On Arthur Champen’s half-acre property in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, a thicket of southern live oaks, palmettos and pine trees muffle the roar of cars on nearby Highway 278. His haint blue house, lightened by the sun, sits on stilts to protect it from flooding that comes with the high tide. During the spring, it is common for the marshland adjacent to his land to turn into a muddy soup. “Other than the cars,” Champen, 81, said, “you hear how peaceful it is?”
About a decade ago, Champen’s family nearly lost the grassy marshland next door that their family bought several generations ago. In 1892, his great-great-grandparents, Civil War veteran Richard White and his wife, Amelia, bought 24.2 hectares (60 acres) of land for $600. For nearly a century, the land was heirs’ property - family-owned land passed through generations usually without a will - until Champen’s grand uncle hired a surveyor and divided a portion of the land between the Whites’ descendants in 1983. More than 10 family members remain on about 4 hectares (10 acres) of land, while a few sold their shares. For Gullah Geechee people, the descendants of formerly enslaved West Africans who remained in the islands of the southeastern US and retained their distinct culture and customs, it is common to live among several generations of family on a compound.
Champen peered out at marshland that remains heirs’ property because severe flooding rendered it unusable. For several generations, the nearly 16 hectares (40 acres) were farmed for corn, cotton and potatoes that were sold at the market. That was until a hurricane hit the area in 1940, causing $9.9 million of property and crop damage throughout South Carolina. The family wasn’t clear on who would pay the property taxes after some members moved away or died. It went up for delinquent tax sale, an annual auction held by the Beaufort County treasurer’s office, where a defaulting taxpayer’s property is sold. They contacted the nonprofit Pan-African Family Empowerment and Land Preservation Network (PAFEN), which helped them pay the bill so that they could retain their land. Although his family doesn’t use the marshland, Champen doesn’t want to sell it. “It’s part of our heritage,” he said.
While Champen’s family kept their land, many Gullah people in the coastal counties of South Carolina and Georgia aren’t as fortunate. Throughout Beaufort County, South Carolina - which includes Hilton Head Island, St Helena Island and the city of Beaufort - Gullah property ownership has been threatened in myriad ways, with delinquent taxes rising to the top of the list. Issues related to clouded or tangled titles, which are heirs’ properties without the current owners’ names on the deeds, family disputes, predatory development, gentrification and the climate crisis are also contributing factors in land loss. The loss of property can be seen in the dwindling Gullah Geechee population: in 1940, most of Hilton Head’s 1,100 residents were the descendants of freedmen, while in 2020, only 6% of the island’s population was Black, down from 8% in 2000.
In Beaufort County, it is impossible to say how many Gullah Geechee people have lost their homes in recent years, said Josh Walden, the chief of operations at Center for Heirs’ Property. It would require significant research and money to go through partition actions in civil courts and to figure out which ones were owned by Gullah Geechee families. A study from Auburn University in the Journal of Rural Social Sciences showed that there were more than 41,000 heirs’ properties throughout South Carolina that totaled more than 167,500 hectares (414,000 acres) and was worth more than $3.42 billion in market value in 2019.
Beaufort County treasurer’s office data showed that the amount of properties sold at the annual auction for delinquent taxes on St Helena Island has largely remained the same, despite an increase of properties that had fallen behind in their payments. Between 2019 and 2023, 38 properties were officially sold after the previous year’s auction on St Helena Island. During that same period on Hilton Head Island, 19 properties were sold at the delinquent tax sale. While the average amount of taxes owed on either island was no more than $700, it can reach up to more than $4,000, which can be difficult for older Gullah people on fixed incomes to pay. And when multiple people have claim to an heirs’ property, it is sometimes unclear who will pay for the taxes, and the bills are overlooked.
Maria Walls, Beaufort County’s treasurer, said she was unaware how many heirs’ properties were represented in the data. But she said the county had worked to minimize Gullah land loss by creating an online payment platform to streamline the payment process and by partnering with local advocacy groups such as the Lowcountry Gullah Foundation.
Based on observations from their advocacy work in South Carolina, Luana Graves Sellars, the founder of Lowcountry Gullah Foundation, and Theresa White, PAFEN’s CEO and founder, say that Hilton Head has experienced the greatest amount of Gullah Geechee land loss of all of the state’s sea islands due to its popularity. St Helena Island, 45 miles east of Hilton Head, has also experienced significant loss. Between 2015 and 2021, White said, her organization spent more than $160,000 paying Gullah people’s property taxes in Hilton Head and St Helena islands. In 2024 alone, Graves Sellars said her organization spent more than $38,000 saving 10.2 hectares (25.4 acres) of historical land in Beaufort County, with 59% of the properties in the city of Beaufort and 35% in Hilton Head.
