GAINESVILLE, FL (352today.com) – Racism once forced Vincent Hampton’s mother to make a heartbreaking choice: love over family.

Kim Hampton stood firm in her decision to marry across racial lines, despite her family’s disapproval. She built a home centered on kindness, compassion, and integrity — teaching her children that a person’s character matters more than the color of their skin. That foundation shaped Vincent Hampton into the entrepreneur and real estate professional he is today. But the hardships his parents endured continue to remind him how much progress is still needed.

Now, Hampton often finds himself in conversations with people who are shaped by the biases of their environments. It’s his mother’s moral courage — choosing what’s right over what’s familiar — that gave him the tools to navigate those conversations and the conviction to speak up.

It’s those early “microlessons,” as he calls them, that gave Hampton the strength to confront hard truths — conversations that may be uncomfortable but, he believes, are necessary to foster empathy and real understanding.

“I’m someone that’s always spoken out when things make me uncomfortable, a lot of uncomfortable things in real estate, specifically in Gainesville and the south,” says Hampton. “I’m actually working on a few projects involving affordable housing, and there’s such an issue today with homelessness. We’re in this time where people are trying to attack the symptoms of all these systems. One of the main things that we’re trying to do with a couple of the nonprofits that we’re working with, we’re actually dedicating research into our history to identify sustainable ways we can not only move forward with but fix a lot of those issues, a lot of those things that happened in the past.”

While redlining and other discriminatory housing practices have long been outlawed, their effects remain.

“On one side, you’re dealing with people who have generational wealth and on the other side you have generational trauma that’s passed on,” says Hampton.

He credits his mother’s lifelong dedication to education and community service as a powerful influence. A teacher in underserved schools for more than three decades, she earned her doctorate in education from the University of Florida in 2024.

“We all have our own avenues of serving and to me just seeing how dedicated she’s been to education,” he says.

She also taught him to stay curious — reminding him that asking questions is often more powerful than making assumptions.

“What drives me most is my children, wanting a better world for them that’s inclusive that’s comfortable,” he shares. “With that comes the need to bring up a lot of these uncomfortable things that we haven’t talked about, where we haven’t openly shed light on. Do we want this to be a truly diverse and welcoming community for everyone?”

As someone who is multi-racial, Hampton has taken a hard look at how history shaped his own family. His two grandmothers didn’t speak to each other for 37 years because of their personal beliefs — yet in a moment of life’s symmetry, they ended up sharing a hospice room just five days apart.

“I’m just trying to have better family reunions. I just want things to be inclusive for everyone,” says Hampton.


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