99th anniversary of Tulsa massacre highlights Juneteenth, murders of Black people across America
Warning: The following account contains graphic descriptions that may trigger some readers. Discretion is advised.
O.W. Gurley, a wealthy Black entrepreneur from Arkansas, moved to racially segregated Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 1906 and bought 40 acres of land. On it, he built three, two-story buildings and five homes for Black people who were not allowed to live on the white side of town.
Soon, word spread across the country about opportunities for Black people in the segregated section of Tulsa, which Gurley named 鈥淕reenwood鈥 after a town in Mississippi.聽
Other prominent Black businesspeople followed suit.聽
J.B. Stradford, who was born into slavery in Kentucky but later became a lawyer and activist, built a 55-room luxury hotel in Greenwood 鈥 the largest Black-owned property of its kind in the country at the time.聽
A.J. Smitherman founded the Black-owned Tulsa Star, informing Black people about their legal rights, along with news about court rulings and legislation that could help or harm them.
Eventually, Greenwood Avenue was lined with luxury shops, restaurants, grocery stores, hotels, jewelry and clothing stores, movie theaters, barbershops and salons. The district, which ultimately came to be known as the 鈥淏lack Wall Street,鈥 also had a library, pool halls and nightclubs as well as offices for doctors, lawyers and dentists.聽
Working-class Black people were not excluded. Janitors, dishwashers, porters and domestic workers spent the money they made in other parts of town in Greenwood.
鈥淚t is said within Greenwood every dollar would change hands 19 times before it left the community,鈥 Michelle Place, executive director of the Tulsa Historical Society and Museum, told .
But , in one of the worst massacres in American history, all of Greenwood came crumbling down. From May 31 to June 1, 1921, a white mob killed hundreds of Black people, burned down what was then the most affluent Black community in America and left thousands of people homeless.聽
Nearly a century later, the country was confronted with those horrific events once again when President Trump that he would hold a campaign rally in Tulsa on June 19, also known as and Emancipation Day 鈥 the date in 1865 when a Union general traveled to Galveston, Texas, to read President Abraham Lincoln鈥檚 orders to free enslaved Africans. Critics were enraged.
鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just a wink to white supremacists 鈥 he鈥檚 throwing them a welcome home party,鈥 Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., last week.聽
Trump later rescheduled the rally for Saturday, June 20.
But the news was a grim reminder of the Tulsa massacre, which was sparked by the false accusation that a Black man had sexually assaulted a white woman.聽
Such allegations are a throughout American history, including the Emanuel Nine massacre in Charleston, South Carolina, where five years ago a white supremacist, acting on false information that Black men were raping white women in large numbers, killed nine Black people in a Bible study.
鈥楽peak out against injustice鈥
鈥淔谤辞尘 Emmett Till鈥檚 lynching to the to the slaughter of innocent Black people in Tulsa and countless other examples, white supremacists have long used the false accusations of white women against Black men as an excuse to destroy Black lives and bulldoze pillars of Black success,鈥 said Tafeni English, director of the Civil Rights Memorial Center, in Montgomery, Alabama, which honors martyrs of the civil rights movement.聽
鈥淎s the country now focuses its attention on the bloodshed in Tulsa nearly 100 years ago, it is in the midst of a new reckoning on racial injustice with the murders of聽,听, , , ,听听补苍诲 ,鈥 English said. 鈥淎mericans must decide once and for all that Black lives truly do matter. We must take direct action to ensure that Black lives are protected. We must all educate ourselves and others about the historic and current oppression against Black Americans in this country, and we must use our collective voices to speak out against injustice whenever and wherever we see it.鈥
According to news reports and , this is how the Tulsa massacre unfolded:
The success of Black Wall Street created jealousy and anger among some white people in the city, explained Mechelle Brown, director of programs at the .
Some white people in Tulsa may have said to themselves, 鈥溾橦ow dare these negroes have a grand piano in their house, and I don鈥檛 have a piano in my house,鈥欌 Brown told .
The racial tension boiled over following an incident between a white teenager and a Black man.
Sarah Page, 17, worked as an elevator operator and Dick Rowland, 19, who reportedly shined shoes in the building, frequently used that elevator.
On the morning of May 30, 1921, the elevator doors closed. Inside, Page and Rowland were alone for a short time before there was a scream.
When the doors opened, Rowland ran. Later, he was arrested. At first, Page said she was assaulted.
But some historic accounts say Rowland tripped on his way out of the elevator, and that he grabbed Page鈥檚 arm in the process. She screamed, and someone else in the building contacted the authorities.聽
Black Wall Street set aflame
Page never pressed charges, but authorities did. By day鈥檚 end, rumors that Page had been raped were quickly spreading across the city.
An inflammatory report in the May 31 edition of the white-owned Tulsa Tribune ignited a confrontation between Black and white armed mobs gathered around the courthouse. The group of armed Black people believed Rowland would be lynched without their protection.
