Property · Eminent Domain · California · Reparative Justice

Bruce's Beach: The Black Resort Manhattan Beach Stole — and a Century Later Returned

In 1912, Willa and Charles Bruce built a beach resort in Manhattan Beach, California — one of the few places on the Pacific Coast where Black families could swim, rest, and simply be. Their neighbors harassed them for twelve years. In 1924, the city condemned the property under eminent domain, claiming they needed it for a park. The land sat unused for years. In 2022 — ninety-eight years later — Los Angeles County gave it back. It is one of the only documented acts of reparative land justice in American history.

Period1912 — 2022
LocationManhattan Beach, California
Entries7 documented events
DomainProperty · Displacement · Reparative Justice
The argument

Bruce's Beach is not a singular injustice — it is a template. Black families build something. White neighbors and local government destroy it. The mechanism varies (mob violence in Tulsa, eminent domain in Manhattan Beach and Seneca Village, highway construction in Tremé and Bronzeville) but the logic is identical: Black prosperity, where it exists, is treated as a problem to be solved. What makes Bruce's Beach different from most chapters of this story is the ending: the land came back. That return — partial, belated, but real — is itself an argument. If it was possible in 2022, it was possible in 1964. It was possible in 1934. The question was never whether return was possible. The question was whether it was wanted.

Era 1
Building Something · 1912–1920
1

In 1912, Willa and Charles Bruce — a Black couple from Los Angeles — purchased two lots of oceanfront property in the small beach town of Manhattan Beach, about twenty miles south of the city. The price was $1,225. They were not the first Black residents in the area, but they were among the first to stake a permanent commercial claim on the Pacific Coast.

What they built was a resort: a lodge, a café, and eventually a dance hall and changing rooms — a place where Black families from Los Angeles could come to the beach, swim in the Pacific, eat, rest, and socialize. This was not a small thing. The beaches of Southern California were, in practice and often in explicit policy, whites-only spaces. Black Angelenos were turned away, harassed, or worse at most of the region's coastal areas. Bruce's Beach — as it quickly became known — was a rare exception: a place by the ocean where Black people were not just tolerated but welcomed.

Word spread rapidly. On summer weekends, Black families traveled from across Los Angeles County to Bruce's Beach. The resort became a gathering place — a space of leisure, dignity, and community that was otherwise almost entirely unavailable to Black Californians. Willa Bruce, who ran much of the day-to-day operation, became a central figure in the Black community of Southern California.

"There is no beach resort for colored people on the Pacific Coast... except that of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce."

— California Eagle, Los Angeles Black newspaper, circa 1914

2

From the day the Bruces opened their resort, the white residents and city government of Manhattan Beach worked to drive them out. The campaign was sustained, organized, and escalating.

1912
White neighbors petition the city to prevent Black visitors from using the beach. The city begins placing legal and bureaucratic obstacles on the Bruce property — delayed permits, selective enforcement of nuisance ordinances.
1916
The Bruces' dance hall is burned. No arrests are made. The Bruces rebuild.
Early 1920s
The Ku Klux Klan establishes an active chapter in Manhattan Beach. KKK members are documented among the city's residents and, reportedly, among its officials. Cross-burnings and intimidation campaigns against the Bruces and their guests are recorded.
1922–1924
The city attempts to rezone the area to exclude Black businesses. When that fails legally, they turn to eminent domain.

The Bruces stayed through all of it — the arson, the cross-burnings, the bureaucratic harassment, the KKK presence. They had purchased their land legally, built their business legitimately, and served a community that had nowhere else to go. They were the injured party in every single confrontation, and they were the ones who eventually lost.

Era 2
The Taking · 1924
3

In February 1924, the Manhattan Beach city council voted to condemn the Bruce property — along with several surrounding lots owned by other Black families — under the power of eminent domain. The stated purpose was the creation of a public park. California state law permitted municipalities to seize private property for public use provided they paid "just compensation."

The Bruces were paid $14,500 for their property. It was not a fair price for what they had built — twelve years of investment, a functioning business, a community institution — but it was the price the city set, and they had no practical recourse. Five other Black-owned lots in the same area were condemned simultaneously. The Black community in and around Manhattan Beach was effectively expelled from the beachfront.

What the "public use" claim looked like in practice
  • The city condemned the property in February 1924, citing plans for a public park and beachfront improvement
  • The Bruce family was forced to vacate. Their resort was demolished.
  • For years afterward, the site sat completely unused — no park was built, no public amenity created
  • The land was eventually transferred to Los Angeles County, which operated it as a lifeguard training facility — not a public park
  • California courts had established that "public use" under eminent domain was broadly construed; the Bruces had no viable legal challenge
  • The sequence — condemn Black property, leave it empty — was a documented pattern in American cities of the era

The vacancy of the land for years after the condemnation is the clearest evidence of what the taking actually was. A genuine public works project would have broken ground promptly. Instead, the lot stood empty — the proof written into the geography that this had never been about a park. It had been about removing Black property owners from white-controlled beachfront.

"They didn't want a park. They wanted us gone."

— Paraphrase of the Bruce family's documented position, as recorded by descendants

4

What happened to the Bruces at Manhattan Beach was not an isolated incident. It was one instance of a pattern that operated across California and the entire American West in the early twentieth century: Black people who built property, businesses, or communities near desirable land — coastal, commercial, or urban — found themselves subjected to the same sequence. Harassment, legal pressure, and finally government-sanctioned taking.

