Worse Mass Killing In American History .…Not Even Close.

WORST MASS SHOOTING IN AMERICAN HISTORY.…

Ever since a shoot­er entered a Gay night­club in Orlando Florida killing 49 peo­ple and wound­ing 53 the mass media have engaged in a sys­tem­at­ic and seem­ing­ly coör­di­nat­ed attempt to paint this lat­est mass shoot­ing as the worst in American history.
The United States of America did not become a nation three days ago. Neither did it become a nation even 70 years ago. So in the inter­est of clar­i­ty I would pick one sto­ry out of the litany of sto­ries which puts this nar­ra­tive to a lie. Whether New York or Chicago, Greenwood Florida to Tulsa Oklahoma the instances are many.
We chose to use a sin­gle sto­ry this time.

Black History Month

The Tulsa Massacre, 1921

Revolutionary Worker #1043, February 20, 2000

On May 30, 1921, a rumor swept through the boom­ing west­ern oil town of Tulsa, Oklahoma that a young Black man had insult­ed a white woman in a down­town elevator.

According to the white suprema­cist rules of U.S. soci­ety, the accused man faced an imme­di­ate death sen­tence. Since the turn of the cen­tu­ry, many hun­dreds of Black men in the U.S. had been bru­tal­ly lynched and muti­lat­ed by vig­i­lante gangs – with­out tri­al or inves­ti­ga­tion – often for accu­sa­tions of “affronting white womanhood.”

But this time, in Tulsa, it was dif­fer­ent. This time there was resis­tance. Organized mil­i­tant forces in the Black com­mu­ni­ty stepped for­ward to defend Dick Rowland.

All the hate­ful forces of white suprema­cy in the area respond­ed to that resis­tance with two fever­ish days of mur­der and fire. The dead of Tulsa’s Black com­mu­ni­ty lay stacked in piles. And the cen­tral Black busi­ness dis­trict of North Tulsa was total­ly burned out.

Tulsa 1921 is a sto­ry of bru­tal “eth­nic cleans­ing” and geno­cide. This was the largest “civ­il dis­tur­bance” since the Civil War and the anti-Indian wars of the 1800s. It is a sto­ry that has been sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly cen­sored by the sys­tem – despite the repeat­ed efforts of the Black press, rev­o­lu­tion­ary forces and pro­gres­sive his­to­ri­ans to bring the facts to light.

Now, after almost 80 years, the truth about the Tulsa Massacre is final­ly break­ing into the pub­lic are­na, and the last sur­vivors are step­ping for­ward to tell the sto­ry that has been denied and suppressed.

Tulsa’s Little Africa

For decades, Black peo­ple flee­ing the hor­rors of the plan­ta­tion South had found their way west to North Tulsa and forged a new com­mu­ni­ty of 15,000 – togeth­er with Black Seminoles who arrived in Oklahoma a cen­tu­ry ear­li­er after the infa­mous “Trail of Tears.” This new com­mu­ni­ty was called the Greenwood dis­trict, or “Little Africa.”

Most of the peo­ple in this Black com­mu­ni­ty were wage work­ers – often cross­ing the rail­road tracks into South Tulsa for the worst jobs and domes­tic work. At the same time, the rigid seg­re­ga­tion of Tulsa meant that “Little Africa” cre­at­ed its own busi­ness dis­trict along Greenwood Avenue. Supporters of Black cap­i­tal­ism nick­named it “the Negro Wall Street.”

There were Black-owned movie the­aters, a news­pa­per, jew­el­ry stores, 15 doc­tors, three law offices, a school, three gro­cery stores, many restau­rants, church­es, and a Black-owned bus line.

But the Tulsa Tribune and white racists of South Tulsa just called it “N*ggertown.”

The inven­tion of cars and intense demands of World War 1 brought explo­sive growth to the petro­le­um fields and to the noto­ri­ous­ly cor­rupt and row­dy town of Tulsa. The local Tulsa own­ing class felt that their boom­ing down­town busi­ness dis­trict was hemmed in by the Black Greenwood com­mu­ni­ty. They want­ed Blacks moved out. Police Commissioner Adkison and the Tulsa Tribunecon­stant­ly accused Greenwood of being a cen­ter of pros­ti­tu­tion, drugs, liquor and gambling.

Meanwhile in “Little Africa,” like in oth­er Black com­mu­ni­ties, there was a deeply impa­tient new mood of resis­tance. Black vet­er­ans came back from World War 1 with pride and a fresh belief that they deserved respect and equal­i­ty. In urban areas, many Black peo­ple were bold­er in ques­tion­ing the lynch-law cus­toms of Jim Crow. The rev­o­lu­tion­ary storms of Europe and Russia after World War 1 inspired the new rev­o­lu­tion­ary and com­mu­nist orga­ni­za­tion among Black people.

