The Santee Cooper Project: A New Deal for Whom?
In 1934, the South Carolina legislature authorized the South Carolina Public Service Authority — known as Santee Cooper — to construct a hydroelectric and navigation project on the Santee and Cooper rivers. The project would dam the Santee River, create two large reservoirs (Lake Marion and Lake Moultrie), and connect them by a canal to generate electricity and improve navigation to the port of Charleston.
The project received federal Public Works Administration funding — New Deal money, designed to put Americans back to work and electrify rural America. Construction began in 1939. By the time it was complete in 1942, Santee Cooper was one of the largest earth-moving projects ever undertaken in the Western Hemisphere at that time: 110,000 acres of lowcountry South Carolina swamp, farmland, and community had been flooded to create what would become the largest lake system in South Carolina.
The political framing was unambiguously progressive: rural electrification, economic development, jobs. What it required was the displacement of approximately 900 families from the land that would be flooded. In 1939–1941 South Carolina, the distribution of who those families were — and what recourse they had — was determined entirely by race.