Posted inElections, Politics & Policy, Rural Issues, Voting

Sapelo Island’s Gullah Geechee Community Fights Back and Wins

In a win for Gullah Geechee residents on Georgia’s sea islands, voters this week rejected an ordinance that doubled the allowed square footage for homes in Sapelo Island’s Hog Hammock district.  Many Black residents feared the change would lead to higher property taxes, gentrification, and displacement. Unofficial results on Tuesday showed 19% of 10,000 registered […]

Posted inCulture, Economic Development

Georgia’s Highest Court Sides With Sapelo Island Residents to Put Land Battle on Ballot

In a win for Black landowners, Georgia’s highest court unanimously sided with Gullah Geechee communities in a long-standing zoning battle on Sapelo Island. On Tuesday, the state Supreme Court reversed a lower court ruling that had stopped a referendum to consider repealing a revised zoning ordinance passed by McIntosh County officials two years ago. A […]

Posted inClimate Change, History, Rural Issues

The Army Took Their Land. Decades Later, This Black Community Still Wants It Back.

HARRIS NECK NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE, Ga. — Over the course of what was a scorching, yet typical May day across Coastal Georgia, Willie Moran made it a point to stop and take a deep breath at every sight of water.  Looking out across the estuaries and salt marshes teeming with wildlife, he repeatedly reminded his […]

Posted inCulture, History

South Carolina’s Gullah Geechee Are Denied Their Right to Bury Their Loved Ones

For generations, Mary Mack’s family has offered free burial plots to the bereaved families on St. Helena Island. It’s an ancestral calling and a tradition.  Spanning 64 square miles, the island on the coast of South Carolina is home to one of the largest remaining Gullah Geechee communities in the southeast U.S. Surrounded by creeks, […]

Posted inHistory, Money, Politics & Policy, Rural Issues

The Battle for Land, Identity, and Survival of Gullah Geechee Communities

Whenever Nikki Williams’ feet touch the soil on Sapelo Island, Georgia, memories of her youth flood back vividly. Every fall, her grandfather had her work at the drink booth during Cultural Day, where hundreds gathered to celebrate “the heart and soul of Gullah Geechee culture” through arts and live entertainment. It’s a time to “touch […]

Posted inPolitics & Policy

Why Fair Voting Maps Could Be Good for the Environment

Gullah-Geechee Corridor resident Taiwan Scott is angry. The South Carolina real estate agent, who focuses on supporting Black property owners, is in a battle with legislators as rising sea levels and more intense and frequent storms imperil Black Americans’ land and heritage across the approximately 12,000 square miles extending from North Carolina to Florida. “Black […]

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