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Ideal08 05-31-2003 08:40 AM

The Tulsa Riot of 1921
 
This is a tidbit of history I knew nothing about. You learn something new everyday.

This is the worst riot in american history. 15,000 Blacks wer left homeless, between 300 and 3000 were killed, wounded and/or missing, 1500 homes were burned to the ground and over 600 Black owned businesses in a 35 square block area were bombed in the all Black Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma. It was the first american city to be bombed by airplanes. More peope died this day than in any single event since the civil war (9/11?). White historians did an excelent job in wiping their footprints from the sand. Reference to this can't be found in any history books. Go to www.Blackwallstreet.freeservers.com, for the true story with pictures.

The song on the website is killin' me!

CountryGurl 05-31-2003 11:01 AM

Thanks for educating us today!!!:D

Finer Woman10-A-91 05-31-2003 11:09 AM

Hey Ideal,

Do you get BlackFacts of the day? (that fact was heavy!) Maybe this should be a regular thread in Chit Chat? Just think our organizations were in swing all while this was happening...my sorority of course in its nascent phase of development. It really does make you appreciative for where we are today.

CrimsonTide4 05-31-2003 04:38 PM

My favorite Alpha hipped me to this back in undergrad. I could have sworn that I passed it along but maybe not.

This was a trip because BLACK folks were financially independent; owned their own banks, homes, businesses, etc.

I believe there is a book being written about this community and the riots and aftermath. :)

Ideal08 05-31-2003 08:29 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Finer Woman10-A-91
Hey Ideal,

Do you get BlackFacts of the day?

Yup!

CrimsonTide4 05-31-2003 08:41 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Finer Woman10-A-91
Hey Ideal,

Do you get BlackFacts of the day? (that fact was heavy!) Maybe this should be a regular thread in Chit Chat?

There is a Black Fact thread in DST. Feel free to pull it back to the top.

I get the Black Facts for other purposes. ;) :D :cool:

NOWorNEVER 05-31-2003 08:45 PM

Yes! I learned about this earlier this year in one of my African American Studies courses. Tulsa was just one of the many places where race riots occured. Between 1919 and 1921, around 10 or 11 riots broke out causing thousands of deaths, burning, and lynchings including Rosewood and Tulsa. The bulk of them happened in the middle of 1919 which is called the "Red Summer." We watched a video with Tulsa witnesses who were very young when it happened. One woman said her mother made all her brothers and sisters hide under the bed as a mob of angry white men charged in their house and set the curtains on fire. When they left, her mother gathered them up and ran.
Also, it was started because a black man bumped into a white woman on the elevator. The media scrambled the information and said that a white woman was "raped" by a black man in the elevator. Things went crazy from there. Even the huge Baptist church that was just completed was burned. It's so sad that this happened and it isn't even documented.

CrimsonTide4 05-31-2003 08:51 PM

Websites about the Tulsa Riots
 
CNN report with Eyewitness accounts, 1999

Riots in America:1800-1943

http://bama.ua.edu/~mcart001/

http://www.blackcity.net/black/history/tulsariots/

http://hnn.us/comments/8948.html

http://www.thenorthstarnetwork.com/n.../181512-1.html

http://www.tulsalibrary.org/aarc/Riot/bibliography.htm

A book, THE GETTING PLACE, sounds pretty good

Ideal08 06-01-2003 07:12 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by NOWorNEVER
We watched a video with Tulsa witnesses who were very young when it happened.
Do you remember the name of the video? I'd like to see it.

NOWorNEVER 06-02-2003 09:24 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Ideal08
Do you remember the name of the video? I'd like to see it.
Hmm, I don't know the name of the documentary right off hand. Let me email my professor and I'll get back to you.

pinkey08 06-02-2003 03:47 PM

That is somehting that very few people know about. The only reason I know is because I am originally from Oklahoma.
________
Mywebcamhookup

CrimsonTide4 06-03-2003 03:14 PM

1921 riot survivors sue ex-newspaper family
2003-06-03 By The Associated Press



TULSA - Two Tulsa race riot survivors are suing a former newspaper family on allegations articles published in 1921 ignited the violence that destroyed the city's black neighborhoods. The federal lawsuit filed by Rosella Carter, 102, and her son, James Dale Carter, 84, also names the Tulsa World as a defendant because of the newspaper's publishing relationship with the now-defunct Tulsa Tribune. The Ku Klux Klan and its "Grand Wizard" also are named.

