Close Menu
Savannah HeraldSavannah Herald
  • Home
  • News
    • Local
    • State
    • National
    • World
    • HBCUs
  • Events
  • Weather
  • Traffic
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
    • Faith
    • Beauty
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Art & Literature
    • Travel
    • Senior Living
    • Black History
  • Health
  • Business
    • Investing
    • Gaming
    • Education
    • Entertainment
    • Tech
    • Real Estate
  • More
    • Health Inspections
    • A List of Our Online Black Newspapers in America
  • Guides
    • Black History Savannah
    • MLK Guide Savannah
We're Social
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Trending
  • The Carroll County Courthouse Massacre
  • Throw These Items Out Today to Make More Space in Your Home
  • Quincy Jones’ Estate Sells Part Of His Legendary Catalog — Including Michael Jackson Hits – Essence
  • Long Co. Health Dept. Temporarily Closed Due to Water Interruption
  • Grambling State secures trademark for iconic ‘G’ logo after near 30-year legal battle
  • Politicians are starting to pay a lot more attention to the plight of white-collar workers
  • KW Family Reunion 2026 Recap
  • Big L’s Estate Releases ‘The Parable Of Lamont Coleman’ Trailer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Login
Savannah HeraldSavannah Herald
  • Home
  • News
    • Local
    • State
    • National
    • World
    • HBCUs
  • Events
  • Weather
  • Traffic
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
    • Faith
    • Beauty
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Art & Literature
    • Travel
    • Senior Living
    • Black History
  • Health
  • Business
    • Investing
    • Gaming
    • Education
    • Entertainment
    • Tech
    • Real Estate
  • More
    • Health Inspections
    • A List of Our Online Black Newspapers in America
  • Guides
    • Black History Savannah
    • MLK Guide Savannah
Savannah HeraldSavannah Herald
Home » Author Details History of Black Leisure Sites in Southland – BlackPressUSA
Travel

Author Details History of Black Leisure Sites in Southland – BlackPressUSA

Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldMarch 17, 20266 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
At a Black Women for Wellness Black History Month presentation Feb. 13, Alison Rose Jefferson spoke about the impact of Blacks creating spaces for leisure in the 20th century had on the surrounding community and the challenges Blacks faced by white residents and local government. Photo by Cynthia Gibson.
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Black Arts & Culture Feature:

Key takeaways
  • Black-built leisure sites like Bruce's Beach, Lake Elsinore, and Bay Street Beach faced harassment, arson, and property seizure.
  • White supremacist opposition and municipal actions excluded Black entrepreneurs, erasing their roles in regional recreation, business, and community formation.
  • Later landmark designations and restitution, like return of Bruce's Beach property and the Bay Street Historic District, acknowledge but cannot fully remedy losses.
By Cynthia Gibson, Contributing Writer | WAVE Publications

In her latest book, “Living the California Dream – African American Leisure Sites during the Jim Crow Era,” author Alison Rose Jefferson provides new insights into how the great migration of Blacks beginning in 1910 from the American South to the urban North, Midwest, and West challenged the prevailing narratives that exclude African Americans and shows their active role in shaping regional identity.

Her research demonstrates that in California and other western states — unlike the South — racial discrimination existed in implicit practice rather than explicit legal prescriptions.

At a Black Women for Wellness Black History Month presentation on Feb. 13, Jefferson chronicled the history of several recreational sites developed by African Americans. She spoke about the impact that Blacks creating spaces for leisure had on the surrounding community and the challenges that Blacks faced from white residents and local government.

Jefferson’s presentation focused on several specific Southern California leisure sites created in the 20th century by and for African Americans — Bruce’s Beach in Manhattan Beach, Lakeshore Beach Club in Lake Elsinore, and Santa Monica’s Bay Street Beach.

In 1912, Willa Bruce and her husband Charles purchased oceanfront property to establish a resort for Black residents who were barred from other beaches. It became a popular gathering place for African Americans on weekends and in the summer.

The successful venture spurred other African Americans to buy land and build vacation cottages nearby.

From the first days of operation, white neighbors and members of the Ku Klux Klan harassed the Bruces and their customers, which included setting fire to a mattress under the resort’s main deck and burning down a nearby home belonging to another Black family.

