Samantha Porter - Keller Williams Preferred Properties

Samantha Porter - Keller Williams Preferred Properties Providing real estate service in the Metropolitan area as a licensed real estate agent.

📍 Reduced Price 📍 This recently reduced home at 1420 V Street Se in Washington won't last long, so, don't wait to set up...
03/24/2026

📍 Reduced Price 📍 This recently reduced home at 1420 V Street Se in Washington won't last long, so, don't wait to set up a showing! Reach out here or at (240) 640-3285 for more information!

**SHORT SALE** Welcome to 1420 V Street SE, a beautifully situated 2-bedroom, 1.5-bath semi-detached rowhome in the heart of Historic Anacostia. This inviting home blends classic character with thoughtful updates, offering a unique chance to step into homeownership in one of DC's fastest-growing ...

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 7 of 7 You have walked with me through history this week. Through ba...
02/28/2026

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 7 of 7


You have walked with me through history this week. Through bank lobbies where they said no. Through neighborhoods built on determination. Through kitchen table strategies and modern applications. Through the lies that try to stop you and the hard middle that tests you.

Now we arrive at the only question that matters: What will you build?

Because here is the truth that ties everything together: You are not just buying property. You are continuing a legacy. Every Black woman who built before you is watching. Not with judgment. With hope. With the same fire that burned in their chests when they signed papers that changed their family trees forever.

The woman in 1968 who walked out of that bank with her head high? She did not know your name. But she was building for you. Every sacrifice she made, every side door she found, every no she transformed into anyway was a brick in a foundation you now stand on.

And the foundation is asking you a question: Will you keep building?

This is what I know after years in this DMV market: The opportunities are here. Prince George's County with its Black wealth and appreciation potential. Montgomery County with its strong schools and stable values. The District itself, where every neighborhood tells a story of resilience. Maryland. Virginia. The entire metropolitan area is filled with doors waiting for the right key.

Your key.

The strategies work. The Susu circles and accountability groups. The house hacks and ADU conversions. The multi-generational plays and family investment structures. The creative financing that finds yes when banks say no. All of it works. It worked for them. It will work for you.

But strategies without action are just ideas. And ideas do not build generational wealth. Decisions do.

So here is your invitation: Decide. Decide that you are a builder. Decide that the voice that lies does not get the final word. Decide that the hard middle will not stop you. Decide that your grandchildren will tell stories about the woman who changed everything.

That woman is you.

The women who built before you did not wait until they felt ready. They did not wait until the market was perfect. They did not wait until the fear went away. They built despite everything.

Now you build.

What is waiting below is your first step. Not the last step. The first one. The one that turns intention into action and dreams into deeds.

Your ancestors are cheering. Your descendants are waiting. The legacy continues with you.

⬇️

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 6 of 7 Nobody told you it would be easy. But nobody told you it woul...
02/27/2026

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 6 of 7


Nobody told you it would be easy. But nobody told you it would be this hard either.

The offer that fell through. The inspection that revealed problems. The financing that got complicated at the last minute. The family member who questioned your decision. The moment at 3am when you wondered if you made a terrible mistake.

This is the part of the journey they do not put on vision boards.

But here is what you need to know: Every woman who built before you stood exactly where you are standing. In the hard middle. In the uncertain space between starting and succeeding. In the gap where faith is the only thing holding the bridge together.

Mrs. Thompson bought her first property in 1961. Three months later, the furnace died. She did not have money for a new one. She heated that house with space heaters and prayer for two winters while she saved. She never sold. That property funded her grandson's college education.

Mrs. Robinson closed on a duplex in 1978. Her first tenant stopped paying rent after four months. She worked double shifts for a year to cover both units while she learned landlord law and found better tenants. She never sold. That duplex is now worth six times what she paid.

Mrs. Carter invested in a fixer-upper in 1995. The renovation went over budget by forty percent. She borrowed from her Susu sisters and paid them back over three years. She never sold. Her daughter lives there now, mortgage-free.