鈥淎 simple accident between a Black shoeshine worker and a white female elevator operator was intentionally misconstrued in a local paper as assault,鈥 writer Caleb Gayle recently wrote for . 鈥淲hite Tulsans took this as just cause to set Black Wall Street aflame.鈥
Rowland鈥檚 charges, highly suspect from the beginning, were later dismissed. Nevertheless, the group of armed Black people believed at the time that his safety, their own safety and the safety of their community was in their hands.
As the two opposing racially divided groups gathered at the courthouse and the clash worsened, the authorities did not calm or contain the situation.
But the sheriff and his men had barricaded the top floor of the courthouse to protect Rowland. Shots were fired. The armed white group greatly outnumbered the armed Black group, which retreated to Greenwood.聽
But early on the morning of June 1, 1921, white rioters entered Greenwood, looting and burning buildings.
The white mob stole, damaged or destroyed personal property that Black people 鈥 fleeing for their lives 鈥 had left behind in their homes and businesses.聽
White people even , and shot Black people down in the streets with machine guns.
After the violence began, , and gave them guns and ammunition. These men did not stem the violence, and in many cases, added to it.聽
The rioters deliberately burned or otherwise destroyed over 1,200 homes in Greenwood, as well as virtually every other structure 鈥 churches, schools, businesses, a hospital and library included.
Although they were greatly outnumbered, Black people fought bravely to protect their homes and businesses, but to no avail.聽
The governor declared martial law and National Guard troops were sent to Tulsa. Guardsmen helped firefighters douse the flames, but also arrested nearly all of Greenwood鈥檚 surviving Black residents, taking them to other parts of the city where they were confined in holding centers.聽
After 24 hours, the violence ended, leaving 35 city blocks in charred ruins. More than 800 people were treated for injuries.
The death toll initially came in at 36. However, historians believe an estimated 300 people may have died.
Greenwood was completely destroyed. Photos of the massacre show lifeless Black bodies lying in the streets, a scene that was recreated in the first episode of HBO鈥檚 听蝉别谤颈别蝉.
In the wake of the destruction, white Tulsa officials rejected some outside assistance, but there were also white residents who offered aid to the city鈥檚 newly homeless Black population.
To provide ongoing support, the American Red Cross remained in Tulsa for months following the massacre.
Dick Rowland survived and at some point left town. Little is known about his life after that.
Not in the history books
The 1921 massacre went largely unacknowledged for decades.
鈥淥klahoma schools did not talk about it. In fact, newspapers didn鈥檛 even print any information about the Tulsa Race Riot,鈥 U.S. Sen. James Lankford of Oklahoma told聽. 鈥淚t was completely ignored. It was one of those horrible events that everyone wanted to sweep under the rug and ignore.鈥
But not everyone wanted to ignore it. Some have sought to preserve that awful history.
, curator of the Smithsonian鈥檚聽, spent several years collecting artifacts from the riot and its aftermath.
鈥淚t was the frustration of poor whites not knowing what to do with a successful Black community, and in coalition with the city government were given permission to do what they did,鈥 Gardullo told the Smithsonian Magazine.
, a Greenwood lawyer and father of the famed Black historian聽, wrote a 10-page manuscript describing his eyewitness account of what happened on May 31, 1921. The manuscript is now part of the museum鈥檚 collection in Washington, D.C.
Franklin wrote that he left his law office, locked the door, and descended to the foot of the steps after realizing that white people were bombing Greenwood from private planes, according to the magazine.
鈥淭he side-walks were literally covered with burning turpentine balls,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淚 knew all too well where they came from, and I knew all too well why every burning building first caught from the top.
鈥淚 paused and waited for an opportune time to escape,鈥 he wrote. 鈥溾榃here oh where is our splendid fire department with its half dozen stations?鈥 I asked myself. 鈥業s the city in conspiracy with the mob?鈥欌
鈥楢 country that never wanted us鈥
Franklin鈥檚 sentiments are echoed today in the cries of Black activists, who seek an end to the police brutality that they say is supported by cities, states and the federal government.
The fact that the Tulsa anniversary nearly coincides with Juneteenth is also painfully relevant to many Black people in America.
鈥淛uneteenth has always been a difficult celebration for Black people on two dimensions,鈥 Gayle wrote in his article. 鈥淲e celebrate that we are no longer enslaved in this country, while realizing that this country has been morally bankrupt for devaluing and enslaving us in the first place.聽
鈥淏ut in Tulsa on May 31听补苍诲 June 1, on the way to celebrating freedom聽on June 19,鈥 he wrote, 鈥渨e also mourn every year a massacre that decimated lives and also decimated an important expression of living abundantly in a country that never wanted us.鈥
Photo聽courtesy of Library of Congress