The Call for Lynching

Dick Rowland, a young Black shoeshine man, knew the white ele­va­tor oper­a­tor Sarah Page. An inves­ti­ga­tor from the NAACP uncov­ered that Rowland had called for the ele­va­tor. Page had been angry to be called by a Black man and closed the doors while he was only halfway in. Thrown off bal­ance, he had stepped on her foot. As Rowland left that ele­va­tor, Page screamed that he had insult­ed her.

Rowland was arrest­ed and tak­en to the Tulsa County Courthouse. No charges were ever pressed, no evi­dence was ever presented.

The next morn­ing, the Tulsa Tribune print­ed a rabid edi­to­r­i­al with the head­line “To Lynch Negro Tonight.” That evening, an armed mob of white peo­ple gath­ered out­side the jail to lynch Dick Rowland.

A remark­able thing hap­pened: Suddenly an armed group of Black men (var­i­ous­ly report­ed at 50 to 75) arrived from Greenwood, dressed in World War 1 Army fatigues. With breath-tak­ing courage, they con­front­ed this grow­ing crowd of 2,000 racists – announc­ing that they would fight to pro­tect Rowland’s life and see that he got basic justice.

There were shouts back and forth between the two groups – then shots. Several men fell dead. Greatly out­num­bered, the Black mil­i­tants retreat­ed north, across the rail­road tracks into Greenwood.

The local police orga­nized a mur­der­ous attack on the Black com­mu­ni­ty. They dep­u­tized hun­dreds of men from the lynch mob and told them, “Now you can go out and shoot any n*gger you see, and the law’ll be behind you.” Groups of white men broke into down­town hard­ware stores, pawn­shops, and gun stores and took firearms and ammunition.

As the racist forces tried to cross the rail­road tracks, fight­ers with­in the Black com­mu­ni­ty held them off for hours with sniper fire. By dawn, huge num­bers of armed whites had gath­ered – as many as 10,000 – and at 5 a.m. they moved into “Little Africa.” It was a full mil­i­tary inva­sion – com­plete with machine guns.

A 1924 legal brief by the American Central Insurance Company would lat­er describe their “com­mon intent to exe­cute a com­mon plan, to-wit: the exter­mi­na­tion of the col­ored peo­ple of Tulsa and the destruc­tion of the col­ored set­tle­ment, homes, and build­ings, by fire.”

There was con­tin­u­ous resis­tance. Teams of Black fight­ers formed to fight for the lives of the peo­ple. The com­bat was house-to-house, and even hand-to-hand in some areas. A Black woman, Mary Jones Parrish, lat­er wrote: “Looking south out of the win­dow of what then was the Woods Building, we saw car loads of men with rifles unload­ing up near the gra­nary.… Then the truth dawned upon us that our men were fight­ing in vain to hold their dear Greenwood.”

The sur­vivors report­ed that their neigh­bor­hoods were strafed by air­planes. Explosives and fire­bombs were dropped. A Tulsa cop, Van B. Hurley, lat­er report­ed that sev­er­al promi­nent city offi­cials met with local plane own­ers in a down­town office and planned the air attack. It was one of the first report­ed uses of aer­i­al bombs in world history.

Fire and Mass Murder

They set our house on fire and we were up in the attic… five kids… We were able to get out with­out injury but bul­lets were zing­ing around there… But when we got down, the tele­phone poles were burned and falling and my poor sis­ter who was two years younger than I am said, ‘Kinney, is the world on fire?’ I said, ‘I don’t think so, but we are in deep trouble.“ ‘

Kinney Booker, who was 8
dur­ing the Massacre

The attack­ers imme­di­ate­ly set the Black com­mu­ni­ty on fire. A wall of flame swept through the Greenwood busi­ness dis­trict– burn­ing out every­thing in its path.

Meanwhile, gangs of heav­i­ly armed attack­ers went house-to-house – killing peo­ple, tak­ing away Black men in a sys­tem­at­ic roundup, steal­ing any­thing valu­able and light­ing Black homes on fire. Eyewitnesses report­ed that Sheriff’s deputies used kerosene to burn down the finest homes in the dis­trict. About 1,200 hous­es, hotels, and busi­ness­es were destroyed. Thirty-five blocks were a burnt-out waste­land. Charred bod­ies were found in the debris.