The lawsuit, filed in the Western District of Missouri where the Carters live, seeks damages of more than $75,000.

"This is not a white thing; it's not a black thing. It's about getting justice," said Tulsa attorney Jim Lloyd, who represents the two survivors.

They allege that late Tulsa Tribune Publisher Richard Lloyd Jones Sr. and the Tribune "published highly inflammatory articles designed to whip up the Ku Klux Klan and the general white population."

The lawsuit claims the newspaper suggested that a young black man be hanged on allegations he assaulted a white woman and that this suggestion prompted 16 hours of violence that left dozens dead and the black Greenwood District in ruins.

It also alleges that a bullet wound caused lifelong suffering for Leroy Carter - Rosella Carter's husband and James Carter's father - and contributed to his death in December 1936.

Jenkin Lloyd Jones Jr., grandson of Richard Lloyd Jones Sr., said last week that he had not seen the lawsuit but said his grandfather had an exemplary record on race.

"My grandparents hid blacks in their home during the riot," Jones said.

The riot began the evening of May 31, 1921, when blacks and whites clashed outside the Tulsa County Courthouse where Dick Rowland was being held. Rowland was never prosecuted.

No copy of the Tribune editorial rumored to contain an inflammatory headline has ever been found. The few known copies of the May 31,
1921, Tribune - all first editions - do not contain such a piece.

The front-page story of Rowland's arrest was torn from the Tribune file copy sometime before it was microfilmed for archives in 1947.

Lloyd, a member of the legal team that has filed a lawsuit against the city and state on behalf of nearly 400 riot survivors and descendants of victims, said the Carters didn't know about the newspaper stories until he told them.

Lloyd also served on the Tulsa Race Riot Commission, a state panel assigned to investigate the riot.

Schaad Titus, the Tulsa World's legal counsel, said he expects the World to be dropped from the lawsuit.

"This suit is absolutely without merit as it concerns the Tulsa World," he said.

The World and Tribune shared ownership of Newspaper Printing Corp., which handled production for the two papers from 1941 until the Tribune closed in 1992.

CrimsonTide4 06-08-2003 02:44 PM

I found this today and wanted to share
 
AP Documents Land Taken From Blacks Through Trickery, Violence and Murder

By TODD LEWAN
and DOLORES BARCLAY
Associated Press Writers


For generations, black families passed down the tales in uneasy whispers: ''They stole our land.''
These were family secrets shared after the children fell asleep, after neighbors turned down the lamps - old stories locked in fear and shame.

Some of those whispered bits of oral history, it turns out, are true.

In an 18-month investigation, The Associated Press documented a pattern in which black Americans were cheated out of their land or driven from it through intimidation, violence and even murder.

In some cases, government officials approved the land takings; in others, they took part in them. The earliest occurred before the Civil War; others are being litigated today.
Some of the land taken from black families has become a country club in Virginia, oil fields in Mississippi, a major-league baseball spring training facility in Florida.

The United States has a long history of bitter, often violent land disputes, from claim jumping in the gold fields to range wars in the old West to broken treaties with American Indians. Poor white landowners, too, were sometimes treated unfairly, pressured to sell out at rock-bottom prices by railroads and lumber and mining companies.
The fate of black landowners has been an overlooked part of this story.

The AP - in an investigation that included interviews with more than 1,000 people and the examination of tens of thousands of public records in county courthouses and state and federal archives - documented 107 land takings in 13 Southern and border states.
In those cases alone, 406 black landowners lost more than 24,000 acres of farm and timber land plus 85 smaller properties, including stores and city lots. Today, virtually all of this property, valued at tens of millions of dollars, is owned by whites or by corporations.

