Viola Davis celebrates her 55th birthday by buying South Carolina plantation home she was born in

Viola Davis celebrates her humble beginnings as she buys South Carolina plantation home that she was born in for her 55th birthday

Viola Davis is looking back on her humble beginnings as she celebrates her 55th birthday.

The Academy Award-winner showed how far she’s come while revealing her latest real estate purchase: the very South Carolina home she was born in in 1965.

The How To Get Away With Murder talent shared a photo of the modest house to her social media, telling fans: ‘The above is the house where I was born August 11, 1965. It is the birthplace of my story. Today on my 55th year of life….I own it….all of it.’

From nearly nothing: Viola Davis purchased the South Carolina home she was born in to celebrate her 55th birthday

Success story: The How To Get Away With Murder talent shared a photo of the modest house to her social media, telling fans: 'It is the birthplace of my story. Today on my 55th year of life....I own it....all of it.' She's seen in February 2020 above

Success story: The How To Get Away With Murder talent shared a photo of the modest house to her social media, telling fans: ‘It is the birthplace of my story. Today on my 55th year of life….I own it….all of it.’ She’s seen in February 2020 above

She continued with the Cherokee birth blessing, writing: ‘May you live long enough to know why you were born.’

Not only did Viola snag the home her grandma used to own but she purchased the land surrounding it as well.

The bare-bones residence is said to previously been part of a plantation, meaning the history of the property runs deep and dark.

Back in 2016, Viola talked about her birthplace with Entertainment Weekly.

While she revealed she wasn’t there long, the actress said her simple start was integral to her understanding of herself and her family.

‘I wasn’t on it long, because I was the fifth child, and so we moved soon after I was born,’ she explained. ‘I mean, I went back to visit briefly but still not aware of the history. I think I read one slave narrative of someone who was on that plantation which was horrific.

‘160 acres of land, and my grandfather was a sharecropper. Most of my uncles and cousins, they’re farmers. That’s the choice that they had. My grandmother’s house was a one room shack. I have a picture of it on my phone because I think it’s a beautiful picture.’

Things weren’t glamorous for the family, who had ‘no running water’ or bathroom during that time. 

‘It’s just an outhouse,’ she said. ‘But my mom says that the day I was born, all of my aunts and uncles were in the house, she said, everyone was drinking and laughing, and having fun. She said she ate a sardine, mustard, onion, tomato sandwich after I was born.’

‘I love that story,’ Davis went on. ‘It’s a great story to me. It’s a great story of celebration in the midst of what you would feel is a decimated environment, but you could see the joy and the life that can come out of that, because it’s not always about things, you know.’