Los Angeles Times

Remains found in search of 1921 Tulsa massacre site

Investigat­ors are looking for victims of a white mob’s attack on Black Wall Street.

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OKLAHOMA CITY — At least 10 bodies were found Wednesday in an unmarked mass grave at a Tulsa cemetery where investigat­ors are searching for the remains of victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, Oklahoma’s state archaeolog­ist said.

“What we were f inding was an indication that we were inside a large area ... a large hole that had been excavated and into which several individual­s had been placed and buried in that location. This constitute­s a mass grave,” state archaeolog­ist Kary Stackelbec­k said.

Investigat­ors found 10 wooden coffins containing what was initially presumed to be one person in each, Stackelbec­k said. She said further examinatio­n of the coffins and remains, which have not been removed, was needed.

“Those skeletal remains are not in great condition,” Stackelbec­k said. “They’re not the worst condition we have seen ... but they’re not the best.”

Combined with one set of remains found nearby Tuesday, at least 11 bodies have

now been discovered, according to Stackelbec­k.

University of Florida forensic anthropolo­gist Phoebe Stubblefie­ld, a descendent of a massacre survivor who is assisting in the search, said patience is needed before anyone can

expect to know the identities of the remains or the cause of deaths.

“We will need considerab­le time to investigat­e them because the preservati­on, teeth have been showing up OK, but nondental structures” have deteriorat­ed, Stubblefie­ld said.

Stackelbec­k said it was too early to say that the remains are massacre victims, even though they were found near an area known as the Original 18, where funeral home records indicate massacre victims were buried.

There are two headstones in the Original 18 marking the graves of two massacre victims, but the area where the remains were found Wednesday is unmarked.

“We have not yet made our assessment to say that these do actually represent the massacre victims,” Stackelbec­k said. “Whether they are associated with the same event or the same time period of burial is something that we are still in the process of assessing.”

Tulsa Mayor G. T. Bynum, who in 2018 proposed looking for victims of the violence and later budgeted $ 100,000 to fund it after previous searches failed, called the discovery significan­t.

“What we do know as of today is that there is a mass grave in Oaklawn Cemetery where we have no record of anyone being buried,”

Bynum said.

The latest search at Oaklawn began Monday. An earlier excavation of another part of the cemetery ended in July with no significan­t discoverie­s.

The violence took place on May 31 and June 1, 1921, when a white mob attacked Tulsa’s Black Wall Street, killing an estimated 300 mostly Black people and wounding 800 more, while robbing and burning businesses, homes and churches.

The massacre happened two years after what is known as the Red Summer, when hundreds of African Americans died at the hands of white mobs in violence around the U. S. that has been depicted in the HBO TV shows “Watchmen” and “Lovecraft County.”

It also received renewed attention after President Trump selected Tulsa as the location for a June rally amid a national reckoning over police brutality and racial violence. Trump moved the date to avoid coinciding with a Juneteenth celebratio­n in the Greenwood District commemorat­ing the end of slavery.

 ?? Mike Simons Tulsa World ?? FLOWERS HANG on a fence as crews search for remains at Oaklawn Cemetery in Tulsa, Okla. The 1921 racial attack left about 300 people dead and 800 wounded.
Mike Simons Tulsa World FLOWERS HANG on a fence as crews search for remains at Oaklawn Cemetery in Tulsa, Okla. The 1921 racial attack left about 300 people dead and 800 wounded.

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