The deed to Bruce’s Beach has been returned to the descendants of Willa and Charles Bruce, nearly a century after the oceanfront property was seized from the Black entrepreneurs.

On Wednesday, Dean Logan, the county’s registrar-recorder, presented a certified copy of the land transfer for the Manhattan Beach land — where the Bruces once ran a thriving resort for Black travelers — to Anthony Bruce, a great-great-grandson of the Bruces, according to theAssociated Press.

“This transfer will allow the Bruce family to realize generational wealth, which they have been denied for generations simply because they were black in America,” said State Sen. Steven Bradford, who authored the state bill that allowed the land to be transferred back to the Bruce family, perCNN.

“Nothing like this has ever been done before,” remarked Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn, the outlet reported. “We can’t change the past and we will never be able to make up for the injustice that was done to your great, great grandparents and great grandparents, Willa and Charles nearly a century ago. But this is a start.”

Christina House/Los Angeles Times via Getty

anthony bruce, bruce beach

Willa and Charlesbought the land for $1,225in 1912 and built a resort called Bruce’s Beach, according to theLos Angeles Times.

After they endured years of racist threats and harassment from their white neighbors and the Ku Klux Klan, city officials condemned the neighborhood in 1924, seizing dozens of properties through eminent domain. The city claimed that they took action out of an urgent need for a park, but the land sat vacant for several more decades.

The property was transferred to Los Angeles County in 1995, according toCNNandThe Los Angeles Times.

anthony bruce, bruce beach

Two years ago, after realizing the county owned Bruce’s Beach, Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn took on the charge ofreturning the land to its rightful owners.

Last September, Gov. Gavin Newsomsigned into law Senate Bill 796, which enabled Los Angeles County officials to immediately begin transferring the land to the family — with Wednesday’s ceremony marking the final step of the process.

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The family has since formed a company to hold the land, with the county leasing it from them for an annual rent of $413,000, according to the Associated Press.

The agreement also gives the county the right to purchase the land for $20 million at a later date, reportedThe Los Angeles Times.

source: people.com