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All libraries are closed Wed., Nov. 11 for Veterans' Day, and
all web sites & catalog will be unavailable during maintenance.

News & Events Blog.

Books Sandwiched In
Join the Friends of the Tulsa City-County Libraries at noontime on Mondays in November for Books Sandwiched In.*

Books to Treasure
Meet children’s author and illustrator Brad Sneed at Books to Treasure on Nov. 13.*

Geraldine Brooks
Geraldine Brooks is coming to Tulsa Dec. 4 and 5 to receive the 2009 Peggy V. Helmerich Distinguished Author Award*

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African-American Resource Center
Tulsa Race Riot of 1921

| Final Report of the Race Riot Commission | Photographs | Bibliography |
| Selected Newspaper Articles | Race Riot Timeline with Maps | Information Sources |
| 1921 Race Riot Resource Kits for Teachers |

Tulsa's Greenwood district is the site of one of the most devastating race riots in the history of the United States. Before May 31, 1921, Tulsa's black business district known as Greenwood flourished in spite of segregation. It boasted of several restaurants, theaters, clothing shops and hotels. Dubbed the "Black Wall Street," Greenwood was an economic powerhouse.

Riot Photo

After May 31, 1921, Greenwood would never be the same. The tension mounted between the black and white communities over an incident that allegedly occurred in an elevator at Drexel building in downtown Tulsa involving Sarah Page, a 17-year-old white elevator operator, and Dick Rowland, a 19-year-old black man. There are several versions of what supposedly transpired, but the most common being that Dick Rowland accidentally stepped on Page's foot in the elevator, throwing her off balance. When Rowland reached out to keep her from falling, she screamed. Many Tulsans came to believe through media reports that Rowland attacked Page although no sufficient evidence surfaced to substantiate the claim. The incident was further escalated by a local newspaper headline that encouraged the public to "Nab Negro for Attacking Girl in Elevator."

The strained relationship between the white and black communities, the heightened jealousy of the success of the Black Wall Street area and the elevator encounter led to the Tulsa Race Riot.

Armed white men looted, burned and destroyed the black community. When the smoke cleared, mere shells of buildings were all that remained of the business district. The Red Cross estimates that more than 300 people were killed and approximately 1,200 homes were destroyed.

| About the Center | Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 | Materials for Teachers |
| Historic All-Black Towns | Web Sites | African-American Firsts Challenge |
| This Month in History | African-American Authors | African-American Inventions |
| Back to African- American Resource Center Home Page |

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