Diary of a Negress wrote:
The Bombing of Little Africa
Black Wall Street: The True Story
Kush*te Prince:
I’ve always believed that black folks need to do for
self. We need to have our own schools, businesses and black banking
system independent of whites. We really don’t need white folks, we can
survive on our own.
When I learned of Black
Wall Street, I wept openly. I cried for my people who had defied all
odds and succeeded. I cried for that baby who was separated from his
parents never to be found in the fire. I cried for the ransacked homes
and the mass killings on the streets of Greenwood. I cried for the women
who watched their men be lynched and burned. I cried for the little
boys who watched their mothers get raped while the white racists laughed
and taunted him. And I bawled because once…in this lifetime, blacks
were millionaires. Respectable, wealthy Africans who owned businesses,
airplanes, banks, schools and churches.
May God have mercy on their souls.
Searching under the heading of “riots,”
“Oklahoma” and “Tulsa” in current editions of the World Book
Encyclopedia, there is conspicuously no mention whatsoever of the Tulsa
race riot of 1921, and this omission is by no means a surprise, or a
rare case. The fact is, one would also be hard-pressed to find
documentation of the incident, let alone and accurate accounting of it,
in any other “scholarly” reference or American history book.
That’s precisely the point that noted author, publisher
and orator Ron Wallace, a Tulsa native, sought to make nearly five years
ago when he began researching this riot, one of the worst incidents of
violence ever visited upon people of African descent. Ultimately joined
on the project by colleague Jay Wilson of Los Angeles, the duo found and
compiled indisputable evidence of what they now describe as “a Black
holocaust in America.”
The date was June 1, 1921, when “Black Wall Street,” the
name fittingly given to one of the most affluent all-Black communities
in America, was bombed from the air and burned to the ground by mobs of
envious whites. In a period spanning fewer than 12 hours, a once
thriving 36-Black business district in northern Tulsa lay smoldering–a
model community destroyed, and a major African-American economic
movement resoundingly defused.
The night’s carnage left some 3,000 African Americans
dead, and over 600 successful businesses lost. Among these were 21
churches, 21 restaurants, 30 grocery stores and two movie theaters, plus
a hospital, a bank, a post office, libraries, schools, law offices, a
half dozen private airplanes and even a bus system. As could have been
expected the impetus behind it all was the infamous Ku Klux Klan,
working in consort with ranking city officials, and many other
sympathizers.
In their self-published book, Black Wallstreet: A Lost
Dream, and its companion video documentary, Black Wallstreet: A Black
Holocaust in America!, the authors have chronicled for the very first
time in the words of area historians and elderly survivors what really
happened there on that fateful summer day in 1921 and why it happened.
Wallace similarly explained to me why this bloody event from the turn of
the century seems to have had a recurring effect that is being felt in
predominately Black neighborhoods even to this day.
The best description of Black Wallstreet, or Little
Africa as it was also known, would be liken it to a mini-Beverly Hills.
It was the golden door of the Black community during the early 1900s,
and it proved that African Americans had successful infrastructure.
That’s what Black Wallstreet was all about. The dollar
circulated 36 to 100 times, sometimes taking a year for currency to
leave the community. Now in 1995, a dollar leaves the Black community in
15-minutes. As far as resources, there were Ph.D.’s residing
in Little Africa, Black attorneys and doctors. One doctor was Dr. Berry
who owned the bus system. His average income was $500 a day, a hefty
pocket change in 1910. During that era, physicians owned medical
schools. There were also pawn shops everywhere, brothels, jewelry
stores, 21 churches, 21 restaurants and two movie theaters. It was a
time when the entire state of Oklahoma had only two airports, yet six
Blacks owned their own planes. It was a very fascinating community.
The area encompassed over 600 businesses and 36
square blocks with a population of 15,000 African Americans. And when
the lower-economic Europeans looked over and saw what the Black
community created, many of them were jealous. When the average
student went to school on Black Wallstreet, he wore a suit and tie
because of the morals and respect they were taught at a young age.
The mainstay of the community was to educate every
child. Nepotism was the one word they believed in. And that’s what we
need to get back to in 1995. The main thoroughfare was Greenwood Avenue,
and it was intersected by Archer and Pine Streets. From the first
letters in each of those three names, you get G.A.P., and that’s where
the renowned R and B music group the Gap Band got its name. They’re from
Tulsa.
Black Wallstreet was a prime example of the typical
Black community in America that did businesses, but it was in an unusual
location. You see, at the time, Oklahoma was set aside to be a Black
and Indian state. There were over 28 Black townships there. One third of
the people who traveled in the terrifying “Trail of Tears” along side
the Indians between 1830 to 1842 were Black people. The citizens of this
proposed Indian and Black state chose a Black governor, a treasurer
from Kansas named McDade. But the Ku Klux Klan said that if he assumed
office that they would kill him within 48 hours. A lot of Blacks
owned farmland, and many of them had gone into the oil business. The
community was so tight and wealthy because they traded dollars
hand-to-hand, and because they were dependent upon one another as a
result of the Jim Crow laws.
It was not unusual that if a resident’s home
accidentally burned down, it could be rebuilt within a few weeks by
neighbors. This was the type of scenario that was going on day- to-day
on Black Wallstreet. When Blacks intermarried into the Indian culture,
some of them received their promised ’40 acres and a mule’ and with that
came whatever oil was later found on the properties.
Just to show you how wealthy a lot of Black people were,
there was a banker in the neighboring town who had a wife named
California Taylor. Her father owned the largest cotton gin west of the
Mississippi [River]. When California shopped, she would take a cruise to
Paris every three months to have her clothes made. There was also a man
named Mason in nearby Wagner County who had the largest potato farm
west of the Mississippi. When he harvested, he would fill 100 boxcars a
day. Another brother not far away had the same thing with a spinach
farm. The typical family then was five children or more, though the
typical farm family would have 10 kids or more who made up the nucleus
of the labor.
On Black Wallstreet, a lot of global business was
conducted. The community flourished from the early 1900s until June 1,
1921. That’s when the largest massacre of non-military Americans in the
history of this country took place, and it was lead by the Ku Klux Klan.
Imagine walking out of your front door and seeing 1,500 homes being
burned. It must have been amazing.
Survivors we interviewed think that the whole
thing was planned because during the time that all of this was going on,
white families with their children stood around the borders of their
community and watched the massacre, the looting and everything–much in
the same manner they would watch a lynching.
In my lectures I ask people if they understand where the
word “picnic” comes from. It was typical to have a picnic on a Friday
evening in Oklahoma. The word was short for “pick a Brotha Man” to lynch.
They would lynch a Black male and cut off body parts as souvenirs. This
went on every weekend in this country, and it was all across the county.
That’s where the term really came from.
{ recopied from Black Wall Street Freeservers.com }
Please make time to watch this documentary….it’s long, about 2 hours. Please, please, please educated yourself on our history.
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