Read Death in a Promised Land Online

Authors: Scott Ellsworth

Death in a Promised Land (29 page)

Johnson, O. T., 69

Jones, Richard Lloyd, 48

“Junior” Ku Klux Klan, 22

Kirkpatrick, Major Byron, 53–54

“Knights of Liberty,” 30–33

Kopp, H. E., 90

Krieger, Charles, 125

Ku Klux Klan: rebirth of, 20

   in Oklahoma, 99

   in Tulsa, 20–22, 98, 102–103, 122

Latimer, J. C, 72

Leonard, O. W., incident involving (1919), 33–38

Loupe, E. A., 76–77

Lorton, Eugene, 29, 124

Lucas, E. L., 25, 32

Lynchings: U.S., 17–18

   Moultrie, Georgia, 18

   in Oklahoma, 19–20, 24, 128

   in Tulsa, 38–44, 102–103, 126

McCabe, Edwin P., 19

Macedonia Baptist Church, 12

McCullough, Willard, 49–52, 53, 61, 101, 127

McGee’s Hardware Store, 54

McNulty Park, internment at, 59, 71

Martial law, conditions under, 74–78

Martin, L. J., 83, 90–91

Mayo brothers, 59

Miller, Dr. George H., 130

Moore, George, 40

Moran, John, 32

Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 57, 70, 129

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP): on white militancy, 23

   supporters in Tulsa, 24

   initiates “Tulsa Relief and Defense Fund,” 82

   financial contributions to relief work, 82, 92

   formation of Tulsa chapter, 103–104

National Guard

—black views of, 77–78

—combined units: riot activities, 61–62, 74

   care of wounded, 66

   at internment centers, 71–72

   other postriot actions, 74–78

—Oklahoma units: mobilized, 53–54

   arrival in Tulsa, 61, withdrawal of, 76–78

—Tulsa units: armory incident, 50–51;

   mobilized, 53–54

   riot actions, 54, 59;

   held in alert, 76

   response to rumor of black counterattack, 78

Native Americans: in Tulsa area, 8, 12;

