On May 30, 1921, 19-year-old Dick Roland entered the elevator within the Drexel Building in Tulsa, Oklahoma, to use the restroom on the top floor. As the elevator moved its way up, it lurched, and the Black teen accidentally lunged toward the operator, 16-year-old Sarah Page, a White orphan. The girl screamed and a White store clerk came to her aid. Terrified for his security, Roland fled the scene. This innocent encounter between two teens in the midst of a brutal segregation was to set the stage for what is to be still considered the largest race “riot” in the nation’s history.
Nearly a century later, the Tulsa Race Massacre, as it is now known, is one of the most mysterious uprisings to occur during the Jim Crow period. That’s because the event had remained a local secret until the late 1990’s, when the extended families of the Blacks who lost their lives and livelihoods began demanding reparations for their loved ones.
Many of the Blacks who made their way to Tulsa, Oklahoma, were slaves who had accompanied their Native American masters en route through the Trail of Tears. They later earned some freedom through property they either bought from Native Americans or were granted through the government as part of its expulsion settlement.
Tulsa’s Greenwood Community, where the massacre occurred, became known as Black Wall Street over time. It gained this prestigious nomenclature after the former slaves that made their way to Tulsa managed to build a thriving community during segregation, thanks in great part to Tulsa’s oil boom.
Several reasons led to the 1921 race massacre. The racial tensions of the time were the overlying factors, with Blacks having to thrive through fears of White fascism, lynchings, and economic control. Despite these challenges, the Greenwood Community was to eventually hold theaters, hospitals, and robust modern amenities of the time. But this extravagance was to be enjoyed only under the watchful eyes of its racist neighbors, who did whatever they could to control the lives of the segregated Blacks.
What still remains a mystery about the Tulsa massacre is the number of victims who lost their lives during the three-day riot. Official records have settled on 37, although there is evidence that at least 300 people were scorched, shot, or brutally beaten, and damages are estimated as high as $3 million. What’s worse than the confusion in the final tally of deaths and damages, is the evidence that shows the victim, Sarah Page, had not only repeatedly denied allegations of sexual assault, but that she was to later follow Dick Roland out of Tulsa to pursue a relationship with him.
To this day, the Tulsa Race Massacre is still not covered in history books or classrooms. A trip to the refurbished Greenwood Community shows no overt evidence of the massacre, unless you look very carefully or diligently research Tulsa’s history. It’s only now, 18 years into the 21st century, that the incident is receiving the exposure it deserves. Turns out, the book is a hidden gem, dug up from the library archives 20 years after it was first published.
True to the incident itself, the author’s profile is also a mystery, until I looked very carefully and diligently researched his history. Nonetheless, the book is a thorough depiction of the massacre and should be a required read.