Properties taken from blacks were often small - a 40-acre farm, a general store, a modest house. But the losses were devastating to families struggling to overcome the legacy of slavery. In the agrarian South, landownership was the ladder to respect and prosperity - the means to building economic security and passing wealth on to the next generation. When black families lost their land, they lost all of this.

Besides the 107 cases the AP documented, reporters found evidence of scores of other land takings that could not be fully verified because of gaps or inconsistencies in the public record. Thousands of additional reports of land takings from black families remain uninvestigated.
Two thousand have been collected in recent years by the Penn Center on St. Helena Island, S.C., an educational institution established for freed slaves during the Civil War. The Land Loss Prevention Project, a group of lawyers in Durham, N.C., who represent blacks in land disputes, said it receives new reports daily. And Heather Gray of the Federation of Southern Cooperatives in Atlanta said her organization has ''file cabinets full of complaints.''

AP's findings ''are just the tip of one of the biggest crimes of this country's history,'' said Ray Winbush, director of Fisk University's Institute of Race Relations.

Some examples of land takings documented by the AP:

•After midnight on Oct. 4, 1908, 50 hooded white men surrounded the home of a black farmer in Hickman, Ky., and ordered him to come out for a whipping. When David Walker refused and shot at them instead, the mob poured coal oil on his house and set it afire, according to contemporary newspaper accounts. Pleading for mercy, Walker ran out the front door, followed by four screaming children and his wife, carrying a baby in her arms. The mob shot them all, wounding three children and killing the others. Walker's oldest son never escaped the burning house. No one was ever charged with the killings, and the surviving children were deprived of the farm their father died defending.:mad: Land records show that Walker's 2 1/2-acre farm was simply folded into the property of a white neighbor. The neighbor soon sold it to another man, whose daughter owns the undeveloped land today.

• In the 1950s and 1960s, a Chevrolet dealer in Holmes County, Miss., acquired hundreds of acres from black farmers by foreclosing on small loans for farm equipment and pickup trucks. Norman Weathersby, then the only dealer in the area, required the farmers to put up their land as security for the loans, county residents who dealt with him said. And the equipment he sold them, they said, often broke down shortly thereafter. Weathersby's friend, William E. Strider, ran the local Farmers Home Administration - the credit lifeline for many Southern farmers. Area residents, including Erma Russell, 81, said Strider, now dead, was often slow in releasing farm operating loans to blacks. When cash-poor farmers missed payments owed to Weathersby, he took their land. The AP documented eight cases in which Weathersby acquired black-owned farms this way. When he died in 1973, he left more than 700 acres of this land to his family, according to estate papers, deeds and court records.

• In 1964, the state of Alabama sued Lemon Williams and Lawrence Hudson, claiming the cousins had no right to two 40-acre farms their family had worked in Sweet Water, Ala., for nearly a century. The land, officials contended, belonged to the state. Circuit Judge Emmett F. Hildreth urged the state to drop its suit, declaring it would result in ''a severe injustice.'' But when the state refused, saying it wanted income from timber on the land, the judge ruled against the family. Today, the land lies empty; the state recently opened some of it to logging. The state's internal memos and letters on the case are peppered with references to the family's race.

In the same courthouse where the case was heard, the AP located deeds and tax records documenting that the family had owned the land since an ancestor bought the property on Jan. 3, 1874. Surviving records also show the family paid property taxes on the farms from the mid-1950s until the land was taken.

AP reporters tracked the land cases by reviewing deeds, mortgages, tax records, estate papers, court proceedings, surveyor maps, oil and gas leases, marriage records, census listings, birth records, death certificates and Freedmen's Bureau archives. Additional documents, including FBI files and Farmers Home Administration records, were obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.

The AP interviewed black families that lost land, as well as lawyers, title searchers, historians, appraisers, genealogists, surveyors, land activists, and local, state and federal officials.

The AP also talked to current owners of the land, nearly all of whom acquired the properties years after the land takings occurred. Most said they knew little about the history of their land. When told about it, most expressed regret.