Dozens of interviews with Gullah residents, attorneys, organizers, nonprofit heads, city and state leaders, and environmental advocacy groups reveal that land loss poses an existential threat to the Gullah community. Champen would like the state government to compensate his family and others’ for what they lost on the unusable marshland that they continue to pay taxes on. Others who lost or were at risk of losing their family homes said they would like the property taxes to be reduced for heirs’ properties. Ultimately, residents and their advocates have addressed the crisis by banding together to pay off each other’s property taxes, educating one another on estate planning and tax-payment plans, and applying pressure on state and local officials to make it easier for Gullah people to stay in their homes.
“There’s been a renewed emphasis now on Black people helping each other, because of all the stuff that Trump and them are doing and all the discrimination that’s going on,” White said. “People are realizing that they might have to come back here to live on the property that their families have owned.”
As he leaned on a tangled grape vine on his property, Champen recalled climbing up the spindly plant as a child and eating its grapes. In the decades since growing up in the historically Gullah neighborhood of Stoney, Champen said the area had significantly changed. The nearby highway has expanded from two to six lanes, and some of the Gullah people in the area have died or moved away. Still, he wants his way of life to be passed on to future generations.
“My hope is that my children and grandchildren will continue to keep the property, but you never know,” Champen said, adding that youth often choose to live in the city when they mature.
The trend of people moving away is partially reflected in the Lowcountry Gullah Foundation’s survey of heirs’ properties. According to Graves Sellars’ count, Gullah land ownership decreased from 1,400 hectares (3,500 acres) before 1956, when the first bridge connected Hilton Head to the mainland, to 390 hectares (963 acres) in 2023.
On Hilton Head and St Helena during the Civil War, the Union army occupied the area, resulting in white residents fleeing and enslaved Black people in the area becoming free before the Emancipation Proclamation. Gullah people were given land on the sea islands because it was once considered undesirable, said Graves Sellars. “No one wanted to live here because it was too hot, it was too humid, it was too bug-infested,” she said. “The government was just like, ‘Well, the enslaved people are already there. So, let’s just give them that land, because nobody really wants it anyway.’”
Due to their remoteness, Gullah people had difficulty accessing probate courts, so the owners would often die without a will. As a result, the state’s estate laws required that the properties’ interests be divided between surviving spouses and their children. As families grew further from the original certificate holder, the amount of people who held interests in the land multiplied. “What you have over time is a geometrically increasing problem,” said South Carolina Senator Tom Davis, “with, in some cases, hundreds of heirs having an interest in real property.”
Hilton Head and St Helena remained mostly inhabited by Gullah people for nearly a century until bridges erected in the early to mid-20th century made them accessible to vehicle traffic. Developers followed soon thereafter. Walden, of the Center for Heirs’ Property, said his Gullah clients had shared that their families began leaving their land beginning with the Great Migration in 1910. During that time, Black people fled the South in droves to escape racial violence, settling in the Northeast, Midwest and the West.
“The Great Migration led to, not only the sale or forced sale of land, people leaving and selling because they were in fear for their life,” said Walden, “but it also made the property vulnerable because the majority of the family left, and maybe it just lay fallow, or maybe one person stayed there, and when they died, it was lost.” As development began to rise in the 1970s and ’80s, waterfront properties were assessed for higher values and property taxes increased, said Davis.
Heirs’ properties are also vulnerable to predatory developers. Tenants-in-common ownership, which is when more than one person owns a property, causes issues when one owner sells their part of the land to a developer and the developer sues the other co-owners in a forced sale to assume full ownership.
For one Gullah family, an out-of-state relative who had no interest in the South Carolina property triggered the loss of more than 8 hectares (20 acres) of ancestral land. Long before the family lost the communal land, Herbert Ford’s great-great-grandparents had bought the Hilton Head property in the early 1900s. But since it was heirs’ property without a living owner on the title, a relative in New York who had partial interest in the land sold his portion to the town and a developer in the late 2010s. As a result of the tangled title, the family members who remained on the ancestral land were forced to sell their remaining portion.
In late March 2025, Ford, a fifth-generation Hilton Head resident who is Gullah, drove to the entrance of the 8-hectare (20-acre) property that the out-of-state relative sold to the developer James Moore in 2018. It is now a subdivision called Old Stoney Village with large town homes worth half a million dollars. As part of an agreement with the developer, 0.8 hectares (2 acres) next door were set aside for the remaining family members. A gray fence separates the village from his family compound, a stark dividing line between the new wealthy residents and the former inhabitants who reside in about 10 mobile homes.
While the sale didn’t personally affect Ford since he lived on his own property, the 73-year-old was upset on his family’s behalf. “I don’t think the entire family should be penalized because one or two persons decide they want to sell their particular interest. And if that means the developer can’t do anything with that small interest, then don’t purchase it,” Ford said as he sat in his truck.