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Tuesday 27 December 2022

What do you know about Gullah Families land and cultures?

The Gullah Geeche families represent an entirely different population. They have lived through centuries with their traditions and cultures intact. Read through the culture and traditions of the families in this post to get an interesting idea about them before you even visit.

Families of Gullah Geechee origin provide a perspective on Black history in the United States that is frequently left out of popular accounts. Gullah Geechee is a term used to describe a group of people that live along the shores of North and South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida who have a language and culture known as the Sea Islands. In addition to being able to identify Sierra Leon as the place of their ancestry based on language, several of these families have jointly held property, roughly considered as Gullah Family Compounds since as early as 1861.

The cultural developments that are connected to Gullah Geechee culture in the United States record the specific attempt of Gullah families to define the boundaries of their relationships and their lifestyle outside of enslavement and institutionalized racism. This research sought to comprehend the impact that South Carolina's heirs' property rights, a type of familial land ownership, had on family ties and the long-term viability of the culture.

More than two persons might have an interest in land because heirs are a property right that makes it possible for land to be passed down through families without the need for a will.



Property of Gullah Family Compound


In the low-country of South Carolina, heirs' property refers to land ownership by predominantly Black families who received a deed to their property after emancipation. Multiple family members might own the land as tenants-in-common when it is an heirs' property.

Although this land ownership arrangement makes the Gullah/Geechee culture more vulnerable, the difficulties that families in this environment face are common to many rural areas. These include an ageing population, dwindling job possibilities for young people and newly returning families, and limited government assistance for smaller family farms.

Since there were no bridges connecting the Sea Islands of South Carolina to the mainland until the mid- to late 20th century, these islands have been home to numerous people who have relied on the land and the sea to generate food and other items to meet their needs. Systems of bartering and shared responsibility existed among the families, supporting family life and island culture.

Elders of the Gullah/Geechee people implicitly acknowledge the Freedmen's Bureau's contribution to the development of local educational and social services through the Penn School. Elders' stories reveal the worth of the land. Youth are regularly exposed to Gullah/Geechee elders' attempts to explain the value of land to their families in order to increase their understanding of the challenges involved with their family's land ownership.

Gullah Geechee Culture is one of the most popular attractions for tourists in Hilton Head. It has everything a traveler would want to explore. Visit Hilton Head to explore Gullah Family compounds with friends and family.

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