- keyword(s): 1921 Race Riot
Showing Results: 91 - 100 of 120
Reparations.
The research materials of William M. O'Brien, local historian.
"The Conspiracy of Silence", 1983-06-02
Tulsa Daily World excerpts, 1921-06-01
Photocopy of the front cover page and page eight of the Tulsa Daily World, dated Wednesday, June 1, 1921. Under the headline "Two Whites Dead in Race Riot," several articles describe the alleged origins, development, and popular and official responses to the violence. Initial reports stated that no African Americans had died, and then and updates reported two deaths in the Frisco tracks.
National Guard.
The research materials of William M. O'Brien, local historian.
Reconstructing the Dreamland..., 2000
...Contemplating Civil Rights Actions and Reparations for the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 by Alfred L. Brophy. Preliminary draft of the report, remarks or a speech, and a short essay printed from a website, apparently attached as an appendix for research.
Photocopy of an advertisement from J.W. Megee , 1921
The advertisement is a list of gun models and types that were stolen from the store on the night of the Race Riot. The owner asks that the items be returned, and notes that any guns not returned will be reported to the authorities. Includes the store's address and phone number.
Telephone poles standing among the ruins, 1921-06-01
Enlarged copy of photograph of telephone poles rising up along Hartford Avenue above the ruined remains of buildings after the Tulsa Race Riot.
The title supplied by cataloger. Digital image has been modified from the original for clarity.
Photocopied news articles on Roy Belton Lynching, 12 pp., 1920 Aug 29
Walter F. White's first article on the Tulsa Race Riot.
Redfearn Brief, District Court Case 23291, Tulsa County, 36 pp.
The research materials of William M. O'Brien, local historian.
H.R. 1039, 2007
H.R. 1039: To direct the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a special resources study regarding the suitability and feasibility of designating the John Hope Franklin Memorial/Museum of Reconciliation and other sites in Tulsa, Oklahoma, relating to the 1921 Tulsa race riot as a unit of the National Park Service, and for other purposes. 5p.