Fight over Black land loss comes to one grandmother’s front doorthedigitalchaps

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Josephine Wright’s story is a story of the South Carolina Lowcountry. Once a center of Black land ownership in the United States, the region has seen much of that ownership disappear due to development and historical discrimination. Ms. Wright is determined that the trend stop at her property line. She says she’s not moving, however much a developer might like her land.

But her story is also a story of America writ large, where property has always been power, and has flowed to the powerful. From white communities in Appalachia to Native communities in the West, marginalized groups have been systematically dispossessed of property for centuries. Still, courts and local governments are starting to fight back.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Property has always been a primary path to wealth, with Black Americans and other marginalized communities struggling to fend off forces that would take theirs. But there are signs of a shift, and one woman’s case has caught national attention.

New laws are making it harder for predatory land prospectors to strike low-ball deals with distant heirs. And here in South Carolina, the county introduced heritage zoning to protect people who have lived on the land for generations, like Ms. Wright.

“This isn’t just about money, but … who we are,” says one of her granddaughters, Tracey Love Graves. “The struggle isn’t isolated to history or some remote island. In fact, where isn’t this happening?”

For Tracey Love Graves, the childhood memory has the gauze of a fairytale: crossing the causeway at night, a turn down a gravel road, massive oak branches reaching across the car like claws in the moonlight.

Ms. Love Graves, a film actress, arches her arms and fingers into a canopy as she tells the story. Trepidation, she says, turned to relief when the car slipped into the driveway of the island homestead of Josephine Wright, her grandmother.

That formative sense of shelter runs strong for Ms. Love Graves, the youngest of Ms. Wright’s 40 grandchildren. Today, however, the oaks along the road have long been felled along with much of the maritime forest in which she played as a child. The threat now, she says, is no longer in her imagination. It is a developer suing Ms. Wright, who is now in her 90s, in a bid, the family believes, to force a sale to complete a large subdivision of high-end homes.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Property has always been a primary path to wealth, with Black Americans and other marginalized communities struggling to fend off forces that would take theirs. But there are signs of a shift, and one woman’s case has caught national attention.

But Ms. Wright has fought back. She has built a coalition that includes the hip-hop legend Snoop Dogg and Atlanta film tycoon Tyler Perry, who has said Ms. Wright’s determination reminds him of his own grandmother. Recently, he even vowed to build her a new home. Ms. Love Graves calls her grandmother “a gentle force, always a presence.”

Ms. Wright’s story has resonated because “this isn’t just about money, but … who we are,” says Ms. Love Graves in an interview in her grandmother’s front yard. “The struggle isn’t isolated to history or some remote island. In fact, where isn’t this happening?”

Black land loss

Property has always been a vital way for Americans to accrue wealth, and since Reconstruction, Black landowners have been systematically dispossessed of theirs. In 1910, Black farmers owned some 16 million acres, according to an American Bar Association study. Now, they own only 10% of that land. 

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