The mechanisms varied but were interchangeable tools from the same toolbox:

The tools of Black property destruction, 1900–1950s
  • Racially restrictive covenants — deed restrictions preventing sale to non-white buyers, in effect throughout Los Angeles County and explicitly upheld by courts until Shelley v. Kraemer (1948)
  • Selective zoning — rezoning areas to commercial or industrial once Black residents moved in, making residential life legally difficult
  • Eminent domain — used in Manhattan Beach (Bruce's Beach), Manhattan (Seneca Village), and later as the legal mechanism for urban renewal highway projects that destroyed Black neighborhoods nationwide in the 1950s–60s
  • Mob violence — Tulsa (1921), Rosewood, Florida (1923), and dozens of other documented incidents
  • Insurance and financing exclusion — Black property owners could not obtain standard homeowner's insurance or mortgage financing; HOLC redlining (from 1933) systematized this at the federal level

In this context, Bruce's Beach was not exceptional — it was representative. What made it eventually exceptional was what came next, nearly a century later.

Era 3
Erasure, Recovery, and Return · 1948–2022
5

After the condemnation, the Bruce property passed through various government hands. Los Angeles County eventually developed it as a lifeguard training facility. The site became a public park — Bayview Terrace Park — and later was renamed Marineland Park. For decades, the park carried no marker acknowledging the history of what had stood there or how the land had been obtained.

The name "Bruce's Beach" was erased from maps and official memory. The California Eagle — the Black newspaper that had celebrated the resort — ceased publication in 1964. The community that had gathered at Bruce's Beach on summer weekends dispersed, aged, and eventually died without the history being recorded in any mainstream account of Manhattan Beach or Los Angeles.

In 1997, local historian Alison Rose Jefferson began researching what she suspected had been a Black beach community in the area. Her archival work — drawing on census records, city council minutes, deed records, and old newspaper archives — reconstructed the story of the Bruces and documented the deliberate nature of the condemnation. Her research was foundational to everything that followed.

In 2006, the park was formally renamed Bruce's Beach Park — a marker was installed acknowledging the history of the property. It was a recognition, but not a remedy. The land was still owned by Los Angeles County, and its value — oceanfront property in one of Southern California's most exclusive zip codes — had increased to an estimated $75 million.

6

In 2021, California state Assemblymember Chris Holden introduced AB 1604 — legislation specifically authorizing Los Angeles County to transfer the Bruce's Beach property to the descendants of Willa and Charles Bruce. California state law had previously prohibited the transfer of county-owned land without the state's approval; the bill created a legal pathway that had not existed before.

The bill passed the California legislature and was signed by Governor Gavin Newsom in September 2021. Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn, whose district includes Manhattan Beach, had been the primary driver of the county-level effort and had worked with the Bruce family's descendants — particularly Anthony Bruce, a great-great-grandson of Willa and Charles — to document the lineage and prepare for the transfer.

What the return meant
The Bruce Family Heirs Were Offered the Land Back — at the Current Market Value
The county's offer was not a gift without conditions: the Bruce family was offered the land at a lease-back arrangement under which the county would continue to operate the park while paying the family a lease rate — approximately $413,000 per year — with the option for the family to eventually sell the land back to the county or develop it. The land's assessed value was approximately $75 million. The question of whether "just compensation" paid in 1924 dollars for a property worth $75 million in 2022 dollars constituted justice was left explicitly and deliberately open.

The vote by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors was unanimous. It was a political act — and a historic one. No other jurisdiction in the United States had successfully transferred government-owned land back to a Black family from whom it had been taken through eminent domain.

7

On June 28, 2022 — ninety-eight years after the city of Manhattan Beach voted to condemn the Bruce property — the deed to the land was formally transferred to the Bruce family descendants in a ceremony at the site. County Supervisor Janice Hahn handed the title to Anthony Bruce in front of the park that bears his family's name.

Anthony Bruce, speaking at the ceremony, said his great-great-grandparents "would have never thought in their wildest dreams that this day would come." The transfer was covered nationally and internationally — less as a local real estate transaction and more as a test case for what reparative land justice could look like.

Several months later, in September 2022, the Bruce family sold the property back to Los Angeles County for approximately $20 million — a negotiated price that allowed the county to retain the public park while compensating the family for the land's value. The transaction was structured to benefit the family financially while preserving the public use of the beachfront.

What the Bruce's Beach return established — and what it left unresolved
  • First documented successful return of government-seized land to descendants of Black owners dispossessed by eminent domain
  • Demonstrated that reparative land transfer is legally possible at the state and county level
  • The $20 million sale price, while significant, is a fraction of the $75 million appraised value — the question of full restitution remained contested
  • Thousands of comparable cases across the U.S. have not been addressed: Seneca Village, Tulsa's Greenwood, the communities bulldozed for urban renewal nationwide
  • No federal mechanism exists for reparative land return; each case requires separate state legislation
  • The Bruce's Beach return was enabled by a very specific combination of factors: documented history, living identifiable descendants, land still under government ownership, and political will — none of which exists in most comparable cases

The name Willa Bruce deserves to be the name people remember from this story. She was a Black woman who in 1912 looked at a coastline she was legally barred from enjoying freely and decided to buy a piece of it, build something, and invite her community in. She was harassed, threatened, burned out, and dispossessed. She did not live to see 2022. But the land she purchased — and what it means that it came back — is her legacy.

The Chain of Causation

Bruces buy land 1912
Only Black beach resort on Pacific Coast
12 yrs harassment, arson, KKK
City obstructs, neighbors threaten
Eminent domain 1924
"Public park" — land sits empty
70 years of erasure
No marker, no memory
Historian recovers the record, 1997
Alison Rose Jefferson's research
Park renamed 2006
Recognition — not remedy
AB 1604 signed 2021
Legal pathway created
Deed returned June 2022
98 years later — land comes home