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Have you ever heard of the tragic story of Bruce's Beach?

George H. Peck (1856–1940), a wealthy developer and the founder of Manhattan Beach, "bucked" the practice of racial exclusion and set aside two city blocks of beachfront area and made them available for purchase by African Americans. Peck also developed "Peck's Pier," the only pier in the area open to African Americans.[1]

Willa and Charles Bruce bought a property in the strand area for $1,225 that was set aside from Henry Willard in 1912, and added on three lots.[1] They established a resort and named it for Mrs. Bruce.[2]

The development included a bathhouse and dining house for blacks, whose access to public beaches was highly restricted.[3] That a black-only beach resort would open up there was all the more notable because Manhattan Beach was "an otherwise lily-white community" and blacks only had limited access to beaches; Mrs. Bruce's initiative "defiantly transgressed these racial boundaries."[4] It was not the only beach attraction available to blacks; there was also Peck's Pier and pavilion on 34th Street,[5] a section of Santa Monica State Beach referred to as the "Ink Well", and the Pacific Beach Club in Orange County. As Los Angeles's population increased and property values soared in the 1920s, blacks in the area suffered from increased racial tension, before eminent domain proceedings started by the city forced the club to close down.[1]



In the 1920s, the resort was attacked by the Ku Klux Klan in an attempt to get the city to take back the land from the rightful owners, the Bruce family. Under the pretense of building a city park, the city of Manhattan Beach did take the land away from the Bruce family, and African Americans were run off the land. It was not until 2007, practically eighty years later, that this travesty was acknowledged by the city and the beach was renamed Bruce's Beach.[6]

In the 1960s, the property, which had been vacant for decades, was made into a city park first called Bayview Terrace Park, then Parque Culiacan; in 2006, the Manhattan Beach City Council decided to rename the park, "commemorating our community's understanding that friendship, goodwill and respect for all begins within our own boundaries and extends to the world community. All are welcome."[2] It was ceremoniously renamed in March 2007[7] during an event exhibiting "a deep tide of goodwill."[8]

The park is on a slope overlooking the ocean and includes rolling grassy terraces with benches and small trees. It is located a few blocks from the beach, between 26th and 27th Street, and runs west from Highland Avenue to Manhattan Avenue.[2]
 
There are a lot of stories like that. A wealthy white abolitionist in NY gave a bunch of land to escaped black slaves in the 1800s. They wound up calling the area Timbuctoo. It's not really inhabited by blacks nowadays though, as the settlement fell apart pretty quickly.

he difficulty of farming in the Adirondack region, coupled with the settlers' lack of experience in house-building and the bigotry of white neighbors, caused the Timbuctoo experiment to fail by 1855.


White people in America are an interesting case study. When you start reading about slavery, the abolition movement, and periods that follow. You'll find that there were a lot of white people that took drastic measures to try and help black people. A lot of them were killed by other white people. What's crazy when you think about it, is that nowadays, you have all these racists crying about how we're trying to paint them all as evil. No, there are plenty of white people from history that you could raise up as being great heroes. White people just ain't interested in praising them. They rather praise the slavers, murderers, and rapists. How messed up is that?
 
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