- keyword(s): 1921 Race Riot
Showing Results: 51 - 60 of 116
National Guards taking Negroes to ball park for protection. Race Riot at Tulsa June 1st 1921, 1921-06-01
National Guards taking Negroes to ball park for protection. Race Riot at Tulsa June 1st 1921
National Guards taking Negroes to ball park for protection. Race Riot at Tulsa June 1st 1921.
All that was left of his home after Tulsa Race Riot, 1921-06
Burning of church where ammunition was stored during Tulsa Race Riot, 1921-06-01
A Postcard showing Mt. Zion Baptist Church burning. This image was taken about Cameron St. and Elgin Ave. The Church was rumored at the time to have been a storehouse for weapons and ammunition.
Title is taken from the writing on the face of the postcard. Digital image has been modified from the original for clarity.
The photographer is unidentified. The Postcards were first published in 1921.
Captured Negroes on way to Convention Hall during Tulsa Race Riot, 1921-06-01
The Truth About What Actually Happened in the Tulsa Race Riot.
The research materials of William M. O'Brien, local historian.
"Riot Duty", 1919
Photocopy of Brigadier General J.F. Wolters, "Riot Duty" (Austin: The National Guard, 1919). A short manual for riot duty officials of the National Guard, it emphasizes the case of Texas and the procedures in case of a "race riot." It contains detailed strategic advise for situations very similar to those experienced in Tulsa in 1921.