Recreation Economy · Compounding Dispossession · Erasure

Lake Marion:
The Economy Built Over Ferguson

Lake Marion is South Carolina's largest lake and one of the South's premier bass fishing destinations. Santee Cooper, the power authority that created it, is a multi-billion-dollar state utility. The land the lake covers — once farmed by Black families including those of Ferguson — has generated economic value for eight decades. The families who were displaced received inadequate payments in 1941 and nothing since. This thread measures what compounded in their absence.

1942 – Present 110,000-acre lake 83 years of compounding Zero restitution
The Chain

When land is taken from Black families under racially unequal conditions, the loss is not static — it compounds. Every year that the land generates economic value in other hands is another year the original families fall further behind. Lake Marion has been compounding since 1942. The gap between what Ferguson's families have and what they would have had grows every year the lake stays full.

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What Rose Where Ferguson Used to Be

By the time the waters of Lake Marion finished rising in 1942, the Santee Cooper project had created the largest lake in South Carolina — and one of the largest man-made lakes east of the Mississippi. From the beginning, the lake's economic function was multiple: hydroelectric power generation, navigation improvement for the port of Charleston, and eventually, recreation.

In the postwar period, recreation use expanded rapidly. Fishing on Lake Marion was exceptional — the impoundment created ideal habitat for striped bass, largemouth bass, crappie, and catfish, and the lake quickly developed a national reputation among freshwater anglers. State parks were developed along the shoreline. Marinas and boat launches proliferated. By the 1960s, a network of fishing camps, motels, and guides operated across what had been, 25 years earlier, the farmland of Black families including those of Ferguson.

The recreation economy of Lake Marion was overwhelmingly white in its early decades — a reflection both of the racial composition of the region (Jim Crow South Carolina, still deeply segregated through the 1960s) and of the documented exclusion of Black Americans from federal recreation areas, state parks, and the commercial hospitality industry that surrounded the lake.

Santee Cooper: The Utility That Grew From the Flooding

The South Carolina Public Service Authority — Santee Cooper — is today a state-owned electric and water utility serving roughly 2 million South Carolinians. It operates four generating facilities, manages the Santee Cooper lakes system, and has assets valued in the billions. It is one of the largest state-owned utilities in the United States.

Santee Cooper's institutional origin is directly the Santee Cooper project of 1939–1942 — the project that flooded Ferguson and the surrounding Black communities. The utility's foundational asset, the power generation infrastructure and the lake system that enables it, was built on land acquired through racially unequal condemnation proceedings in Jim Crow South Carolina. The institutional wealth that Santee Cooper represents today — its assets, its rate base, its political influence in South Carolina — traces directly to that foundation.

Santee Cooper has never formally acknowledged the racial dimensions of its founding displacement. Its official history describes the project's engineering achievements and its role in South Carolina's economic development. The approximately 900 families displaced — and the specific racial disparities in how that displacement was administered — are not featured in its public institutional history.

Santee Cooper today
Type: State-owned electric and water utility, South Carolina Public Service Authority
Customers: Approximately 2 million South Carolinians served directly or through wholesale distribution
Generation capacity: Approximately 4,000+ megawatts across four facilities
Lake system: Lake Marion (110,000 acres) and Lake Moultrie (60,500 acres)
Annual revenues: Approximately $1.5–2 billion
Foundation: The 1939–1942 project that displaced ~900 families, including the Black community of Ferguson
1942 → 83 Years → The Gap Compounds

What Compounding Looks Like Over Eight Decades

When economists and historians discuss the racial wealth gap, the concept of compounding is central. Wealth compounds: land appreciates, and that appreciation can be borrowed against to generate more wealth; the next generation inherits the asset base and compounds again. When a family is dispossessed — whether through slavery's uncompensated labor, Reconstruction's broken promises, redlining, or a federal dam project — the loss is not the value of what was taken at the moment of taking. The loss is every subsequent year of compounding that did not happen.

The families of Ferguson who received inadequate condemnation payments in 1941 lost not just the value of their land in 1941 dollars. They lost the 83 subsequent years of appreciation, the ability to borrow against that land to start businesses or fund their children's education, the inheritance they could have passed to their children and grandchildren, and the economic security that land ownership in a rural community provides across generations.

The Compounding Gap: What Ferguson's Families Lost Beyond the 1941 Payment
Illustrative calculation of compounding dispossession over eight decades. A Black family holding 40 acres in the Santee Cooper flood zone in 1941 who received a condemnation payment and a family who retained equivalent land outside the flood zone.
Decade What happened for families who kept land What Ferguson families had instead
1940s Rural electrification raised land values; new roads expanded market access; land served as collateral for postwar farm loans Condemnation payment — typically insufficient to buy equivalent land nearby; families relocated to rented housing or smaller plots
1950s Recreation economy around Lake Marion began generating premium values for adjacent land; fishing camp and marina development expanded shoreline values Segregated from the recreation economy; Jim Crow barred Black South Carolinians from most Lake Marion recreation facilities
1960s Agricultural commodity support programs backed by land ownership; Great Society programs for landowners; land could be collateral for SBA loans Without land collateral, limited access to SBA or farm credit; USDA discrimination (documented in Pigford) denied equivalent support to Black farmers who remained
1970s–80s South Carolina land values rose with coastal development boom; lakefront property began commanding significant premiums Displacement from land base meant no participation in the appreciation; families were now wage workers, not landowners, in an economy where landowners were getting rich
1990s–2000s Lake Marion region developed as retirement and recreation destination; lakefront lots selling for multiples of agricultural value No share of lakefront premium; the specific land their families owned — now under the lake — generating value for the recreation economy and for Santee Cooper
2010s–Present South Carolina land appreciation accelerated; remote work drove demand for lake property; lakefront values at historic highs Descendants now three and four generations removed from the original dispossession; the compounding gap is at its widest point

This table illustrates the mechanism of compounding dispossession, not a precise dollar calculation. The actual wealth gap created by the Santee Cooper project's racially unequal displacement has never been formally calculated by any government body. No restitution mechanism exists for descendants of the displaced families.

The Lake Today: What Grows Where Ferguson Was

Lake Marion today is South Carolina's largest lake and one of the most productive freshwater fisheries in the eastern United States. The Santee Cooper lakes attract hundreds of thousands of visitors annually. State parks line the shoreline. Resorts, marinas, and fishing guides operate across the region. The town of Santee, on the lake's southern shore, is a significant tourism hub — hotels, restaurants, fishing charter services, and recreational equipment retailers cluster around the lake access points.

The property values on and near Lake Marion have appreciated substantially over the eight decades since the lake was created. Lakefront homes command prices far above inland equivalents. The South Carolina low country, once one of the poorest regions of one of the poorest states, has seen significant real estate appreciation driven in part by the recreational amenity that the Santee Cooper lakes provide.

Ferguson, South Carolina is not marked at the lake. There is no interpretive sign at any Lake Marion recreation area that identifies the Black communities that were submerged to create it. Santee Cooper's visitor materials do not mention Ferguson. The oral history collection at the University of South Carolina's South Caroliniana Library remains the most accessible documentation of what the flooding took — and it is an academic archive, not a public memorial.

Where Ferguson's Families Went

The families displaced by the Santee Cooper flooding dispersed across South Carolina and into the cities of the North and Midwest that were receiving the Great Migration's second wave in the early 1940s. Some settled in Columbia. Some went to Charleston. Some followed the migration routes to New York, Philadelphia, and Detroit that their relatives had taken a generation earlier.

The displacement was not merely geographic. Families who had been self-sufficient lowcountry farmers — who had owned their land and built their community over generations — became urban renters or rural wage workers. The land ownership that had provided economic security, community identity, and intergenerational wealth transfer was gone. What replaced it was a wage economy structured, in Jim Crow South Carolina and in the segregated urban North, around racial barriers to advancement.

Organizations of descendants have formed in recent decades to document and preserve the history of the Santee Cooper flood zone communities. Community reunions, oral history projects, and efforts to locate and protect the submerged cemeteries have kept the history alive at the community level. None of these efforts have been supported by restitution, formal apology, or any institutional acknowledgment from Santee Cooper or the state of South Carolina.

"My grandmother told the story every year. How they came and measured the land and told them what it was worth. She said: 'They told us what our home was worth and we couldn't say different.' She never stopped being angry about it."

— Descendant testimony; South Caroliniana Library oral history collection, University of South Carolina

A National Pattern in Local Water

Oscarville, Georgia. Ferguson, South Carolina. Lake Lanier. Lake Marion. These are not isolated stories — they are instances of a national pattern in which the infrastructure of American economic development was built by displacing Black communities on racially unequal terms, generating economic benefits that flowed primarily to white Americans, and leaving no mechanism for the displaced families to share in what grew on top of their loss.

Researchers have documented this pattern across hundreds of federal and state infrastructure projects: the TVA's dam system displaced Black communities throughout Tennessee, Alabama, and Kentucky; the interstate highway system bisected or demolished Black urban neighborhoods across the country; urban renewal programs in Northern cities destroyed Black residential and commercial communities in the name of development that then served other populations. In each case, the costs were disproportionately Black and the benefits disproportionately white.

The lakes are a particularly complete form of this pattern because the submersion is total and permanent. Unlike a neighborhood that was demolished — where at least the land remains, where descendants could in theory return or be compensated — a submerged community is gone in a way that forecloses even the physical possibility of return. The water makes the erasure literal.

What remains is the accounting question that no government in the United States has chosen to open: what is owed to the descendants of families whose land, community, and wealth-building capacity was taken to build the infrastructure that everyone else uses? The lakes are still full. The debt is still outstanding.

The Full Chain: 1942 Flooding → Compounding → Present Gap

Ferguson
submerged 1942
No land base
for descendants
83 years of
compounding lost
Santee Cooper:
$1.5B/yr utility
Gap at its
widest point now

The lake is still full.

Ferguson has been underwater for 83 years. Santee Cooper has been generating revenue on top of it for 83 years. Not one dollar of that revenue has gone to the families whose land it covers.