Regular infantry of the Oklahoma National Guard rushed in on a spe­cial train, arriv­ing June 1. The Guard’s com­man­der lat­er wrote, “Twenty-five thou­sand whites, armed to the teeth, were rang­ing the city in utter and ruth­less defi­ance of every con­cept of law and right­eous­ness. Motor cars bristling with guns swept through the city, their occu­pants fir­ing at will.” The Guard sol­diers were offi­cial­ly there to stop the “dis­tur­bance,” but they quick­ly went to work round­ing up Black peo­ple at bay­o­net point, wound­ing many in the process.

Behind the trees and walls near the foot of Standpipe Hill, the armed defense fight­ers of the Black com­mu­ni­ty made their last stand. The National Guard set up two machine guns and poured dead­ly fire into the area. The last Black fight­ers sur­ren­dered. They were dis­armed and marched in columns to four major intern­ment areas that had been set up at the city’s Convention Hall, McNulty Baseball Park, the Fairgrounds and the town’s airport.

The killing was sys­tem­at­ic and heart­less. Death squads of armed whites, many of them orga­nized Klansmen, went door-to-door in the burn­ing neigh­bor­hoods killing peo­ple. They shot any­one mov­ing in the streets. Black men were chained to cars and dragged to their deaths. In white areas, Black domes­tic work­ers were gunned down on their way home – with­out warn­ing. Dr. A. C. Jackson (who was described by a founder of the Mayo Clinic as “the most able Negro sur­geon in the coun­try”) was mur­dered after sur­ren­der­ing him­self to police.

The National Guard orga­nized teams to stack bod­ies and load them on wag­ons and trucks. The Red Cross report­ed treat­ing almost 1,000 wound­ed peo­ple – over­whelm­ing­ly Black. The local Black school, which escaped the fire, became a field hos­pi­tal. One observ­er wrote, “There were men wound­ed in every con­ceiv­able way, like sol­diers after a big bat­tle. Some with ampu­tat­ed limbs, burned faces, oth­ers minus an eye or with heads ban­daged. There were women who were ner­vous wrecks, and some con­fine­ment cas­es. Was I in a hos­pi­tal in France? No, in Tulsa.”

Many Black peo­ple fled the city com­plete­ly – into the Osage Hills and the many Black com­mu­ni­ties that dot­ted rur­al Oklahoma. Many thou­sands had been cap­tured at gun­point. Some were tak­en to killing fields and exe­cut­ed in cold blood. Others, includ­ing many chil­dren, were marched to the intern­ment cen­ters. At the entrance to the Tulsa Convention Center, a mur­dered Black man’s body was pub­licly dis­played as a tro­phy in the back of a truck. And columns of cap­tured Black peo­ple were forced to pass in front of it, on their way into the building.

Reporter Brent Staples describes the after­math (New York Times December 19, 1999): “Corpses stacked like cord­wood on street cor­ners, pho­tographed for keep­sakes. Corpses piled in the backs of wag­ons, dump trucks, and along rail­road sid­ings. Corpses buried in an under­ground tun­nel down­town, where one caller said 123 blacks had been clubbed to death. Corpses left to rot for days in a park under the blis­ter­ing Oklahoma sun. Corpses dumped in the Arkansas River and allowed to float away.”

By June 2, the fight­ing was over. The Black com­mu­ni­ty had been com­plete­ly burnt out — turned into a smok­ing waste­land. After being held in intern­ment, a thou­sand Black peo­ple were forced to spend the fol­low­ing win­ter in a refugee city of tents and board shacks under bit­ter con­di­tions. For months, Black peo­ple would see white peo­ple on Tulsa’s down­town streets wear­ing cloth­ing and jew­el­ry stolen dur­ing the pogrom.

The Fight for the Truth

The Black press in the U.S. fought hard to expose what had hap­pened in Tulsa.

The new­ly formed Communist Party (CP) print­ed hun­dreds of thou­sands of fly­ers enti­tled “The Tulsa Massacre.” The leaflet bold­ly sup­port­ed the armed self-defense of Black com­mu­ni­ties and called for the rev­o­lu­tion­ary over­throw of the cap­i­tal­ist sys­tem for its bru­tal white suprema­cy. Activists dis­trib­uted them very wide­ly across the coun­try – in fac­to­ry dis­tricts, Black com­mu­ni­ties and con­ven­tions of orga­ni­za­tions like the NAACP.

Government infor­mants report­ed that a ton of the fly­ers were dis­trib­uted in Chicago alone.

