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California beach returned to Black owners’ family in landmark move

Los Angeles County Officials have returned the deed of Manhattan Beach to the property owners’ great-grandson almost 100 years after it was stolen in a racially motivated seizure.

Bruce’s Beach in California – known to most people today as Manhattan Beach – has a history that most people who visit it today know little about.

The beachfront property was owned by an African American couple, Charles and Willa Bruce, who purchased it in 1912 for $1,225. For over a decade, the Bruce family ran a lodge, café, and dance hall on the property.

Black Americans living through the segregation era would venture there to safely relax along the coastline, enjoying the sea and sun. Soon after, numerous Black families bought or built their own houses in the area, but it didn’t take long for the success of the community to fill the local white population with resentment.

The property was regularly subjected to harassment and scare-tactics by local Ku Klux Klan members. Tires were slashed, fires were set, and fake ‘10-minute parking’ or ‘no trespassing’ signs were put up around the property to deter Black visitors from visiting – but they failed.

In 1924, city officials seized more than 20 properties in and around Bruce’s Beach, stating the urgent need for a public park. The Bruce family’s beach resort was forced to close and demolished. Citing racial prejudice, the family sued for $120,000 in compensation.

After years of back and forth, The Bruce’s received just $14,500. Like many others in the area, they had no choice but to move inland and abandon their business, working for other companies as chefs for the rest of their lives. They lost the fortune and social ties they had spent a decade building.

In line with the Black Lives Matter movement, a new generation of campaigners and local legislators have called for justice for the Black community, saying the seizure of properties like Bruce’s Beach were racially motivated.

Turnbull Sanders, who has worked for 20 years in land-use law, told the LA times: ‘It is mind boggling to think about how many opportunities are missed when the government intercedes to prevent certain people from building wealth.’

In fact, three decades passed without the so-called plans for a park materialising in place of Bruce’s Beach. By the 1950s, city officials became worried that previous residents would make a move to reclaim their land, so City Park was finally opened and later renamed.

It wasn’t until a recent vote by City Council members that a commemorative sign acknowledging the history of the Bruce family was placed on the property. Today, the area is home to 35,500 people, of which less than 1 percent are Black.

Similar stories have occurred countless times over America’s past, with Black farmers losing about 90 percent of their land to white realtors, surveyors, and neighbours between 1910 and 1977. The financial estimate of these losses is at least $356 billion in today’s dollars.

In what is being called a ‘watershed moment’ for reparations for Black Americans, a long-running campaign to return the property’s deed to the Bruce family’s successors has succeeded.

Officials from the Los Angeles County handed over a certified copy of the deed to the heirs of Charles and Willa – their great-grandson, Anthony Bruce – saying that although the move could ‘not reverse the injustice that was done, it represents a bold step in the right direction.’

Community activists say that the move could serve as a ‘blueprint’ for how to get something like this done, creating a knock-on effect in other states – and they’re doing the work to try to make it happen.

The organisation Where Is My Land is helping Black Americans discover their connections to solen land through extensive research and helping them reclaim the land through traditional advocacy and digital amplification.

At the same time, the organisation is working to better educate the public about the history of Black land theft, which is often left untaught in schools.

Anthony Bruce, now in possession of the Bruce family’s property, said ‘It’s surreal and it’s almost like being transported to the other side of the known universe. It’s just I want to make sure that I don’t lose focus as to what Charles and Willa’s dream was.’

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