Weathersby's son, John, 62, who now runs the dealership in Indianola, Miss., said he had little direct knowledge about his father's business affairs. However, he said he was sure his father never would have sold defective vehicles and that he always treated people fairly.
Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman examined the state's files on the Sweet Water case after an inquiry from the AP. He said he found them ''disturbing'' and has asked the state attorney general to review the matter.

''What I have asked the attorney general to do,'' he said, ''is look not only at the letter of the law but at what is fair and right.''

The land takings are part of a larger picture - a 91-year decline in black landownership in America.
In 1910, black Americans owned more farmland than at any time before or since - at least 15 million acres. Nearly all of it was in the South, largely in Mississippi, Alabama and the Carolinas, according to the U.S. Agricultural Census. Today, blacks own only 1.1 million of the country's more than 1 billion acres of arable land. They are part owners of another 1.07 million acres.


The number of white farmers has declined over the last century, too, as economic trends have concentrated land in fewer, often corporate, hands. However, black ownership has declined 2 1/2 times faster than white ownership, the U.S. Civil Rights Commission noted in a 1982 report, the last comprehensive federal study on the trend.

The decline in black landownership had a number of causes, including the discriminatory lending practices of the Farmers Home Administration and the migration of blacks from the rural South to industrial centers in the North and West.

However, the land takings also contributed. In the decades between Reconstruction and the civil rights struggle, black families were powerless to prevent them, said Stuart E. Tolnay, a University of Washington sociologist and co-author of a book on lynchings. In an era when black Americans could not drink from the same water fountains as whites and black men were lynched for whistling at white women, few blacks dared to challenge whites. Those who did could rarely find lawyers to take their cases or judges who would give them a fair hearing.

The Rev. Isaac Simmons was an exception. When his land was taken, he found a lawyer and tried to fight back.
In 1942, his 141-acre farm in Amite County, Miss., was sold for nonpayment of taxes, property records show. The farm, for which his father had paid $302 in 1887, was bought by a white man for $180.

Only partial, tattered tax records for the period exist today in the county courthouse; but they are enough to show that tax payments on at least part of the property were current when the land was taken.

Simmons hired a lawyer in February 1944 and filed suit to get his land back. On March 26, a group of whites paid Simmons a visit.

The minister's daughter, Laura Lee Houston, now 74, recently recalled her terror as she stood with her month-old baby in her arms and watched the men drag Simmons away. ''I screamed and hollered so loud,'' she said. ''They came toward me and I ran down in the woods.''

The whites then grabbed Simmons' son, Eldridge, from his house and drove the two men to a lonely road.

''Two of them kept beating me,'' Eldridge Simmons later told the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. ''They kept telling me that my father and I were 'smart niggers' for going to see a lawyer.''

Simmons, who has since died, said his captors gave him 10 days to leave town and told his father to start running. Later that day, the minister's body turned up with three gunshot wounds in the back, The McComb Enterprise newspaper reported at the time.

Today, the Simmons land - thick with timber and used for hunting - is privately owned and is assessed at $33,660. (Officials assess property for tax purposes, and the valuation is usually less than its market value.)

Over the past 20 years, a handful of black families have sued to regain their ancestral lands. State courts, however, have dismissed their cases on grounds that statutes of limitations had expired.


A group of attorneys led by Harvard University law professor Charles J. Ogletree has been making inquries recently about land takings. The group has announced its intention to file a national class-action lawsuit in pursuit of reparations for slavery and racial discrimination. However, some legal experts say redress for many land takings may not be possible unless laws are changed.
As the acres slipped away, so did treasured pieces of family history - cabins crafted by a grandfather's hand, family graves in shaded groves.

But ''the home place'' meant more than just that. Many blacks have found it ''very difficult to transfer wealth from one generation to the next,'' because they had trouble holding onto land, said Paula Giddings, a history professor at Duke University.

The Espy family in Vero Beach, Fla., lost its heritage in 1942, when the U.S. government seized its land through eminent domain to build an airfield. Government agencies frequently take land this way for public purposes under rules that require fair compensation for the owners.
In Vero Beach, however, the Navy appraised the Espys' 147 acres, which included a 30-acre fruit grove, two houses and 40 house lots, at $8,000, according to court records. The Espys sued, and an all-white jury awarded them $13,000. That amounted to one-sixth of the price per acre that the Navy paid white neighbors for similar land with fewer improvements, records show.

