From Southern Poverty Law Center <[email protected]>
Subject Residents fight to preserve Florida community founded by emancipated Black citizens
Date August 5, 2023 2:00 PM
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What was it like for the people of Royal to survive when that terror
closed in?

Residents fight to preserve Florida community founded by emancipated
Black citizens

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Esther Schrader     Read the full piece here

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Friend,

When Suncara Jackson travels from Tallahassee back to the place she
will always call home - the historically Black community of
Royal in Central Florida - she sometimes shuts her eyes against
the glare of the sun and tries to imagine what it was like.

What was it like for her great-great-grandfather Jim Patterson to make
his way in the years after the Civil War from the plantation he was
born on in Waycross, Georgia, to Royal, where he would become one of
the few newly freed Black Americans granted land by the U.S.
government under the Homestead Act of 1862?

What was it like for the scores of other newly freed men who settled
in Royal, hacking their way through dense thickets of sea grape and
prickly pear and, through their labors, into ownership of
government-deeded parcels of 40 to 160 acres each?

What was it like for the descendants of the original founders to
somehow hold on to their land, even as the promise of the early years
of Reconstruction gave way to white nationalist violence, and the few
other communities of Black homesteaders in the country were wiped out
by racial terror and development-led displacement?

What was it like for the people of Royal to survive when that terror
closed in and the Black community in Ocoee

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, just 50 miles away, was wiped out in 1920 by a white mob? And when
Rosewood

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, another Black community 77 miles away, was burned to the ground
three years later?

One thing Jackson can see without closing her eyes is what it is like
to live in fear that all her ancestors built in Royal - the rich
stories that were handed down to her, the deep sense of family among a
community of people who have maintained ties for generations, the
pride of having endured - is again under threat.

Last year, it was the turnpike extension the Florida Department of
Transportation wanted to route right through Royal. No sooner had
residents staved off that plan, at least for the time being, than
several plots of agricultural land were rezoned by county officials to
accommodate industrial use that could bring pollution and increased
traffic to the tranquil community.

Read More

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