The hard part is not a sign you are doing it wrong. The hard part is the price of admission to generational wealth.

Every strategy from Part 3, every modern application from Part 4, every mindset shift from Part 5 will be tested. Not because the universe is against you. But because building something that lasts requires a foundation that can hold weight.

The women who built before you did not have easier circumstances. They had unshakeable commitment.

Part 7 brings everything together. The complete picture of what becomes possible when you build despite everything.

Below this post is a resource for the woman in the hard middle who refuses to quit. You know if that is you.

⬇️

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 5 of 7 There is a voice. You know the one.It whispers at 2am when yo...
02/26/2026

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 5 of 7


There is a voice. You know the one.

It whispers at 2am when you cannot sleep. It speaks up when you see a listing you love. It gets loud when someone mentions investment properties or generational wealth.

The voice says: That is for other people. Not for you.

It says: You do not have enough saved. You do not know enough. You do not come from enough.

It says: Who do you think you are?

And here is what I need you to understand: That voice is not yours. That voice was installed. By a system that profits when you stay small. By a history that tried to keep your ancestors out. By a culture that benefits when Black women doubt themselves.

The women who built before you? They heard that same voice. Louder, actually. Because the voice had laws backing it up. Had banks enforcing it. Had entire neighborhoods with covenants that said the quiet part out loud.

And they built anyway.

Not because they did not feel the fear. But because they refused to let the fear make the decision.

Mrs. Johnson in 1955, hands shaking as she signed papers for her first property, voice screaming that she was making a mistake. She signed anyway.

Mrs. Williams in 1972, stomach in knots as she put in an offer on a duplex, voice insisting she was reaching too high. She reached anyway.

Mrs. Davis in 1989, heart pounding as she closed on her third rental property, voice warning that her luck would run out. She kept building anyway.

The courage from Part 1. The neighborhoods from Part 2. The strategies from Part 3. The modern applications from Part 4. None of it matters if you let the voice win.

The voice is not wisdom. The voice is not protection. The voice is the echo of every person and system that ever tried to keep Black women from building wealth.

You are not betraying caution by ignoring it. You are honoring ancestors by refusing to let their enemies win.

Part 6 addresses what happens when you start building and it gets hard. Because it will get hard. And you need to be ready.

Something below was created for the woman who is ready to stop listening to the lie. That might be you.

⬇️

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 4 of 7 The year is 2024. The DMV market looks nothing like 1968. Pri...
02/25/2026

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 4 of 7


The year is 2024. The DMV market looks nothing like 1968. Prices are higher. Competition is fiercer. The obstacles have new names.

But the blueprint? The blueprint still works.

Because the women who built before you were not playing a different game. They were playing the same game with fewer pieces. And they still won.

Let me show you what I mean.

The Susu becomes the accountability group. Five friends. Same goal. Monthly contributions to a shared investment fund. When one of you is ready to buy, the group provides the down payment boost. Modern technology, ancestral wisdom.

The House Hack becomes the ADU strategy. That basement apartment. That garage conversion. That English basement in your Capitol Hill rowhouse. Your tenant still pays your mortgage while you build equity. Same mathematics. New vocabulary.

The Multi-Generational Play becomes the family investment LLC. Pool resources legally. Buy property together. Build wealth as a unit. The IRS has forms for what your great-grandmother did with a handshake.

The Seller Financing Secret becomes the creative deal structure. Lease options. Subject-to agreements. Owner carry-back notes. Sellers still say yes when banks say no. You just need to know how to ask.

Here is what the women who built before you understood: The system was never designed for you to win. So you do not play by the system's rules. You play by your own.

They looked at redlining and found workarounds. They looked at discrimination and found side doors. They looked at impossible and found anyway.

The strategies from Part 3 are not history lessons. They are instruction manuals.

