News

Black Family Closes 7-Figure Real Estate Deal to Recreate Modern-Day Black Wall Street in Mississippi

After nearly a year of negotiations and renegotiations, entrepreneur Tony A. Reimonenq Jr, his wife, and his three sons have purchased a 20-unit strip mall in the Oak Grove community of Hattiesburg, Mississippi that they will transform into a local version of Tulsa, Oklahoma’s Historic Greenwood District also known as the original Black Wall Street.

With this purchase, the family has become one of the state’s arguably three percent of African Americans to have ever independently brokered a million-dollar deal. The establishment will be named Greenwood Plaza, and it is the second major commercial expansion of their family-owned firm, Reimonenq & Co LLC.

The purchase is another step closer to the Reimonenq family’s mission of recasting the historic Black Wall Street of Tulsa, Oklahoma’s Greenwood District as well as the unsung Black Wall Street of Mound Bayou, Mississippi. The family wants to follow suit in empowering and equipping individuals to become entrepreneurs.

“I’ve always had a heart to help others succeed, but to do that I first had to succeed,” says Tony, who is CEO of the family business. “I’ve dreamed of having a location from which others like myself can work and draw inspiration from Tulsa’s Greenwood District.”

“I want to empower the people at the bottom of the pyramid who just need an opportunity,” he added. “They aren’t lazy. They work hard but just haven’t learned how to win yet. I know how and want to link up with them to be a part of helping to not only change the trajectory of their lives and the lives of their families but of our communities as a whole. I see it as a civic duty.”

Tulsa’s Greenwood District

Tulsa’s Black Wall Street was birthed when O.W. Gurley, a wealthy businessman from Arkansas, moved to Tulsa in 1906. Gurley opened a store on 40 acres of land he purchased and named the street on which it sat after a city in Mississippi called Greenwood. After adding a hotel and mason lodge, he sold land to other African Americans who also began creating various businesses and services.

The Small Business Administration’s District Director Janita Stewart says that small businesses and their growth are critical to Mississippi’s economy and sees Greenwood Plaza as a necessary component in helping to nurture and sustain local ventures. It is ideal for trade schools, supply stores, barber shops, beauty salons, insurance, real estate brokers, medical offices, lending institutions, caterers, florists, and events or corporate meetings. She comments, “Having a resource to help someone start a business or grow an existing one situated under the same roof is a great asset. Small businesses and entrepreneurs need various resources to do what they do best, which is to create, make, sell something, or provide a viable service.”

In spite of the pandemic, there has been a net growth in small businesses over the course of the past couple of years. In accordance with the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Office of Advocacy, Mississippi small businesses saw a slight increase from 262,272 to 264,858 with some of these new starts created out of necessity.

“When small businesses succeed, so does the economy,” she adds.

Successful entrepreneur Dee Brown believes such services are critically important to the success of small businesses. Dee is the Founder and CEO of The P3 Group, Inc., the nation’s largest African American-owned, public-private partnership real estate development firm with several offices spread throughout the country, including Jackson, MS. He is also a member of the FORBES Real Estate Council and has been a mentor and associate of Tony for more than a decade. He comments, “Training is important because inadequate management is one of the leading causes of small business failure. Most small business owners fail because they lack access to capital, have poor management, or fall victim to poor planning and execution.”

Sealing the Deal

Tony admits that negotiating the deal had its challenges. When he first saw the sprawling property three years ago, he had a “gut feeling” to buy it even though it wasn’t for sale. Being drawn to the property, he would drive by to view it thinking of how he could use it. When realtors London & Stetleman did post a for sale sign, Tony came in with an offer below their asking price. When both parties agreed upon the sale price that’s when Tony began running into roadblocks. Several banks turned down his loan request stating concern about equity sufficiency, timing, or responding they weren’t financing “the type” of loan he needed. But he pressed on.

“I had a strong feeling that just wouldn’t go away,” recalls Tony. “I continued talking and going back and forth negotiating with lenders to make it work.”

Past memories of painful business experiences also helped fuel Reimonenq’s drive in moving forward. They were experiences he wants to prevent others from having.

When asked to name a bad experience, he said, “being priced out of prime locations”.

After some months, surprisingly he struck a creative financing deal that offered him an even better rate and terms than the banks. Even still, he proceeded with caution, being careful to weigh every word in the fine print.

