HomeTop StoriesThe Georgia beach town of Tybee Island is trying to curb Orange...

The Georgia beach town of Tybee Island is trying to curb Orange Crush, the large annual gathering of black students

Tybee Island, Georgia. — Thousands of black students expected this weekend for an annual spring celebration at Georgia’s largest public beach will be greeted by dozens of additional police officers and barricades closing nearby streets. Although the beach remains open, officials are blocking access to nearby parking lots.

Tybee Island, east of Savannah, has been struggling with the April beach party known as Orange Crush since students at Savannah State University, a historically black school, started it more than three decades ago. Residents regularly grumbled about loud music, trash strewn in the sand and revelers urinating in courtyards.

These complaints culminated in fear and outrage a year ago when a record crowd estimated at more than 100,000 people flooded the five-kilometre-long island. That left a small police force to deal with a flood of emergency calls reporting gunfire, drug overdoses, traffic jams and fistfights.

Mayor Brian West, elected last fall by Tybee Island’s 3,100 residents, said roadblocks and added police aren’t just to limit crowds. He hopes the crackdown will drive Orange Crush away for good.

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‘This has to stop. We can’t have this crowd anymore,” West said. “My goal is to end it.”

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Workers place a section of metal barricade along a main road on Tybee Island, Georgia, on April 16, 2024, a few days ahead of the weekend beach party known as Orange Crush. Black students started the spring meet on Georgia’s largest public beach more than three decades ago. Tybee Island officials blocked roads and parking lots and brought in about 100 extra police officers for the party this weekend, saying last year’s record crowds proved unruly and dangerous.

AP Photo/Russ Bynum


Last year, city officials called the unauthorized beach party too chaotic and said it caused traffic wrecks and gridlock throughout Tybee, according to CBS Savannah affiliate WTOC-TV. The station reports that Interim City Manager Michelle Owens says the changes are intended to keep traffic flowing and are similar to measures other beach communities have taken for major spring events.

Racism a factor?

Critics say local officials are overreacting and appear to be singling out black visitors to a southern beach that only white people could use until 1963. They note that Tybee Island draws large crowds on the Fourth of July and other summer weekends when visitors are largely white. just like 92% of the island’s residents.

“Our weekends are full of people all season long, but when Orange Crush comes they close the parking lot, bring in extra police and act like they have to take charge,” said Julia Pearce, one of the island’s few black residents and leader of a group. called the Tybee MLK Human Rights Organization. She added: “They believe black people are criminals.”

During the week, workers installed metal barricades to close off parking meters and residential streets along the main road parallel to the beach. Two large car parks at a popular pier will be closed. And Tybee Island’s roughly two dozen police officers will be supplemented by about 100 deputies, Georgia State Troopers and other officers.

Security plans were affected by tactics used last month to reduce crowds and violence during spring break in Miami Beachwhich was observed by the Tybee Island Police Chief.

Officials defend the moves

Officials insist they are taking action to prevent a repeat of last year’s Orange Crush party, which they say became a public safety crisis with crowds at least twice as large as normal.

“To me, it has nothing to do with race,” said West, who believes city officials previously did not take a stronger stance against Orange Crush because they feared being called racist. “We cannot let that be a reason to make our citizens unsafe, and we will not do that.”

Tybee Island police reported a total of 26 arrests during Orange Crush last year. The charges included one count of armed robbery with a firearm, four counts of fighting in public and five counts of DUI. Two officers reported being pelted with bottles, and two women told police they had been beaten and robbed of a bag.

On a gridlocked highway about a mile from the island, someone shot a gun at a car, wounding one person. A white man was charged in the shooting, which officials said was due to road rage.

Both supporters and opponents of Orange Crush say it is not the students who are causing the biggest problems.

Joshua Miller, a 22-year-old senior at Savannah State University who plans to attend this weekend, said he wouldn’t be surprised if the crackdown was at least partially motivated by race.

“I don’t know what they have in store,” Miller said. ‘I don’t go there with bad intentions. I just go there to have fun.”

Ironic twist

Savannah Mayor Van Johnson was among the black students from Savannah State who helped launch Orange Crush in 1988. The university dropped its involvement in the 1990s, and Johnson said the celebration “went off the rails” over time. But he also told reporters he was concerned about the “overrepresentation of police” at the beach party.

At 1971 Nickie’s Bar & Grill, just off the beach, general manager Sean Ensign said many nearby shops and eateries will close for Orange Crush, although his will remain open and sell takeout as last year. But with nearby parking lots closed, Ensign said its profits could take a hit, “possibly a few thousand dollars.”

This isn’t the first time Tybee Island has focused on the Black Beach party. In 2017, the city council banned alcohol and amplified music on the beach only during Orange Crush weekend. A discrimination complaint to the U.S. Department of Justice led city officials to sign a non-binding agreement to impose uniform rules for large events.

West says Orange Crush is different because it is promoted on social media by people who are not licensed. A new state law allows local governments to recoup public safety costs from organizers of unauthorized events.

In February, Great Britain Wigfall was denied a permit for space on the island for food trucks during Orange Crush. The mayor said Wigfall has continued to promote events on the island.

Wigfall, 30, said he is promoting a concert in Savannah this weekend, but nothing on Tybee Island involving Orange Crush.

“It’s out of my control,” Wigfall said. “Nobody has control over the date people go there.”

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