A detailed account of the devastating 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, including its complex roots and long-term implications.
This young readers’ version of the highly regarded 2001 adult work by the same name covers the events during which the Black district of Greenwood in Tulsa, Oklahoma, was reduced to rubble as mobs of White men attacked, unchecked (and even joined by) by law enforcement, and hundreds of Black lives were lost. The violence was initially fueled by rumors of a White woman’s assault by a Black teenager. However, the perpetrators seized the opportunity to act out their resentment toward Black Wall Street, Greenwood’s thriving business sector, which represented efforts to create lives and opportunities denied by segregation. The incident is carefully placed in the context of historical influences such as Jim Crow laws, post-Reconstruction violence, the forced relocation of Native Americans, and the oil boom. The dramatic narrative then turns to the 19-year-old whose arrest was the catalyst, the sheriff who attempted to keep a lynch mob at bay, the Black leaders who fought for their community, and people of all ages fleeing for their lives. When the violence was over, the White community set out—to a large degree successfully—to erase knowledge of the incident. This valuable work concludes by connecting historical events to present-day systemic racial inequalities and struggles for justice.
A comprehensive, well-crafted account of a grim historical event.
(author’s note, chapter notes, source notes, resources, index) (Nonfiction. 12-18)