
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Skidaway Island, Georgia, is home today to a luxurious community that the mostly White residents consider paradise: waterfront views, live oaks and marsh grass alongside golf courses, swimming pools, and other amenities.
In 1865, the island was a thriving Black community, started by freedmen who were given land by the government under the 40 acres program. They farmed, created a system of government, and turned former cotton plantations into a Black American success story.
But it wouldn’t last. Within two years, the government took that land back from the freedmen and returned it to the former enslavers.
Today, 40 acres in The Landings development are worth at least $20 million. The history of that land is largely absent from day-to-day life. But over a two-and-a-half-year investigation, journalists at the Center for Public Integrity unearthed records that prove that dozens of freed people had, and lost, titles to tracts at what’s now The Landings.
“You could feel chills to know that they had it and then they just pulled the rug from under them, so to speak,” said Linda Brown, one of the few Black residents at The Landings.
This week on Reveal, with the Center for Public Integrity and in honor of Black History Month, we also show a descendant her ancestor’s title for a plot of land that is now becoming another exclusive gated community. And we look at how buried documents like these Reconstruction-era land titles are part of the long game toward reparations.
This is an update of an episode that originally aired in June 2024.
By The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX4.7
82478,247 ratings
Skidaway Island, Georgia, is home today to a luxurious community that the mostly White residents consider paradise: waterfront views, live oaks and marsh grass alongside golf courses, swimming pools, and other amenities.
In 1865, the island was a thriving Black community, started by freedmen who were given land by the government under the 40 acres program. They farmed, created a system of government, and turned former cotton plantations into a Black American success story.
But it wouldn’t last. Within two years, the government took that land back from the freedmen and returned it to the former enslavers.
Today, 40 acres in The Landings development are worth at least $20 million. The history of that land is largely absent from day-to-day life. But over a two-and-a-half-year investigation, journalists at the Center for Public Integrity unearthed records that prove that dozens of freed people had, and lost, titles to tracts at what’s now The Landings.
“You could feel chills to know that they had it and then they just pulled the rug from under them, so to speak,” said Linda Brown, one of the few Black residents at The Landings.
This week on Reveal, with the Center for Public Integrity and in honor of Black History Month, we also show a descendant her ancestor’s title for a plot of land that is now becoming another exclusive gated community. And we look at how buried documents like these Reconstruction-era land titles are part of the long game toward reparations.
This is an update of an episode that originally aired in June 2024.

90,884 Listeners

43,993 Listeners

38,601 Listeners

6,806 Listeners

37,529 Listeners

27,172 Listeners

26,247 Listeners

11,672 Listeners

321 Listeners

9,237 Listeners

4,005 Listeners

943 Listeners

468 Listeners

311 Listeners

11,964 Listeners

3,783 Listeners

14,637 Listeners

4,679 Listeners

112,858 Listeners

326 Listeners

1,898 Listeners

16,376 Listeners

1,551 Listeners