After World War II, the Navy gave the airfield to the city of Vero Beach. Ignoring the Espys' plea to buy back their land, the city sold part of it, at $1,500 an acre, to the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1965 as a spring training facility.
In 1999, the former Navy land, with parts of Dodgertown and a municipal airport, was assessed at $6.19 million. Sixty percent of that land once belonged to the Espys. The team sold its property to Indian River County for $10 million in August, according to Craig Callan, a Dodgers official.

The true extent of land takings from black families will never be known because of gaps in property and tax records in many rural Southern counties. The AP found crumbling tax records, deed books with pages torn from them, file folders with documents missing, and records that had been crudely altered.
In Jackson Parish, La., 40 years of moldy, gnawed tax and mortgage records were piled in a cellar behind a roll of Christmas lights and a wooden reindeer. In Yazoo County, Miss., volumes of tax and deed records filled a classroom in an abandoned school, the papers coated with white dust from a falling ceiling. The AP retrieved dozens of documents that custodians said were earmarked for shredders or landfills.

The AP also found that about a third of the county courthouses in Southern and border states have burned - some more than once - since the Civil War. Some of the fires were deliberately set.

On the night of Sept. 10, 1932, for example, 15 whites torched the courthouse in Paulding, Miss., where property records for the eastern half of Jasper County, then predominantly black, were stored. Records for the predominantly white western half of the county were safe in another courthouse miles away.

The door to the Paulding courthouse's safe, which protected the records, had been locked the night before, the Jasper County News reported at the time. The next morning, the safe was found open, most of the records reduced to ashes.

Suddenly, it was unclear who owned a big piece of eastern Jasper County.

Even before the courthouse fire, landownership in Jasper County was contentious. According to historical accounts, the Ku Klux Klan, resentful that blacks were buying and profiting from land, had been attacking black-owned farms, burning houses, lynching black farmers and chasing black landowners away.

The Masonite Corp., a wood products company, was one of the largest landowners in the area. Because most of the land records had been destroyed, the company went to court in December 1937 to clear its title. Masonite believed it owned 9,581 acres and said in court papers that it had been unable to locate anyone with a rival claim to the land.
A month later, the court ruled the company had clear title to the land, which has since yielded millions of dollars in natural gas, timber and oil, according to state records.

From the few property records that remain, the AP was able to document that at least 204.5 of those acres had been acquired by Masonite after black owners were driven off by the Klan. At least 850,000 barrels of oil have been pumped from this property, according to state oil and gas board records and figures from the Petroleum Techno logy Transfer Council, an industry group.

Today, the land is owned by International Paper Corp., which acquired Masonite in 1988. Jenny Boardman, a company spokeswoman, said International Paper had been unaware of the ''tragic'' history of the land and was concerned about AP's findings.

''This is probably part of a much larger, public debate about whether there should be restitution for people who have been harmed in the past,'' she said. ''And by virtue of the fact that we now own these lands, we should be part of that discussion.''

Even when Southern courthouses remained standing, mistrust and fear of white authority long kept blacks away from record rooms, where documents often were segregated into ''white'' and ''colored.'' Many elderly blacks say they still remember how they were snubbed by court clerks, spat upon and even struck.

Today, however, fear and shame have given way to pride. Interest in genealogy among black families is surging, and some black Americans are unearthing the documents behind those whispered stories.

''People are out there wondering: What ever happened to Grandma's land?'' said Loretta Carter Hanes, 75, a retired genealogist. ''They knew that their grandparents shed a lot of blood and tears to get it.''


Bryan Logan, a 55-year-old sports writer from Washington, D.C., was researching his heritage when he uncovered a connection to 264 acres of riverfront property in Richmond, Va.
Today, the land is Willow Oaks, an almost exclusively white country club with an assessed value of $2.94 million. But in the 1850s, it was a corn-and-wheat plantation worked by the Howlett slaves - Logan's ancestors.