Revolutionaries and pro­gres­sive peo­ple orga­nized cam­paigns to aid the burned-out sur­vivors of this massacre.

In Tulsa itself, amid the hor­ror and sor­row, there was report­ed­ly tremen­dous pride that Rowland had gone free and that the com­mu­ni­ty had fought so fierce­ly with guns against racist attack.

Meanwhile, the U.S. pow­er struc­ture imme­di­ate­ly moved to white­wash this event, and to sup­press knowl­edge of it. A hasti­ly con­vened grand jury announced that the events were caused by the Black com­mu­ni­ty – specif­i­cal­ly blam­ing “an effort on the part of a cer­tain group of col­ored men who appeared at the cour­t­house…” In the sec­ond place they blamed the “agi­ta­tion among the negroes of the social equal­i­ty.” Local author­i­ties blamed a rev­o­lu­tion­ary orga­ni­za­tion, the African Blood Brotherhood, for insti­gat­ing the resis­tance. Leading fig­ures of the Black com­mu­ni­ty were indict­ed for “incit­ing” the events of May 31. Not one white per­son was ever arrest­ed or charged for the Tulsa Massacre.

Mayor Paul Brown report­ed that only 36 peo­ple died – 10 whites and 26 Black peo­ple. This fig­ure was repeat­ed in his­to­ry books and accounts – as an offi­cial account­ing of these so-called “Tulsa Race Riots.”

The head­lines of the Tulsa Tribune raged:

  • Propaganda of Negroes is Blamed”
  • Black Agitators Blamed for Riot, Plot by Negro Society?”
  • Bloodshed in Race War will Cleanse Tulsa”
  • Negro Section Abolished by City’s Order”

Local author­i­ties made sure “Little Africa” would nev­er be rebuilt – mon­ey was denied, new ordi­nances were passed.

The new­ly formed FBI focused much of its activ­i­ties dur­ing the sum­mer of 1921, iden­ti­fy­ing and harass­ing the forces cir­cu­lat­ing the CP’s “Tulsa Massacre” fliers. Insurance com­pa­nies refused to com­pen­sate the vic­tims of the Tulsa mas­sacre and fire.

And soon, this shame­ful Tulsa Massacre was sim­ply erased from offi­cial American his­to­ry and pub­lic dis­cus­sion. Most peo­ple have sim­ply nev­er heard of it. Someone at the Tulsa Tribuneremoved all records that their news­pa­per had called for the lynch­ing of Dick Rowland – no known copies of the inflam­ma­to­ry arti­cles exist today.

Over the years, there was an ongo­ing strug­gle to break through the silence. Survivors told of the air attacks and of bod­ies dumped in mine­shafts and the near­by riv­er. Officially, such reports were dis­missed as unfound­ed exag­ger­a­tions and lies. In the 1970s, thanks to the pow­er­ful Black Liberation move­ment, accounts of the Tulsa Massacre start­ed to appear in pro­gres­sive mag­a­zines, rad­i­cal his­to­ry books and the new cours­es on Black Studies.

Memory and Mass Graves

Six years ago, the world learned about the 1923 racist attack in Rosewood, Florida, through the movie and the court case where sur­vivors received $2 mil­lion in restitution.

Since 1997, a relent­less move­ment has emerged to demand an account­ing in Tulsa. Many par­tic­i­pants demand repa­ra­tions for the bru­tal­i­ty and destruc­tion. More than 150 wit­ness­es, includ­ing 60 sur­vivors, have tes­ti­fied at a “Tulsa Race Riot Commission” of the Oklahoma Legislature. And their pow­er­ful sto­ries have brought out the truth – after all these many years. People have stepped for­ward to iden­ti­fy three places in Tulsa where Black bod­ies were buried in mass graves. Excavations at one of the mass grave sites are sched­uled to begin this summer.

Historians gen­er­al­ly now esti­mate that at least 300 peo­ple died dur­ing this Massacre – over 90 per­cent of them Black. Some peo­ple sus­pect the num­ber was much high­er. In fact, the real num­ber of dead may nev­er be known.

*****

No force can undo the crimes of the Tulsa Massacre. But the strug­gle and deter­mi­na­tion of Black peo­ple has forced a pub­lic inves­ti­ga­tion of these events. Just demands are being made for a pub­lic account­ing and reparations.

At a time when offi­cial Amerikkka crude­ly denies the exis­tence of sys­tem­at­ic and insti­tu­tion­al racism – the real­i­ty of Black peo­ple’s lives and oppres­sion has been wrenched into the light of day.

This arti­cle is post­ed in English and Spanish on Revolutionary Worker Online
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