Prince George's County. Montgomery County. The District itself. The geography has expanded but the principles remain identical. Find the opportunity others overlook. Pool resources with people you trust. Buy and hold for generations, not quarters.

Part 5 addresses the voice in your head that says this is for other people. That voice is lying.

What is waiting below might be exactly the permission you need. Take a look.

⬇️

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 3 of 7 They did not have YouTube tutorials. They did not have real e...
02/24/2026

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 3 of 7


They did not have YouTube tutorials. They did not have real estate podcasts. They did not have Instagram accounts breaking down investment strategies.

They had kitchen tables.

And at those kitchen tables, over sweet tea and pound cake, Black women in the DMV passed down wealth-building secrets that Wall Street has never understood.

The Susu. The savings circle. The informal lending network where ten women each put in fifty dollars a month and one woman took home five hundred. No banks. No interest. No credit checks. Just trust built over generations and sealed with a handshake.

This is how they accumulated down payments when down payments seemed impossible.

The House Hack before anyone called it that. Buying a home with extra rooms and renting them out to cover the mortgage. Your tenant pays your note while you build equity. Simple mathematics that turned domestic workers into landlords.

The Multi-Generational Play. Three generations under one roof not because they had to, but because they understood something: shared expenses meant accelerated savings. Grandma's social security plus Mama's salary plus your income equals a down payment in eighteen months instead of eighteen years.

The Seller Financing Secret. When banks said no, they found sellers who would say yes. Owners willing to carry the note, to become the bank themselves, because they recognized hunger and hustle when they saw it.

These were not just survival tactics. They were sophisticated financial strategies dressed in house dresses and church hats.

The courage we honored in Part 1 and the neighborhoods we explored in Part 2 were built on these exact strategies. Passed from mother to daughter. Aunt to niece. Church mother to young bride.

And here is what matters most: Every single one of these strategies still works today.

Part 4 shows you how to apply these ancestral blueprints to the current DMV market, where the same principles create the same results.

Below this post is a direct line to continuing what they started. It is worth your attention.

⬇️

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 2 of 7 LeDroit Park. Shaw. Anacostia. Brookland. These names mean so...
02/23/2026

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 2 of 7


LeDroit Park. Shaw. Anacostia. Brookland. These names mean something.

Before they were trendy. Before the coffee shops and the condos. Before anyone was talking about investment potential and appreciation rates. Black women were building there.

Not because it was fashionable. Because it was survival. Because it was strategy. Because it was the only geography where their money was welcome.

And here is what the history books leave out: They did not just buy houses. They bought blocks. They bought futures. They created entire ecosystems of Black wealth in a city that tried everything to prevent exactly that.

Picture her in 1952. A domestic worker in Northwest D.C., cleaning houses for families who would never let her live on their street. Every week, she took a portion of that paycheck and put it away. Not in a bank that would reject her. In a shoebox. In a coffee can. In the hands of a trusted friend who ran an informal savings circle.

And when she had enough, she bought a rowhouse in Shaw for what would be pocket change today.

That rowhouse? It is worth over a million dollars now.

But the real wealth was never just the property. It was the proof. Proof that Black women could own. Could build. Could create something permanent in a world that wanted them temporary.

They passed down more than deeds. They passed down blueprints. How to save when saving seems impossible. How to buy when buying seems out of reach. How to build when building seems like a dream for other people.

The woman who cleaned houses raised a daughter who bought her own house. That daughter raised a son who became a developer. Three generations. One vision. Exposed brick and original hardwood floors carrying the fingerprints of ancestors.

In Part 1, we honored the courage it took to walk into banks that did not want them. Now we see what that courage built: neighborhoods, legacies, and a roadmap that still works.

Part 3 uncovers the exact wealth-building strategies these women used, strategies you can apply to your own journey in the DMV market today.

There is something waiting below that connects this history to your future. Check it.

