List of American utopian communities


A wide range of utopian intentional communities were founded across US since the 1800s. Several of them are active in the present day.
Harmonites dominated in the early 1800s.
Secular utopian socialism in the US during the 19th century included adherents of Owenism of the 1820s, [List of Fourierism|Fourierist Associations in the United States|Fourierism], Icarianism, and Bellamyism of the Brotherhood of the Cooperative Commonwealth.
As well, several anarchist communities were established in the U.S. These included Home, Washington and the Socialist Community of Modern Times, founded in New York in 1851.

Seventeenth and eighteenth centuries

NameLocationFounderFounding dateEnding dateNotes
Province of Carolina Carolina16701711-1729Chartered as a restoration colony, it was planned as a utopian society with an integrated physical, economic and social design. Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury, with the assistance of his secretary, the philosopher John Locke, drafted the Grand Model for the Province of Carolina, Carolina's constitution, which was influenced by the utopian aspirations of James Harrington. Settlers were promised religious freedom and free land. Unrest led to Cary's rebellion in 1711. Became a royal colony in 1729.
Province of Pennsylvania PennsylvaniaWilliam Penn1681Chartered as a restoration colony. Inspired by the writings of James Harrington. Planned as a utopian society with an integrated physical, economic and social design
Ephrata Cloister AKA Ephrata CommunityLancaster County, PennsylvaniaJohann Conrad Beissel17321934Founded as a monastic religious community. Restructured as a both-gender community in 1814. Branches were established at other locations, of which two are said to still exist today.
Province of Georgia GeorgiaGeneral James Oglethorpe1733Inspired by writings of James Harrington. Oglethorpe planned the colony to be a utopian society with an integrated physical, economic and social design. Liquor and slavery were prohibited. "Agrarian equality" in which land was allocated equally. Acquisition of land through purchase or inheritance was prohibited. The plan was an early step toward the yeoman republic later envisioned by Thomas Jefferson. Prohibitions against liquor, slavery and private land ownership were lifted in 1749 and 1751, fundamentally ending Georgia's utopian experiment.

Nineteenth century

NameLocationFounderFounding dateEnding dateNotes
HarmonyPennsylvaniaGeorge Rapp18051814A Harmonites village. The Harmony Society is a Christian theosophy and pietist society founded in Iptingen, Germany, in 1785.
Harmony, IndianaIndianaGeorge Rapp18141824A Harmonites village. Colonists were formerly living in Harmony, Pennsylvania. Moved out to Old Economy Village. Sold the property to Robert Owen who himself founded a short-lived utopian settlement there.
ZoarOhioJoseph Bimeler18171898Founded by German religious separatists who wanted religious freedom in America. Prosperous by the 1890s when it was one of the three strongest communistic societies in the U.S.
Old Economy VillagePennsylvaniaGeorge Rapp18241906 A Harmonites village. Colonists formerly lived in Harmony and New Harmony.
New HarmonyIndianaRobert Owen18251829Former Harmonite village bought by British reformer Robert Owen. It then became a short-lived Owenite colony. Josiah Warren formed his anarchist beliefs from his experience there.
NashobaTennesseeFrances Wright18251828An abolitionist, free-love community inspired by New Harmony, Indiana.. History covered in 1963 book Nashoba written by Edd Winfield Parks.
United OrderJackson County, Missouri,
Ohio,
Utah
Joseph Smith18321874Based on the Law of Consecration, a revelation from Joseph Smith who was the founder of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and Mormonism
New Philadelphia ColonyPennsylvaniaBernhard Müller18321833A libertarian socialist community
Oberlin ColonyOhioJohn J. Shipherd and 8 immigrant families18331843Community based on Communal ownership of property
Community of United Christians at Berea, OhioBerea, Ohioeducator John Baldwin and Methodist circuit preachers James Gilruth and Henry Olcott Sheldon18361837Intended to be an ideal Christian community. The founders pooled their land and hoped to create a Utopian "Community of United Christians." Members of the Community vowed to avoid all luxuries and temptations that would prevent them from achieving the Methodist ideal of "sanctification," or perfect love of God. Baldwin later helped found Baldwin Wallace College.
Brook Farm MassachusettsGeorge Ripley
Sophia Ripley
18411846A Transcendent community. Transcendentalism is based on belief in the inherent goodness of people and nature and on benefits of being truly "self-reliant". Under influence of Albert Brisbane, it adopted Fourierist principles in 1844.
North American PhalanxNew JerseyCharles Sears18411856A Fourier Society community. The Fourier Society is based on the ideas of French philosopher Charles Fourier. Longest-lasting of the 30 or so Fourierist communities in the U.S.
Northampton Association of Education and Industry Florence, Northampton, MassachusettsSamuel Hill18421846Abolitionist community. Owned some 500 acres, a silk factory, and a sawmill. Workers did not get a wage but a profit share.
Hopedale CommunityMassachusettsAdin Ballou18421868A Fourierist community based on "Practical Christianity", which included ideas such as temperance, abolitionism, Women's rights, spiritualism and education.
FruitlandsMassachusettsAmos Alcott18431844A Transcendent community.
Skaneateles CommunityNew YorkSociety for Universal Inquiry18431846A Society for Universal Inquiry and Reform community, based on Fourierist principles at least at first.
Sodus Bay PhalanxNew YorkSodus Bay Fourierists18441846A Fourierist community.
Wisconsin PhalanxWisconsinAlbert Brisbane18441850A Fourierist community. One of the longest-lived phalanxes of the 1840s Fourierist boom in the U.S.
Clermont PhalanxOhioFollowers of Charles Fourier18441845A Fourierist community. replaced by Spiritualist community. later became anarchist society.
Prairie Home Community OhioJohn O. Wattles
Valentine Nicholson
18441845A Society for Universal Inquiry and Reform community. Ascribed to Fourierist principles.
Alphadelphia AssociationKalamazoo County, MichiganReverend Richard Thornton, Reverend James Billings, Dr. H. R. Schetterly18441848Fourierist community. Published commune's newspaper, The Alphadelphia Tocsin
Fruit HillsOhioOrson S. Murray18451852A community based on Owenism and anarchism. Maintained close contact with the Kristeen and Grand Prairie Communities.
Kristeen CommunityIndianaCharles Mowland18451847Founded by Charles Mowland and others who had previously been associated with the Prairie Home Community. A Society for Universal Inquiry and Reform community.
Bishop Hill ColonyIllinoisEric Jansson18461862A Swedish Pietist religious commune.
Spring Farm ColonyWisconsinSix Fourierist families18461848A Fourierist community.
UtopiaOhioJosiah Warren18471876Decentralized community based on equitable commerce or mutualism. replaced a Spiritualist community that in turn had replaced a Fourierist community.
Oneida CommunityNew YorkJohn H. Noyes18481880A religious Utopian socialist community. Oneida Community practices included Bible communism, Complex Marriage, Free love, Stirpiculture, Male Continence, Mutual Criticism and Ascending Fellowship. Other Noyesian communities were founded in Wallingford, Connecticut; Newark, New Jersey; Putney and Cambridge, Vermont.
Icarians Nauvoo, Icaria, etc.Texas; Nauvoo, Illinois; Corning, Iowa; Cheltenham, Missouri; Cloverdale, CaliforniaÉtienne Cabet18481898Egalitarian communities based on the French utopian movement founded by Cabet, after his followers emigrated to the US.
Amana ColoniesAmana (CDP), IowaCommunity of True Inspiration1850s1932The Amana villages were built one hour apart when traveling by ox cart. Each village had a church, a farm, multi-family residences, workshops and communal kitchens. Operated woolen and flour mills. Prosperous by the 1890s when it was one of the three strongest communistic societies in the U.S. Its communal aspects narrowed in 1932, but its extensive holdings of farm and woodland never divided. Gave rise to the Amana Corporation, a maker of kitchen appliances.
Modern TimesBrentwood, New YorkJosiah Warren and Stephen Pearl Andrews18511864Founded upon individual sovereignty, equitable commerce and mutualism.
Raritan Bay UnionNew JerseyMarcus Spring
Rebecca Buffum
18531858A Fourierist community.
Aurora ColonyOregonWilliam Keil18531883Christian utopian community
Free Lovers at Davis HouseBerlin Heights, Erie County, OhioFrancis Barry18541858A community based on Free love and spiritualism.
Reunion ColonyDallas, TexasVictor P. Considerant18551869A Fourierist community.
Octagon CityKansasHenry S. Clubb
Charles DeWolfe
John McLaurin
18561857Originally built as a vegetarian colony north of the present-day site of Chanute, Kansas near Vegetarian Creek, a tributary of the Neosho River
Workingmen's Co-operative Colony Kansasfollowers of James Bronterre O'Brien18691874A community based on the political reform philosophy of Chartist James Bronterre O'Brien.
SilkvilleKansasErnest de Boissière18691892Sericulture farm in Kansas that was founded on Fourierist principles. Later shifted away from Fourierism before its collapse.
Union Colony ColoradoNathan Meeker1870?A agricultural temperance community bankrolled by Horace Greeley. Initiated by Nathan Meeker with an article in The New York Tribune in Nov 1869. Meeker selected 800 people from letters submitted and started the colony in May 1870. Still a thriving community but gradually moved away from the ideas of utopia and temperance.
Progressive Colony, near Cedar ValeKansasWilliam Frey18711879A Russian communist colony with a mixture of atheism and liberal Christianity. Fell apart due to the domineering and sometimes cruel manner of its founder.
Zion ValleyKansasWilliam Bickerton18751879Bickertonite Mormon religious colony that secularized in 1879 to become the town of St. John, Kansas.
Danish Socialist ColonyKansasLouis Pio18771877A utopian socialist community near Hays
EsperanzaKansasAlcander Longley18771879A utopian communist community founded by settlers from Missouri.
RugbyTennesseeThomas Hughes ; London and Boston Boards of Aid to Land Ownership18801887A community based on Christian socialism. “Associations” operated general store and other businesses. A tomato cannery and Rugby Pottery Company operated as joint-stock enterprise but failed financially. Hughes left scene in 1887, $250,000 poorer.
Am OlamOregon and various locations across the USMania Bakl and Moses Herder1881Mostly disbanded by the 1890sJewish social movement that sought to create agricultural communities in America.
Shalam ColonyNew MexicoJohn B. Newbrough
Andrew Howland
18841901A community in which members would live peaceful, vegetarian lifestyles, and where orphaned urban children were to be raised.
Kaweah ColonySierra Nevada range, California18861892Inspired by the scientific socialism of Laurence Gronlund and Edward Bellamy. Livelihood based on logging of giant sequoia trees. This ended with creation of the Sequoia National Park. "Squatter's Cabin" is last surviving structure of the colony.
Ruskin ColonyDickson County, TennesseeJulius Wayland18941899Attempt to create a co-operative communal movement. Principles of the community were inspired by Edward Bellamy's utopian novel, Looking Backward. Communal dining hall and laundry, housing, medical care, education, equality, and job security. success hampered by no clear business plan. Eventually some members forced sale of land and disbandment.
Glennis Cooperative Industrial Colonynear Clear Lake, Puget Sound, Washington StateOliver Verity, George Allen and Frank Odell18941895Inspired by Bellamy's book, Looking Backward, 2000-1887. Established with the goal “own and operate manufactories, to acquire land, to build houses for its employees; to insure the employees against want, or the fear of want; and to maintain harmonious social relationships on the basis of cooperation.” started as farm, suffered agricultural problems and broke up. Part of the dissension was apparently from the persuasive anarchist teaching done by Tacoma tailor Andrew Klemencic. Glennis's founders tried again at the Home Colony, Key Peninsula.
AltruriaCaliforniaEdward Byron Payne18941896Christian socialist colony inspired by William Dean Howells' 1884 novel A Traveler from Altruria.
Fairhope Single Tax Corporation, Fairhope, ALAlabamaFairhope Industrial Association1894currently activeFairhope was first settled in 1894 by Georgists. The Single tax experiment was incorporated as the Fairhope Single Tax Corporation under Alabama law in 1904. The municipality of Fairhope was incorporated in 1908.
Koreshan UnityEstero, FloridaCyrus Teed1894Last new member admitted in 1940 Believed in Teed as a Messiah named Koresh, entered heavy decline after Teed's death in 1908.
HarmonyWashingtonCommunity conversion18951899The existing community of Harmony attempted to become an ideal settlement based on "unselfish principles of co-operation and brotherly love" under its articles of incorporation. Settlers were required to accept socialism and be Caucasian of good moral character. Lacking new members outside of the county, the attempt was discontinued in 1899.
Home ColonyWashingtonGeorge H. Allen
Oliver A. Verity
B. F. O'Dell
18951919An intentional community based on anarchist philosophy
NuclaColoradoColorado Cooperative Company1896Decommmunalized, city remains extantEstablished following the Panic of 1893. Originally called Piñon.
Equality ColonySkagit County, WashingtonBrotherhood of the Cooperative Commonwealth18971907Principles of the community were inspired by Edward Bellamy's utopian novel, Looking Backward and its sequel novel Equality. In 1905 colony was divided by arrival of Alexander Horr and other adherents of Theodor Hertzka’s "Freeland" concept. Wave of arsons effectively ended the social experiment.
Bellamy Cooperative ColonyLincoln County, Oregon Founded by Norwegian settlers1897unknownPrinciples of the community were inspired by Edward Bellamy's utopian novel, Looking Backward and its sequel novel Equality.
FreedomBourbon County, KansasG. B. De Bernardi18971905The colony's economy was based on a Labor Exchange, designed to eliminate poverty and want, through the creation of a “soft” currency that served as legal tender. At the colony's warehouse, workers exchanged goods for “labor checks” redeemable for items in the warehouse.