“Several times it looked like it wasn’t going to happen, and other times it looked like we were off to the races,” says Tony.

Closer to the end of the process, Tony became aware of a binding clause in the contract that could have proven fatal to his enterprise had he rushed to sign. Although the clause was legal and common practice, he wasn’t knowledgeable of the practice and its consequences. So, he was ready to call off the deal.

“There were some practices that I personally had never faced before until this point,” he says. “You can’t assume everything is straightforward. Even with good credit, a good down payment, and business history, you can still face roadblocks.”

Once Tony stated his final terms, the buyer agreed, and he had successfully expanded Reimonenq & Co., LLC into a more lucrative enterprise that could now help manifest his vision of empowering and equipping other minorities to dream and achieve.

Real estate broker, Bruna Bezerra of B & Co Realty, believes that the Plaza is just what is needed to promote business growth in the area.

Related Posts

Trump promises ‘no retribution’ when he enters the White House… but does reveal where he draws the line

Donald Trump promised he’s ‘not looking for retribution’ when he enters the White House in January despite vowing to throw his enemies in jail on the campaign trail. Despite the assurance, however, Trump pointed out he ‘obviously’ has the ‘upper hand’ and declared that he would draw the line after a certain amount of betrayal. ‘I am not looking for retribution, grandstanding or to destroy people who treated me very unfairly, or even badly beyond comprehension,’ he told Fox News Digital.

Labour’s jobs bloodbath: Bank of England chief joins Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s, Boots and Amazon warning of cuts after Rachel Reeves’ £25bn national insurance raid

The Bank of England governor today joined Britain’s biggest retailers warning that job cuts are ‘inevitable’ after Rachel Reeves’ monster national insurance raid. Andrew Bailey said dozens of businesses – including Tesco, Asda and Sainsbury’s – had been ‘right’ to sound the alarm in an open letter to the Chancellor. Ms Reeves unveiled an extraordinary £25billion hike in employers’ NICs in the Budget last month. The rate has been raised and the threshold at which firms must pay has been cut, with ministers adamant it was the only way to prop up public services.

Moment reporters frantically search for checked out Biden as lame duck president misses photo with G20 leaders: ‘He’s behind the palm tree!’

Reporters could be heard calling out for President Joe Biden as world leaders at the G20 Summit in Rio de Janeiro gathered for a final photo, but the 81-year-old leader was a no-show. Biden was nowhere to be seen until moments after the picture was taken when photographers and reporters frantically searched for the leader of the free world until one cameraman spotted him behind a nearby palm tree. In footage shot by CSPAN there appeared to be utter confusion as dignitaries were unsure whether to leave the risers erected for the photo or to stay put and wait for Biden to return.

Arctic blast grips Britain: Temperature plummets to -11.2C in ‘first taste of winter’ as commuters brace for travel chaos – as map shows where more snow and ice will fall today

An Arctic blast has hit Britain in the country’s first major taste of winter this year – with drivers getting stuck, trains cancelled and warnings of more icy weather ahead as temperatures plunged to -11.2C and snow started falling in the capital London. Traffic problems have been reported around major cities including Leeds as the Met Office issued a severe weather warning of snow and ice – as it got as cold overnight as -11.2C in the Scottish village of Braemar and -10.7C in Tulloch Bridge in the Highlands. The reading in Braemar was described as the coldest Britain has been at this time of the year since 1998.

Trans congresswoman Sarah McBride blasts Republicans after proposal that would block her from using women’s bathroom on Capitol Hill

A trans war has broken out on Capitol Hill after a Republican lawmaker proposed a measure that would block the first transgender member of Congress from using biological women’s restrooms in the U.S. Capitol. Rep. Nancy Mace is pushing for the new rule ahead of the arrival of Congresswoman-elect Sarah McBride, who will take office in January as the first openly-trans lawmaker in the United States. McBride blasted Republicans after the proposal, claiming they were using it as a ‘distraction’ tactic.

Pink Floyd legend’s property nightmare: Dave Gilmour is trying to sell his £10m mansion… but an admin error means he doesn’t actually own it

Pink Floyd legend David Gilmour is trying to sell a £10million mansion that he doesn’t actually legally own, MailOnline can reveal. Gilmour, 78, recently discovered that a legal oversight means the six-bedroom property he and his wife Polly Samson have lived in for years is actually owned by the Crown. Now he is suing the government to correct the mistake so that he can finally sell it.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *