jstor with this ruthless bit of history that I’d never thought of: How the Beaches of the South Got There.

One barrier standing in their way was Black farmers, many of whom had been relegated to the less-fertile land near the ocean. By the 1920s, nightriders were burning Black-owned homes across the coastal South and warning African Americans to sell their land. Local jumps in real estate values were accompanied by increased racial terrorism.

Ian Whitney @ian_whitney