
Los Angeles (CNN) – A century ago, a Black couple owned a beach resort in Manhattan Beach —
a Southern California town known for its scenic expanse. An inviting soulful
energy and the songs of Black entertainers radiated throughout the corridors of
the dance hall and lodge.
But the music and good times would not last due to the strict racial
segregation that dominated American life then. Harassment from White neighbors
and the Ku Klux Klan tore away at the dreams of owners Charles and Willa Bruce.
The final blow came in 1924 when the city took the property through eminent
domain and paid the couple a fraction of what they asked for. The city wanted
the land for a park. The Bruces left and died just five years later. —read
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