Slaves’ descendants have long history of enduring hurricanes

‘If God’s coming for you, you can’t run’: South Carolina’s island community of slave descendants explain why they often ride out hurricanes and don’t evacuate

  • Thousands of residents on St Helena Island trace ancestry to West African slaves
  • Opinions of family elders often carry as much weight as those of meterologists
  • Inhabitants used to destructive hurricane and usually stay put where they are
  • Florence is now set to bring 83ft waves, four feet of rain and 13-foot storm surge

As a potentially catastrophic Hurricane Florence steamed toward the Carolinas, Josh Dais watched the weather reports on the TV in his barber shop and listened for updates from emergency officials.

But when it comes to deciding whether to flee St Helena Island, where thousands of black residents trace their ancestry back to West African slaves who once toiled in the fields nearby, the opinions of family elders can carry as much weight as those of professional meteorologists.

‘If Mama won’t leave, most folks aren’t going to leave,’ Dais, 29, said Tuesday, recalling how he rode out Tropical Storm Irma last year and Hurricane Matthew in 2016 with relatives at his mother’s home. ‘If Mama and Grandma are going, then a lot of people are leaving.’

John Brown stands behind a fence for his cows outside his home on St. Helena Island, South Carolina, on Tuesday. Thousands of black residents of the island trace their ancestry back to West African slaves and are deeply rooted in tradition

Respect for tradition and deep cultural roots have persisted for generations on the island, which is the largest Gullah community on the South Carolina coast.

An estimated 5,000 or more people living here are descended from slaves who worked rice plantations in the area before they were freed by the Civil War.

Smaller enclaves of Gullah, referred to as Geechee in some areas, are scattered along the Southeast coast from North Carolina to Florida.


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Scholars say separation from the mainland caused the Gullah to retain much of their African heritage, including a unique dialect and skills such as cast-net fishing and basket weaving.

Destructive hurricanes haven’t been too frequent in St. Helena Island’s past. But the so-called Sea Islands Hurricane of 1893 devastated the area after rolling ashore in Savannah, Georgia, and killed an estimated 2,000 people.

Hurricane Florence is set to bring churning 83ft waves, four feet of rain, a 13-foot storm surge and $170 billion worth of destruction when it hits on Thursday night. Forecasters say it could linger for days.

A utility pole stands in the middle of a marsh at sunset on Sapelo Island, Ga., a Gullah-Geechee community which is used to riding out big storms. Pictured on May 16, 2013

Sapelo Island (pictured in 2013) has been repeatedly lashed by hurricanes, and is vulnerable to storm surges coming in from the sea 

Emory Campbell, a Gullah descendant and scholar, recalled riding as a boy in a neighbor’s old cart on Hilton Head Island as Hurricane Gracie struck in 1959 and tore the roof off a hotel.

‘We saw some remnants of hurricanes here when I was growing up,’ Campbell said. 

‘The wind would blow, you’d put some tin up against the window, but you wouldn’t know that much except for the scratchy sounds on the radio coming out of Savannah.’

Hurricane Matthew smashed and toppled trees across surrounding Beaufort County in 2016 but largely spared the modest ranch houses, bungalows and mobile homes of St. Helena Island.

John Brown, 54, said he spent two weeks after Matthew cutting up fallen trees with a chain saw in his job for a municipal public works department. A giant live oak uprooted by the storm remains intact across the street from Brown’s home.

‘If my job didn’t require me to stay, I’d be out of here in a heartbeat,’ Brown said after giving fresh water to his four cows Tuesday. ‘I think most of the older ones, they’re kind of stubborn. But the younger ones, not so much.’

St Helena residents said people started filling up gas cans and buying supplies Monday when the governor ordered evacuations for the entire South Carolina coast. 

People in the Carolinas have been urged to evacuate their homes before the storm hits. Pictured is a hurricane shelter at Trask Middle School in North Carolina on Tuesday 

Things calmed down Tuesday when the order was lifted for Beaufort County, though some local restaurants and businesses stayed closed.

Florence’s track remained uncertain Wednesday. The National Hurricane Center said the storm is expected to slow as it moves toward the Carolinas and could even change direction before coming ashore.

Bertha Bradley wasn’t worrying. She and her husband grew up on St. Helena Island and own Bradley’s Seafood, a small cinderblock shop where they sell shrimp, flounder and whiting, all caught by their son.

Bradley said she has never favored evacuating ahead of hurricanes, in part because her great-grandmother never did. 

Bradley and her husband missed Gracie in 1959 because they were in Savannah after getting married. One subsequent storm, she’s not sure which one, scared them enough to get them to leave the island.

But the traffic, she said, was awful.

‘I said, ‘Why get on the road like this? I’m going to get killed on the road,” Bradley said. ‘I should stay in my house, where I have water and food. If God’s coming for you, you can’t run from him.’

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