⬇️

She walked into that bank in 1968 with her dignity pressed sharp as her Sunday hat. They told her no. Not because she co...
02/22/2026

She walked into that bank in 1968 with her dignity pressed sharp as her Sunday hat. They told her no. Not because she couldn't afford it—because she was a Black woman who dared to believe she deserved to own something. But something inside her already knew the truth they tried to deny. That knowing, that instinct planted before she took her first breath, refused to accept their verdict as final. She found another way. She always found another way. The women who built before you didn't have easier circumstances. They had unshakeable purpose. They looked at redlining and found workarounds. They looked at discrimination and found side doors. They looked at impossible and found anyway. From Shaw to Anacostia, from LeDroit Park to Brookland, they created entire ecosystems of Black wealth in a city designed to prevent exactly that. Kitchen tables became boardrooms. Savings circles became down payments. Domestic workers became landlords. Three generations under one roof wasn't struggle—it was strategy. And here's what your spirit already knows: You are the harvest of seeds they planted in faith. Every door that opens easier for you today was pushed open by hands that bled so yours wouldn't have to. The same instinct that guided them lives in you. It speaks in your restlessness. It whispers in your dissatisfaction with settling. It roars when you're living beneath your design. The blueprint they created still works. The question isn't whether you can build—it's whether you'll trust what was placed inside you before you were born. Your ancestors are cheering. Your descendants are waiting. The legacy continues in the comments below.

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 1 of 7 She stood in that bank lobby in 1968, hat pressed perfect, gl...
02/22/2026

The Black Women Who Built Despite Everything - Part 1 of 7


She stood in that bank lobby in 1968, hat pressed perfect, gloves white as Sunday morning, and they told her no.

Not because her credit was bad. Not because she could not afford it. But because she was a Black woman who had the audacity to believe she deserved to own something in this city.

Washington, D.C. The nation's capital. The place where laws were written about freedom while freedom was being denied in the very same zip code.

She walked out of that bank with her head high and her heart on fire. And she did not stop. She found another way. She always found another way.

Maybe it was a seller who would carry the note. Maybe it was pooling resources with her church sisters. Maybe it was working three jobs until her hands were rough and her savings account finally had enough zeros.

But she bought that house.

And when she turned that key for the first time, she was not just opening a door. She was opening a future. For her children. For her grandchildren. For generations she would never meet but who would inherit her courage.

This is the story they do not teach in history books. The story of Black women in the DMV who looked at a system designed to exclude them and said: Watch me.

They built wealth when wealth-building was illegal for them. They created legacies when legacy was supposed to be impossible. They planted trees whose shade they knew they might never sit under.

And here is what hits different when you really let it land: You are the harvest of seeds they planted in faith.

Every door that opens easier for you today was pushed open by hands that bled so yours would not have to.

This week, we honor them. Not with moments of silence, but with moments of action. Because the greatest tribute to a builder is to keep building.

Part 2 reveals the specific neighborhoods where Black women created wealth against all odds, and the strategies they used that still work today.

Something below this post was made for exactly where you are right now. Worth the scroll.

⬇️

📍 Reduced Price 📍 This recently reduced home at 1420 V Street Se in Washington won't last long, so, don't wait to set up...
02/21/2026

📍 Reduced Price 📍 This recently reduced home at 1420 V Street Se in Washington won't last long, so, don't wait to set up a showing! Reach out here or at (240) 640-3285 for more information!

Welcome to 1420 V Street SE, a beautifully situated 2-bedroom, 1.5-bath semi-detached rowhome in the heart of Historic Anacostia. This inviting home blends classic character with thoughtful updates, offering a unique chance to step into homeownership in one of DC's fastest-growing neighborhoods. ...

Address

1441 McCormick Drive, Suite 1020
Upper Marlboro, MD
MD

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Samantha Porter - Keller Williams Preferred Properties posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Samantha Porter - Keller Williams Preferred Properties:

Share

Category