The Tybee Island, Georgia Black History Trail: A Community Approach To Black Geographies
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-18-2024
Publication Title
Geographical Review
DOI
10.1080/00167428.2024.2406362
Abstract
Tybee Island, Georgia, was a colonial borderland between Spanish and British America before evolving into a middle-class, seaside resort in the 1800s. It continued as a popular vacation spot in the twentieth century. However, research has highlighted the island’s troubling history of racial segregation, particularly surrounding events like the Orange Crush Beach Party. Previous studies also underscored the Historical Society ignoring the island’s Black history in its exhibits. Building on this, a collaborative project emerged in 2021 involving a Georgia Southern University faculty member and undergraduate student, Tybee MLK Human Rights Organization, and Tybee Island Historical Society. The goal was to create a Black History Trail highlighting a rich yet ignored Black history and culture on the island and addressing the exclusion of Tybee’s Black population from museums and markers. This project integrates community geography, focusing on resolving problems like social exclusion, and exploring spatialities of Black life, social oppressions, and resistance. Utilizing archival research, oral history interviews, and ArcGIS, the project developed a 13-stop virtual tour using ESRI Story Maps. We conclude our paper by highlighting the lessons learned during the trail’s development, the multitude of ways the trail embodies the theory of Black geographies in practice, and the broader challenges in honoring Tybee’s Black geographies. Keywords: community geography, Black geographies, Tybee Island, tourism, memory
Disclosure Statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Recommended Citation
Potter, Amy, Julia Pearce, Patricia Leiby, Joyah Michell, Allen Lewis.
2024.
"The Tybee Island, Georgia Black History Trail: A Community Approach To Black Geographies."
Geographical Review: Taylor and Francis Online.
doi: 10.1080/00167428.2024.2406362
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/geo-facpubs/215
Comments
Georgia Southern University faculty member, Amy Potter, co-authored, The Tybee Island, Georgia Black History Trail: A Community Approach To Black Geographies.