In 1943, Julian and Mary Steele purchased a farm in
West Newbury, Massachusetts, a predominately rural
North Shore town within commuting distance of Steele's work in Boston. They moved to that town when their daughter, born in 1944, was a baby. Steele, who established a dairy herd for his working farm, said that the countryside held appeal as a good place to have a family. He also stated,"In West Newbury a man can be an avid admirer of Senator
Joe McCarthy and an equally avid advocate of racial and religious tolerance." In March 1952, Julian Steele, the only black voter among some 1,500 residents, was elected West Newbury's
town meeting moderator. He was the first black town moderator in Massachusetts. Townspeople credited him with "elevating the cultural life of the community." Steele was a founder and the moderator of West Newbury's "wide-awake Town Hall Forum," a weekly lecture series Steele was instrumental in the decision of renowned African-American tenor
Roland Hayes to purchase a summer home in West Newbury on Crane Neck Street, just up from the Steele farm. Hayes, in turn, performed at local events including a charity concert in West Newbury town hall. For at least a decade, Steele was Massachusetts' only black town moderator. In the
direct democracy of
New England town meeting, the
moderator serves to supervise, guide, and referee townspeople's debate leading to votes determining the course of municipal budgets and agendas for the coming year. At the time of Steele's election, local writer
Margaret Coit described town meeting as West Newbury's "favorite indoor sport," where free speech was the rule and "controversy was cherished for its own sake." Steele served as West Newbury's moderator until his death. == Career as a state and federal official ==