When harassment failed to drive the Bruces out, the city used eminent domain in 1924 to seize the land under the pretense of building a park. The Bruces and other resort community property owners challenged those proceedings but were unsuccessful.

Nearly a century later, the state passed legislation authorizing Los Angeles County to return the property to the descendants of the Bruce family.

“These moves are good things, but this restitution does not provide tangible collective benefits to the purged African Americans of all classes from Manhattan Beach and the loss of a vibrant socioeconomic cultural space where to this day Black people make up less than half a percent of the city’s 35,000 population,” Jefferson said.

Another one of the earliest places African Americans went for recreation and relaxation was Lake Elsinore in Riverside County, one of the furthest inland of the African American leisure sites. The Mission in Palm Springs and Lake Elsinore were among numerous resorts in Riverside County that were popular from the 1880s to the 1960s, according to Jefferson. People from around the Southland, especially from the Los Angeles area, visited the resorts to soak in and drink the cold and hot mineral waters for health, healing, and relaxation.

By the late 1920s, Riverside was proclaimed the empire of recreation and health in the Lake Elsinore Valley. Several local Black residents established businesses, purchased vacation homes, and a few invested in resorts and recreation spaces.

The Lake Shore Beach Company began developing the largest resort for Black patrons at Lake Elsinore. The leaders of this investment group were prominent Black Angelenos, physician Wilbur C. Gordon, attorney Charles Darden, businesswoman Sally Taylor Richardson, and businessman Arthur L. Reese.

Jefferson noted that the Black community’s presence has been left out of local history narratives and landmark designation programming, thereby obstructing understanding of the full shared collective history of the range of community builders and their impact and contributions to the development of Lake Elsinore and the Southern California region.

Another Black-owned resort in Riverside County, the Park Ridge Country Club, opened in 1927.

The local elite and other white racist citizens strongly contested the African American reconstruction of this venture. In the Corona community, the Black businessmen’s effort to make the venture a success have been left out of the local history narratives and public memory, thereby limiting the understanding of the Corona community’s historical actors and evolution, Jefferson said. The omission of this history of Corona, like Lake Elsinore, erases the complicated layers of social dynamics of race, space, power, and capitalism in California.

In Santa Monica, African Americans have built and sustained a community since the city’s founding in 1875. Early residents established themselves a few blocks away from the Pacific shoreline in the environs of Bay Street Beach. This is near the civic center today and Phillips Chapel Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, the first national African American organization established by formerly enslaved citizens in 1870. During the same time period, just south of Santa Monica, a Venice enclave of African Americans also began to form.

Both communities have managed to survive waves of discrimination and the encroachment of wealthy residents for more than a century.

In 1908 at 4th and Bay street near Phillips CME, the oceanfront area emerged as a gathering place where African Americans from all over Los Angeles could enjoy the beachfront. From 1900 to the 1960s, many Black beachgoers referred to this area as the Bay Street Beach.

White people, referring to the darker-skinned beachgoers, referred to it as the Inkwell, Jefferson said. Some Black people repurposed this name as a badge of pride, while others refused to use the name.

Accessible by streetcar, the blossoming African American enclave centered around Phillips CME Church saw Black-owned businesses and leisure sites emerge. The area became a place of refuge and a site of community formation.

Prominent attorney Charles S. Darden, a resort developer in Lake Elsinore, and Norman O. Euston, founder of Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company, led a Santa Monica Black enterprise in the 1920s. It was one of the important attempts at beach area business development, sabotaged by white supremacists. This was at a time overlapping the rise of Black beach culture and residency that supported a deeper African American community in Southern California in the first half of the 20th century.

While white supremacist actions hindered African Americans from buying property throughout the urban region and sabotaged their beach service businesses into the 1950s, their communities, presence and agencies sustained their use of public space us. In 2005, the city of Santa Monica designated the Phillips CME Church as a local landmark at the oceanfront, near Crescent Bay Park and Bay Street. This set the stage for the official recognition of a cultural African American monument, the Bay Street Historic District, in 2008.

Jefferson said her goal is to bring attention to the contributions of Black businessmen and women who sought to take advantage of everything California had to offer and to develop businesses that served their communities.

“I’m also interested in people understanding that Black people have been here and enjoying the resources that California has to offer, even if sometimes they were pushed around a bit in terms of prejudice or discrimination,” Jefferson said.