Twentieth century

NameLocationFounderFounding dateEnding dateNotes
Arden VillageDelawareFrank Stephens
William Lightfoot Price
1900currently activeAn art colony founded as a Georgist single-tax art community. Two nearby centres also ascribed to Georgist principles - Ardentown, founded in 1922, and Ardencroft, founded in 1950.
Zion, IllinoisIllinoisJohn Alexander Dowie19001907A Utopian Christian religious community, reorganized following fraud allegations and founder's death into modern city.
Equality ColonyWashingtonNorman W. Lermond
Ed Pelton
19001907One of the many U.S. socialist intentional communities inspired by Edward Bellamy's utopian novel, Looking Backward. These communities were often called Nationalist Clubs.
Freeland AssociationWashingtonDissident members of the Equality Colony19001906A socialist commune. The first settlers dissident members of the nearby Equality Colony. While the Freeland Association dissolved in 1906 the census-designated place (CDP) of Freeland, Washington continues to exist.
Helicon Home ColonyNew JerseyUpton Sinclair 19071908A "co-operative home". A "home colony," in which to "secure the advantage of the application of machinery to domestic processes, and incidentally to solve the problem of the management of servants."
PostPost, TexasC.W. Post1907currently active
Free AcresNew JerseyBolton Hall1910currently activeGeorgist community
Llano del RioCaliforniaJob Harriman19141918Project designed by architect and planner Alice Constance Austin with strong emphasis on shared domestic work
New LlanoLouisianaJob Harriman19171937Founded by Job Harriman & other members of the California Llano del Rio colony who relocated to Louisiana.
Holy CityCaliforniaWilliam E. Riker19191959Founded by a sect that promoted celibacy, temperance and a segregationist interpretation of Christianity.
Jersey HomesteadsRoosevelt, New JerseyPresident Franklin D. Roosevelt, Benjamin Brown19361939socialist Jewish farming community formed as part of F.D.R.'s New Deal. Its history is presented in a 1983 documentary Roosevelt, New Jersey: Visions of Utopia
Druid HeightsCaliforniaElsa Gidlow
Isabel Quallo
Roger Somers
19541987Bohemian and artistic community. A meeting place used by three U.S. countercultural movements -- the Beat Generation of the 1950s, the hippie movement of the 1960s, and the women's movement of the 1970s.
Kerista CommuneNew York
San Francisco
John Peltz "Bro Jud" Presmont1956
1971
1991Polyamorous new religious movement with communal ownership and a polyfidelitous nightly sleeping schedule.
Padanaram SettlementIndianaDaniel Wright1966largely privatized soon after the death of the founder in 2001 Christian fundamentalist commune in rural Indiana
Twin OaksVirginiaKat Kinkade, others1967currently activeOriginally a behaviourist utopian society based on the novel Walden Two; eventually becoming an egalitarian commune.
The FarmLewis County, TennesseeStephen Gaskin1971currently active Buddhist-inspired Hippie vegetarian community. De-collectivized in 1983.
East Wind CommunityOzark County, MissouriKat Kinkade1973currently activeA secular and democratic community in which members hold all communities assets in common.
Uranian Phalanstery and the associated First New York Gnostic Lyceum TempleLower East Side of Manhattan, New YorkRichard Oviet Tyler and Dorothea Baer1974currently activefollows the "Practice of the Eightfold Way on the Path" and exercise "Creativity in Practice of the Path". Fourierist.
Acorn Community FarmVirginiaIra Wallace1993currently activeegalitarian commune; branched off of Twin Oaks.