved by massive migration to a single state to shape it as they wish.

Other attempts

That essay inspired the Free State Project (the umbrella for Grafton's initiative), seeking to move enough libertarians to New Hampshire to change the state's politics and turn it into a libertarian paradise.

Loving County, Texas

The same group had tried something similar in Texas a year after the Grafton project started. They chose Loving County because it is one of the country's least populated, making it easier to take over.

Wanted by Loving County police

They claimed to have bought land and registered to vote there. They didn't expect a negative response from the county's sheriff, who charged them with a misdemeanor when he discovered they had no deed.

Ongoing projects

But libertarians are not the only ones to use migration as a tool of control: the American Redoubt movement proposed conservative Christians move to Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, and some parts of Washington and Oregon to build a haven for their ideas.

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