Cynthia Gibson is a freelance reporter for Wave Newspapers. She can be reached at ckgcommunications@gmail.com.

Read more from the original source


African Art African Textiles Afrofuturism Art and Identity Arts and Culture News Black Art History Black Artists Black Authors Black Creators Black Literature Black Sci-Fi and Fantasy Black Women in Art Black-Owned Bookstores Book Reviews Contemporary Black Art creative expression Cultural Commentary Fashion and Expression Poetry and Prose Street Art and Design
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Savannah Herald
  • Website

Related Posts

Entertainment March 18, 2026

Big L’s Estate Releases ‘The Parable Of Lamont Coleman’ Trailer

Entertainment March 18, 2026

The Best Weekly Deals You Don’t Want to Miss From Calvin Klein, Shark, and More

Travel March 18, 2026

What to Pack for Puerto Rico

Entertainment March 18, 2026

2026 Washington Women of Excellence Awards

Entertainment March 18, 2026

Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl Halftime Show Still the Most Watched

Entertainment March 18, 2026

Apollo Theater Pays Tribute to Kiki Shepard’s Legacy

Comments are closed.

Don't Miss
Food August 28, 2025By Savannah Herald03 Mins Read

Pumpkin Oat Meal Nights Clubs

August 28, 2025

Fresh from the Cooking Area Location: Recipes & Food Ideas Dive to Dish Pumpkin oat…

Obtain the superior DJI Osmo Activity 4 for its lowest-ever rate at Amazon

August 28, 2025

Walter Payton Posthumously Honored by Jackson State

November 25, 2025

The Most Effective Brussels Sprouts Dish

November 2, 2025

Savannah High Student Welders Earn a Trip to the State Championship

November 20, 2025
Archives
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
Categories
  • Art & Literature
  • Beauty
  • Black History
  • Business
  • Climate
  • Education
  • Employment
  • Entertainment
  • Faith
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Gaming
  • HBCUs
  • Health
  • Health Inspections
  • Home & Garden
  • Investing
  • Local
  • Lowcountry News
  • National
  • News
  • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Real Estate
  • Science
  • Senior Living
  • Sports
  • SSU Homecoming 2024
  • State
  • Tech
  • Transportation
  • Travel
  • World
Savannah Herald Newsletter

Subscribe to Updates

A round up interesting pic’s, post and articles in the C-Port and around the world.

About Us
About Us

The Savannah Herald is your trusted source for the pulse of Coastal Georgia and the Low County of South Carolina. We're committed to delivering timely news that resonates with the African American community.

From local politics to business developments, we're here to keep you informed and engaged. Our mission is to amplify the voices and stories that matter, shining a light on our collective experiences and achievements.
We cover:
🏛️ Politics
💼 Business
🎭 Entertainment
🏀 Sports
🩺 Health
💻 Technology
Savannah Herald: Savannah's Black Voice 💪🏾

Our Picks

100 years earlier, the fight for tv raved

August 28, 2025

The Download: Saving the US climate programs, and America’s AI protections are under threat

September 3, 2025

Trump management ends on the bird influenza vaccination: NPR

August 28, 2025

Marshall Faulk has a familiar connection with new Southern football coaches

December 30, 2025

EASTSIDE BY 50: Lady Eagles score dominant 82-23 victory over Meadowcreek

February 28, 2026
Categories
  • Art & Literature
  • Beauty
  • Black History
  • Business
  • Climate
  • Education
  • Employment
  • Entertainment
  • Faith
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Gaming
  • HBCUs
  • Health
  • Health Inspections
  • Home & Garden
  • Investing
  • Local
  • Lowcountry News
  • National
  • News
  • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Real Estate
  • Science
  • Senior Living
  • Sports
  • SSU Homecoming 2024
  • State
  • Tech
  • Transportation
  • Travel
  • World
  • Privacy Policies
  • Disclaimers
  • Terms and Conditions
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Opt-Out Preferences
  • Accessibility Statement
Copyright © 2002-2026 Savannahherald.com All Rights Reserved. A Veteran-Owned Business

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login below or Register Now.

Lost password?

Register Now!

Already registered? Login.

A password will be e-mailed to you.