Their owner, Thomas Howlett, directed in his will that his 15 slaves be freed, that his plantation be sold and that the slaves receive the proceeds. When he died in 1856, his white relatives challenged the will, but two courts upheld it.

Yet the freed slaves never got a penny.

Benjamin Hatcher, the executor of the estate, simply took over the plantation, court records show. He cleared the timber and mined the stone, providing granite for the Navy and War Department buildings in Washington and the capitol in Richmond, according to records in the National Archives.
When the Civil War ended in 1865, the former slaves complained to the occupying Union Army, which ordered Virginia courts to investigate.

Hatcher testified that he had sold the plantation in 1862 - apparently to his son, Thomas - but had not given the proceeds to the former slaves. Instead, court papers show, the proceeds were invested on their behalf in Confederate War Bonds. There is nothing in the public record to suggest the former slaves wanted their money used to support the Southern war effort.
Moreover, the bonds were purchased in the former slaves' names in 1864 - a dubious investment at best in the fourth year of the war. Within months, Union armies were marching on Atlanta and Richmond, and the bonds were worthless pieces of paper.

The blacks insisted they were never given even that, but in 1871, Virginia's highest court ruled that Hatcher was innocent of wrongdoing and that the former slaves were owed nothing.

The following year, the plantation was broken up and sold at a public auction. Hatcher's son received the proceeds, county records show. In the 1930s, a Richmond businessman cobbled the estate back together; he sold it to Willow Oaks Corp. in 1955 for an unspecified amount.

''I don't hold anything against Willow Oaks,'' Logan said. ''But how Virginia's courts acted, how they allowed the land to be stolen - it goes against everything America stands for.''

EDITOR'S NOTE - Associated Press Writers Woody Baird, Allen G. Breed, Shelia Hardwell Byrd, Alan Clendenning, Ron Harrist, David Lieb and Bill Poovey, and investigative researcher Randy Herschaft contributed to this report.


© 2001 Associated Press



taken from: http://www.mamiwata.com/trick.html

There are pictures but they were not right clickable.:(

CrimsonTide4 06-08-2003 03:12 PM

I read the entire article after I had posted it, but y'all this is deep. Can you imagine just how much land out there is OURS. I am thankful that my paternal ancestors were able to hold on to the land in SC. . . This article made me appreciate that land so much more.

Remember when you read ROLL of Thunder, Hear My Cry and Let the Circle Be Unbroken? This article makes the Logan family's struggles that more poignant.

I hope everyone read the above article. I know it is long, but it just goes to show how tainted American history is.

Honeykiss1974 02-13-2004 12:05 PM

Survivors of Tulsa riots have their day in court
 
BY SCOTT GOLD

Los Angeles Times


TULSA - A dwindling number of race-riot survivors -- some more than 100 years old -- will finally have a chance to make their case for reparations, eight decades after a white mob tore into a thriving black neighborhood, leaving as many as 300 people dead.

At a federal courthouse in Tulsa this morning, lawyers representing more than 100 survivors and 300 descendants of riot victims are scheduled to have their first opportunity to argue that their lawsuit seeking damages from the city and state should proceed to trial. The city and state have asked U.S. Senior District Judge James Ellison to dismiss the lawsuit.

Advocates on both sides of the Tulsa case see it as a bellwether for the national campaign to secure reparations for descendants of slaves. Civil-rights leaders say the case could shape the reparation movement's legal strategy and could help convince a skeptical public that society bears some responsibility for centuries-old offenses.

Thursday night, in anticipation of today's hearing, civil-rights advocates held a rally and candlelight vigil.

The vigil was at the Greenwood Cultural Center in north Tulsa, not far from where violence erupted May 31, 1921. That day, a local newspaper printed a young white woman's allegation that she had been assaulted by a black teenager. A white lynch mob marched to the jail where the teen was being held and was met by a group of blacks. A shot rang out, and the riot began.

By the next afternoon, as many as 300 people, mostly black, were dead. Thirty-five square blocks of Greenwood were reduced to ash and rubble. More than 1,000 buildings, including churches and schools, were destroyed.


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