Why the Family May Have Sold, and How We Can Stop It from Happening Again

For decades, the property at 1102 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr Drive sat in the hands of the
Crumbsby family. It was heir property, land passed down through generations, once representing stability and pride. But by 2018, after years of probate proceedings and out-of-state heirs, the family sold both lots for $14,250.
Today, those same parcels hold newly built “twin” homes that sold for more than $400,000 each, and property taxes that used to be a few hundred dollars have soared to nearly $5,000 a year.
The records suggest the heirs’ decision wasn’t about greed, it was about pressure and distance.
The original owner had passed away, leaving several relatives scattered across different states. Maintaining a vacant lot from hundreds of miles away, paying yearly taxes, and navigating legal paperwork was likely overwhelming. Add in a developer’s offer of quick cash, before the family could realize what was coming to the neighborhood, and the sale became almost inevitable.
Once that land left the family’s hands, so did a piece of their legacy. The return on that $14,000 sale is now reaping profits for developers, not descendants. What was once affordable, Black-owned ground is now part of a new wave of redevelopment that few of the original families can afford to return to.
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