   and slavery, 19

New York
Times,
66, 74

Nida, Homer, 38

Niles, Alva J., 83, 90

Oil Field Workers Union, 26–29.
See also
Industrial Workers of the World

Oil industry, in Tulsa and Oklahoma, 9–11

Oklahoma: growth of, 8–11

   race relations in, 19, 20, 24–25

   effort to make into all-black state, 19

   Jim Crow laws in, 19

   racial violence in, 19–20

   lynchings in, 19–20, 24, 38–44, 128

   effects of riot on, 107

Oklahoma City
Black Dispatch,
69

“Oklahoma Clubs,” 19

Oklahoma
Eagle,
106, 107

Oklahoma Hospital, 66, 67

Oklahoma Ironworks, 34–35

Oklahoma
Sun,
14, 70, 74

Page, Sarah, 46–48, 97, 100

Parrish, Mary E. Jones, 63, 76, 79, 82, 92, 103–105

Pew, J. Edgar, 25

Police, Tulsa: black officers, 14, 33–38

   in IWW incident (1917), 25–28, 30–33

   in Leonard incident (1919), 35–38

   in Belton incident (1920), 38–43

   initial handling of Rowland-Page incident, 47–48

   response to courthouse mob, 49–54

   riot actions, 53–57, 59–61, 63, 74

   medical claims against, 67

   aerial reconnaissance, 78

   views of by grand jury, 96–97

   and nature of local law enforcement, 99–100

   and riot causation, 101–102

“Police Protection” cards, 72, 75

Powers, W. J., 25

Prostitution, in Tulsa, 16, 96, 99–100

Pullman Company, 78

Race relations: U.S., World War I era, 17–25

   Oklahoma, 19–20

   resurgence of militant white supremacist beliefs, 20–22

   black self-defense ideologies, 23–25

Race riot, Tulsa (1921): Rowland-Page incident, 45–47

   May 31, 1921, issue of the Tulsa
Tribune,
47–49

   gathering of lynch mob, 49–51

   outbreak of violence, 51–53

   deputization of whites, 54

   gun procurement by whites, 54–55

   first fire, 55

   invasion of black Tulsa, 55–57

   burning and looting by whites, 57–58

   atrocities, 59

   internment of blacks, 60–61

   National Guard activities, 61–63

   use of airplanes, 63

   final fighting, 63–66

   casualty estimates, 66–69

   property loss estimates, 69–70

   causes of, 98–102

   effects on city, 102–104

   white oral tradition, 104–105, 106–107

   black oral tradition, 105–106

   effects on Oklahoma, 107

   rioters, probable social origins, 104–105

Randolph, A. Philip, 23

Reader’s Digest,
107

Real Estate Exchange.
See
Tulsa Real Estate Exchange

Reconstruction Committee: appointed by Mayor Evans, 84

   favors Union Station project, 85

   rejects Chamber of Commerce report, 86

   activities of, 88–89

   sub-committees, 133

Red Cross: reopens Cinnabar Hospital, 66

   care of riot victims, 66–67

   estimates of riot casualties, 67, 69, 70

   estimates of property losses, 70

   estimates of exodus from Tulsa, 74

   helps purchase tickets for refugees, 74

   activities at fairgrounds, 75

   receives donations of clothing and household articles, 79

   is dominant group in relief efforts, 79

   relief activities of, 79–82

   black views of, 82

   reports unsanitary conditions, 88

   provides housing and housing assistance, 89–90, 92–94

   local donations to, 91–93

   terminates programs, 92

   expenditures of, 92

   overall role of, 94

Red Fork, Oklahoma, oil strike, 9

Reeves, Colonel, 86

Relief activities by whites, overall nature of, 79, 89, 91–94

Richards, John P., 59–60

Richardson, Charles, 28, 32

Robertson, James B. A., 43–44, 51, 53, 61, 82, 94

Rooney, Colonel L. J. F., 78

Rowland, Dick, 45–49, 53, 55, 61, 95, 97, 100–102, 127

Ryan, F. J., 29, 30

Sam, Chief Alfred, 24

Salvation Army, Tulsa Citadel, 69, 79

Sharp, Raymond, 40–42, 126

Smitherman, A. J., 44, 74, 97, 136

Smitherman, J. K., 50, 97, 102

Socialist Party: in Oklahoma, 20, 99

   in Tulsa, 20, 29, 122

Spears, I. H., 87–88

State of Oklahoma
v.
Will Robinson, 97

Stratford, J. B., 50, 134

“Take Me Back to Tulsa,” 14–15

Taylor, Peg Leg, 105

Thomas, Jack, 71

Thompson, Garfield, 135

Thompson, Oscar, 135

Thompson, Dr. P. S., 48

Tulsa
Democrat,
33, 35

Tulsa
Guide,
14

Tulsa Hospital, 66

Tulsa Real Estate Exchange, 69–70, 84

Tulsa
Star:
established, 14

   on lynchings, 24–25

   coverage of Belton incident (1920), 39, 44

   claim lodged for destruction of, 70

   blamed by whites for riot, 74

   on “social equality,” 134

Tulsa
Times,
35

Tulsa
Tribune:
coverage of Belton incident (1920), 39–43

   May 31, 1921, issue of, 3, 47–49, 101–102, 127

   riot casualties estimates, 66

   on rebuilding black Tulsa, 91; 1971

   article on riot, 106

Tulsa
Weekly Planet,
14

Tulsa
World:
coverage of IWW incident (1917), 25–33, 124

   coverage of Leonard incident (1919), 35

   coverage of Belton incident (1920), 39–44

   estimate of riot property losses, 70

   calls for rebuilding black Tulsa, 90

Tuttle, William, 7

Universal Negro Improvement Association, 23, 82

Van Leuven, Kathryn, 94

Vernon African Methodist Episcopal Church, 12

Veterans, World War I, black: U.S., 23;

   in Tulsa, 24, 99

Vigilance Committee (1917), 32

Walton, John C, 103

Warner, Ross T., 69

Washington High School.
See
Booker T. Washington High School Webb, Stanley, 35

West James T., 71

White, Walter, 52, 67–69, 84, 85, 89, 90, 127

Whitlow, Henry, 69, 94, 108–109

Wilkinson, Captain, 28

William Redfearn
v.
City of Tulsa,
135

Williams building, 2, 108

Williams Dreamland Theatre.
See
Dreamland Theatre

Williams, John: early career in Tulsa, 1–3

   riot experience, 3–6

Williams, Loula: early career in Tulsa, 1–3

   riot experience, 3–6

   files claim for losses, 70

Williams, Seymour, 54, 123

Williams, W. D. (“Bill”): birth of, 1

   riot experience, 3–6

   on May 31, 1921, issue of the Tulsa
Tribune,
3, 48

   on riot fatalities, 69

   message for young blacks on riot anniversary (1971), 105–106

   on fallacy of Mt. Zion Baptist Church as an arsenal, 129

Willows, Maurice, 66–67

Wills, Bob, and his Texas Playboys, 15

Wilson, Woodrow, administration, 18

Wisconsin Weekly Blade,
23

Women of the Ku Klux Klan, 22

Woolley, Sheriff, 40–43, 126

Younkman, C. S., 88

Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright

Contents

Foreword

PRELUDE In the Promised Land

CHAPTER 1 Boom Cities

CHAPTER 2 Race Relations and Local Violence

CHAPTER 3 Race Riot

CHAPTER 4 Law, Order, and the Politics of Relief

CHAPTER 5 The Segregation of Memory

EPILOGUE Notes on the Subsequent History of “Deep Greenwood”

Appendix I

Appendix II

Notes

Essay on Sources

Acknowledgments

Index

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