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Princeville Works To Save Homes And History One Year After Hurricane Matthew

A new sign hangs outside the closed and condemned Princeville Town Hall.  It reads: "Princeville is Coming Back."
Leoneda Inge
/
WUNC
A new sign hangs outside the closed and condemned Princeville Town Hall. It reads: "Princeville is Coming Back."
A new sign hangs outside the closed and condemned Princeville Town Hall.  It reads: "Princeville is Coming Back."
Leoneda Inge
A new sign hangs outside the closed and condemned Princeville Town Hall. It reads: "Princeville is Coming Back."

It's been one year since Hurricane Matthew devastated the tiny town of Princeville.  The mighty storm forced millions of gallons of water to swell past a levee along the Tar River, flooding most of the historic African-American community.

When you drive up and down the streets of Princeville today, there are many signs of Hurricane Matthew’s aftermath. The fire station remains empty except for some old, soiled uniforms. The museum next door is closed. So is the only elementary school and the Town Hall. 

Princeville Mayor Bobbie Jones often stops by the Town Hall, even though he hasn't officiated business there in a year. Outside the building is a sign that reads, “Princeville is Coming Back.” Jones looks a little thinner and grayer since Matthew hit.

"I wonder why?" laughs Jones. "I'm trying to get my people home. And it’s a long, tedious process. But progress is being made so we’re hopeful they’ll be home soon.”

Princeville’s mostly black population is usually around 2,200 people, but many residents have not returned yet. It is believed nearly half of the town’s residents were initially displaced by Matthew’s floodwaters.Leoneda Inge reports on the Town of Princeville, one year after it was flooded by Hurricane Matthew.

Last weekend, town leaders organized what looked like a welcome home celebration to let residents know they’re still here. They even sang a song called the "Princeville Anthem," that went like this:

“Oh Freedom, Freedom Hill, we built thee round by round. From thy bosom Princeville came, birthed from your hallowed ground.”

The brand new "Princeville Anthem" and a new Princeville flag, waving outside the condemned Town Hall, were born after Matthew’s wrath.

Princeville Commissioner Linda Joyner speaking at the town celebration September 30, 2017.
Leoneda Inge
Princeville Commissioner Linda Joyner speaking at the town celebration September 30, 2017.

“Today we just want to do something to lift your spirits and just to say 'Join hands, and pull through this together'," said Town Commissioner Linda Joyner. "Because this is the only way we will make it back, by doing this together.”

The Town of Princeville has some big decisions to make. When Hurricane Floyd destroyed the town 18 years ago, officials voted not to accept a buy-out and move to higher ground.

This time, post Matthew, the state of North Carolina is planning to purchase 52 acres to extend Princeville’s boundaries and encourage development on higher ground. It is two miles from the town’s historic Freedom Hill, where former slaves sought refuge after the Civil War. 

 “So it means a lot to me, I do not want to have to move off of that land, you know," said Princeville native Jeanell Person.

Person was born and raised in Princeville, a couple of blocks from Freedom Hill. She left for several years but moved back after her father died. After Matthew, her family was displaced for almost seven months. Still, Person wants to stay put.

“My father, he had like a ninth grade education and he couldn’t read and write and so him and my mom struggled to keep that land there and I don’t want to move from where I am,” said Person.

A group of well-seasoned landscape architects and planners from across the country, along with graduate students and other experts, have come up with drawings and design-options to be considered for the 52-acre site.

A mural of Princeville's history remains in tact, tucked away in a community park not far from the town hall.
Leoneda Inge
A mural of Princeville's history remains in tact, tucked away in a community park not far from the town hall.

Kofi Boone is a professor of Landscape Architecture at N.C. State and was a part of the Princeville workshop. Boone says Princeville residents expected work by the Army Corps of Engineers would have minimized flooding.  

“We are Americans as well. We deserve that level of safety and protection just like everybody else. So that tendency to say, 'No, we don’t want to relocate, you all need to do your job,' is a reasonable response by a community,” said Boone.

But Princeville has flooded twice in nearly 20 years.

Gavin Smith, professor of City and Regional Planning at UNC Chapel Hill, is leading the design project. He and Boone say moving critical facilities like the fire department, to less vulnerable land is a real option. Smith says he understands the need to link that site to Princeville’s history.

“There is unbelievable history and culture in the town but if you were to drive through it without really knowing, you might just drive through and see the one sign that says Freedom Hill,” said Smith.

And with the 52 acres being adjacent to Highway 64, business options could open up, helping a tax base that is mostly reliant on home owners.

Mayor Bobbie Jones can see businesses and a new housing development constructed on the 52 acres. But not the Town Hall.

“It does not make sense for us to move the Town Hall and ask the citizens to come back but we’re not coming back. What message are we sending?" said Jones. "If we move the Town Hall, but tell the citizens to come back, are we saying that the town is not safe?”   

The design options have not been approved yet. Maybe one plan will include an elevated Town Hall, overlooking Freedom Hill.

Copyright 2017 North Carolina Public Radio

Leoneda Inge is WUNC’s race and southern culture reporter, the first public radio journalist in the South to hold such a position. She explores modern and historical constructs to tell stories of poverty and wealth, health and food culture, education and racial identity. Leoneda is also co-host of the podcast Tested, allowing for even more in-depth storytelling on those topics.
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