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1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of |
3 | | Representatives wish to acknowledge the Tulsa, Oklahoma race |
4 | | riot of May 31 and June 1, 1921; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, During the course of 18 hours on May 31 and June |
6 | | 1, 1921, more than 1,000 homes and businesses in Tulsa, |
7 | | Oklahoma were destroyed and estimates of 50 to 300 people were |
8 | | killed during the riot; and
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9 | | WHEREAS, By early 1921, Tulsa, Oklahoma was a modern city |
10 | | with a population of more than 100,000; most of the city's |
11 | | 10,000 African-American residents lived in the Greenwood |
12 | | District, a vibrant neighborhood that was home to two |
13 | | newspapers, several churches, a library branch, and scores of |
14 | | black-owned businesses; and
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15 | | WHEREAS, On May 30, 1921, an incident involving Dick |
16 | | Rowland, an African-American shoe shiner, and Sarah Page, a |
17 | | white elevator operator, in the Drexel Building in Tulsa would |
18 | | rapidly escalate into one of the single worst incidents of |
19 | | racial violence in American history; the most common |
20 | | explanation is that Rowland stepped on Page's foot as he |
21 | | entered the elevator, causing her to scream, and Rowland was |
22 | | arrested by the police; and
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1 | | WHEREAS, On May 30, 1921, the Tulsa Tribune, the city's |
2 | | afternoon daily newspaper, reported that Rowland had attempted |
3 | | to rape Page; by 7:30 P.M., hundreds of whites had gathered |
4 | | outside the Tulsa County Courthouse, demanding that the |
5 | | authorities hand over Rowland, but the sheriff refused; at |
6 | | around 9 P.M., after reports of the dire conditions downtown |
7 | | reached Greenwood, a group of approximately 25 armed |
8 | | African-American men, many of them World War I veterans, went |
9 | | down to the courthouse and offered their services to the |
10 | | authorities to help protect Rowland, but were rebuffed by the |
11 | | sheriff; at around 10 P.M., a false rumor hit Greenwood that |
12 | | whites were storming the courthouse, prompting a second |
13 | | contingent of African-American men to go back to the courthouse |
14 | | and offer their services to the authorities, who were once |
15 | | again turned away; as the group was leaving, a white man tried |
16 | | to disarm a black veteran and a shot was fired, an incident |
17 | | that became the start of the riot; and
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18 | | WHEREAS, Over the next 6 hours, Tulsa was plunged into |
19 | | chaos as angry whites, frustrated over the failed lynching, |
20 | | began to vent their rage at African-Americans in general; |
21 | | furious fighting erupted along the Frisco railroad tracks, |
22 | | where black defenders were able to hold off members of the |
23 | | white mob; an unarmed African-American man was murdered inside |
24 | | a downtown movie theater, while carloads of armed whites began |
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1 | | making "drive-by" shootings in black residential |
2 | | neighborhoods; by midnight, fires had been set along the edge |
3 | | of the African-American commercial district; in some of the |
4 | | city's all-night cafes, whites began to organize for a dawn |
5 | | invasion of Greenwood; and
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6 | | WHEREAS, During the early hours of the riot, local |
7 | | authorities did little to stem the growing crisis and Tulsa |
8 | | police officers had deputized former members of the lynch mob; |
9 | | local units of the National Guard were mobilized, but they |
10 | | spent most of the night protecting a white neighborhood from a |
11 | | nonexistent black counterattack; and |
12 | | WHEREAS, Shortly before dawn on June 1, 1921, thousands of |
13 | | armed whites had gathered along the fringes of Greenwood; after |
14 | | daybreak, they poured into the African-American district, |
15 | | looting homes and businesses and setting them on fire; numerous |
16 | | atrocities occurred, including the murder of A. C. Jackson, a |
17 | | renowned black surgeon, who was shot after he surrendered to a |
18 | | group of whites; at least one machine gun was utilized by the |
19 | | invading whites and some have claimed that airplanes were used |
20 | | in the attack; black Tulsans fought hard to protect their homes |
21 | | and businesses, with particularly sharp fighting occurring off |
22 | | of Standpipe Hill, but were outgunned and outnumbered in the |
23 | | end; and |
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1 | | WHEREAS, Following the riot, a brief period of martial law |
2 | | was followed by various legal maneuvers; even though Dick |
3 | | Rowland was exonerated, an all-white grand jury blamed black |
4 | | Tulsans for the riot; despite overwhelming evidence, no whites |
5 | | were ever sent to prison for the murders and arson that |
6 | | occurred during the riot; and |
7 | | WHEREAS, The vast majority of Tulsa's African-American |
8 | | population had been made homeless by the riot; despite efforts |
9 | | by the white establishment to force the relocation of the black |
10 | | community, black Tulsans had already begun the long and arduous |
11 | | process of rebuilding Greenwood within days of the riot; |
12 | | thousands were forced to spend the winter of 1921-1922 living |
13 | | in tents; and |
14 | | WHEREAS, The deep scars left by the riot remained visible |
15 | | for years and the riot became a taboo subject, particularly in |
16 | | Tulsa, for many years; in 1997, a state commission was formed |
17 | | to investigate the riot; the commission recommended that |
18 | | reparations be paid to the remaining riot survivors, while a |
19 | | team of scientists and historians uncovered evidence |
20 | | supporting long-held beliefs that unidentified riot victims |
21 | | had been buried in unmarked grave sites; and |
22 | | WHEREAS, It is important that the people of the State of |
23 | | Illinois and the nation do not forget this terrible tragedy; |