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Tulsa,
Oklahoma - Oil Capital of the World |
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In the spring of 1883, the
post office was moved from the Perryman ranch to the Perryman store,
located on what would later become the southwest corner of First and Main
Streets. Later when J.M. Hall was appointed to succeed Josiah Perryman as
Postmaster in December, 1885, Mr. Hall moved the office to the Hall
Brothers’ Store located on the west side of Main Street just south of the
Frisco tracks.
In 1889 the unassigned lands in Indian
Territory were opened to white settlers and the flood of people were soon
nick-named the “boomers.”
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Tulsa,
Oklahoma in
1896
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Judge of the first United States court in
Indian Territory ruled
that Tulsa had the right to incorporate. Tulsa’s business leaders
immediately got together to draw a petition for incorporation.
Though it took some time, Tulsa, with its population of 1,100
residents, was incorporated on January 18, 1898.
With the
discovery of oil in 1901,
Tulsa
changed from a cow-town to a boomtown. At the nearby community of Red
Fork, a giant oil deposit was found and wildcatters and investors
began to flood the city of
Tulsa,
bringing along their families and settling in. New neighborhoods
were soon established on the north side of the Arkansas River and the
town began to spread out in all directions from downtown.
Four
years later, in 1905, a new, even larger oil discovery was made in
nearby Glenn Pool that would lead to
Tulsa’s
golden age of the 1920s and its title as the "Oil Capital of the
World."
Many early oil companies chose
Tulsa for
their home base.
By 1920, Tulsa was called home to almost
100,000 people and 400 different oil companies. The booming town
boasted two daily newspapers, four telegraph companies, more than
10,000 telephones, seven banks, 200 attorneys and more than 150
doctors, as well as numerous other businesses.
Though
the 1920s looked very promising for the burgeoning city, it would soon
see one of the most gruesome and devastating race riots in U.S.
history.
The
whole thing began on May 30, 1921, when Dick Rowland, a black
shoe-shine boy, was accused of assaulting Sarah Page, an elevator
operator in the Drexel Building at Third and Main. Page claimed
that Rowland grabbed her arm, causing her to flee in panic. A clerk at
a nearby store insisted that Rowland had tried to rape Page.
Accounts of the incident circulated among the city's white community
during the day and became more exaggerated with each telling.
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Tulsa police arrested Rowland the following day
and began an investigation. Following Rowland's arrest on May 31,
1921, the Tulsa
Tribune printed a story that Rowland had
attacked her, scratching her hands and face
and tearing her clothes. In the same newspaper that day was an
editorial that stated that a hanging was planned for that night.
Tightly in the grip of the Ku Klux Klan,
Tulsa wasted
no time in forming a lynch mob that evening around the courthouse intent
upon the execution of Dick Rowland. To stave off the lynch mob, the
sheriff and his men were forced to barricade the top floor to protect
their prisoner.
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Street by street, block by block, the white
invaders moved northward across Tulsa's African-American district, looting
homes and setting them on fire. Photo courtesy Department of
Special Collections, McFarlin Library, University of Tulsa. |
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The devastating remains of Greenwood the day
after the riot. Photo courtesy Department of Special Collections,
McFarlin Library, University of Tulsa.
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A group of blacks also converged around
the courthouse in an attempt to defend Rowland. When a white man in
the crowd confronted an armed black man attempting to wrest the gun from
him, a scuffle ensued and the white man was killed. Immediately, a riot
began.
The outnumbered blacks began retreating
to the Greenwood Avenue business district while truckloads of whites set
fires and shot them on sight. Far into the early morning hours of
the next day Black
Tulsa was looted and burned by white rioters. The Greenwood
district, known nationally as "Black Wall Street" for its economic success
was a particular target.
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After the governor declared martial law,
the National Guard troops arrived in
Tulsa and
began to round up more than 6,000 black people, placing them in various
internment centers such as the baseball stadium, the Convention Hall and
the Fairgrounds. Though the violence had ceased by the next day, many of
the interred were kept for up to eight days.
Twenty-four hours after the violence erupted,
it ceased. In the wake of the violence, 35 city blocks lay in charred
ruins, over 800 people were treated for injuries, and almost 1,400
homes were destroyed.
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While only the authorities detained a handful
of white rioters, most black Tulsans soon found themselves led away at
gunpoint and held under guard. Photo courtesy Department of Special
Collections, McFarlin Library, University of Tulsa.
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You can tell by the writing on this photograph
what Tulsa's sentimentalities were at the time. Photo courtesy
Department of Special Collections, McFarlin Library, University of Tulsa.
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All that was left of this man's home after the
riots. Photo courtesy Department of Special Collections, McFarlin
Library, University of Tulsa.
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The losses of businesses
included two theaters, three hotels, more than a dozen restaurants,
several churchs and a hospital. Estimates of the dead range up to 300.
After this terrible tragedy, dozens of black families
left the area for more peaceful cities. Today, only a single block
of the original buildings remains standing in the area.
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