May 31 marks the 90th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Riot. You can be excused if you've never heard of it. Despite being the bloodiest attack on African-American citizens in U.S. history, the riot was almost completely ignored by most history books for about 75 years. Only recently has the event received the attention it deserves.
In 1921, the Greenwood section of Tulsa, Okla., was one of the most prosperous black neighborhoods in the country. Greenwood's nickname was "the Negro Wall Street." The discovery of oil in Tulsa in 1901 turned the city into a boomtown. In the 1910s, Tulsa's economic good times coincided with an exodus of African Americans from the Deep South called the Great Migration. Oklahoma was a Jim Crow state. But blacks wanted to cash in on the state's oil wealth like everyone else.
There was one problem: The speedy arrival of so many blacks—as well as immigrants from overseas — provoked fear among many of Oklahoma's whites. A great number of them had come from the South or the conservative Midwest. The 1910s witnessed a resurrection of the Ku Klux Klan nationally, and Oklahoma joined the trend enthusiastically. Soon after the riot, Tulsa would report more than 2,000 people had signed up with the Klan.
The riot started on May 31, 1921, in the way many racial disturbances did at the time — with an accusation that a black man assaulted a white woman. Whites gathered to lynch the 19-year-old being accused. But they were surprised when local African Americans, some of them veterans of World War I, moved to defend him with guns. One white man tried to disarm a black man. They struggled. A shot was fired. The riot was on.
Blacks protected their homes and businesses as best they could. But they were badly outnumbered. Within 24 hours, a 42-block area was burned. At least 300 people were killed — most of them black — but the true death toll could be much higher. About 10,000 people were left homeless, and more than 1,000 homes and businesses were destroyed. Greenwood never really recovered.
The end of Tulsa's white riot was the beginning of a massive cover-up. The event was almost completely ignored by most journalists and historians. Official documents, police records and photographs disappeared. People who participated refused to talk about it. Local newspapers from the time vanished. It was as if the worst single incident of racial violence in U.S. history had never taken place.
That began to change about 15 years ago, as African Americans — who had never forgotten — and historians began to demand an accounting. Today, teachers can find many resources. This two-part news story, found here and here, is a good introduction. And this slide show can give students an idea of what Greenwood was like before and after the riot.
The Tulsa Race Riot is just one chapter of American history that has been deliberately ignored because it involves race. Many students are surprised to find that that familiar landmarks were once sites for lynchings, that racial segregation was once prevalent locally or that the Ku Klux Klan once had a big following in their city. This Teaching Tolerance article can show you how to help students uncover their forgotten past.
Price is managing editor of Teaching Tolerance.



Comments
A significant anniversary in
A significant anniversary in Tulsa and American history. When I was creating the exhibition script and choosing artifacts for the soon-to-be-opened Kaiser Holocaust Exhibit at Tulsa's Sherwin Miller Museum in 2004, even as a newcomer, I recognized the importance of the riots. The first historical object that a visitor to the museum encounters there is a KKK robe, most likely worn during those turbulent times. It immediatly captures the heart and mind and most apporpriately sets the stage for learning about the Holocaust.
The Tulsa riot was the
The Tulsa riot was the largest single attempt to create a "sundown town" in the U.S. Because the project was so big, it failed. Many other cities and town -- even entire counties and multi-county areas -- DID "go sundown" between 1890 and 1940, however. They drove out their black populations (or sometimes Chinese Americans, Native Americans, etc.) or determined formally or informally not to allow any in.
Therefore students far from Tulsa can investigate whether THEIR town, or nearby towns, were (in some cases still are) sundown towns. My website, http://sundown.afro.illinois.edu/sundowntowns.php, tells how. When they confirm a town, they can send the information to me to add to the site. Then they can raise the issue locally, asking the town to take three steps to end the practice:
1. Admit it.
2. Apologize.
and state
3. We don't do this any more.
Students as young as middle school have done such research.
We encourage everyone to read
We encourage everyone to read the great article that James W. Loewen did on "sundown towns" for Teaching Tolerance at http://www.tolerance.org/magazine/number-33-spring-2008/does-my-town-have-racist-past.
Good article on the
Good article on the anti-Black urban pogrom or 1921 "race riot" in Tulsa, Oklanoma. However, in my new book, I have cited or documented about 69 urban pogroms that occurred in the U.S., beginning against "free" Black communities during the ante-bellum era, as well as a "guesstimated" 17,000 Black lynchings, the latter in contrast to earlier estimates-studies revealing only about 5,000 lynchings between 1885 and 1940. (Ref: Truths My Teacher Told Me: An Analysis of History Textbooks and Public Mis-education, with Wholistic Solutions, 2011)
Minister (Dr.) Gyasi A. Foluke