San Francisco Chronicle

Scientists seek graves of victims of ’21 race riots

- By Ken Miller Ken Miller is an Associated Press writer.

OKLAHOMA CITY — Scientists surveying a cemetery and a homeless camp in Tulsa, Okla., found pits holding possible remains of black residents killed nearly 100 years ago in a race massacre, investigat­ors have revealed.

In a report presented Monday night to the 1921 Race Massacre Graves Investigat­ion Public Oversight Committee, Oklahoma Archaeolog­ical Survey scientists Scott Hammersted­t and Amanda Regnier said forensic archaeolog­ists scanning with groundpene­trating radar at the sites in north Tulsa found anomalies in the ground that they think should be excavated and tested further.

“There have been other searches that have found some anomalies, but I think that ours is the most promising one,” Hammersted­t said. “There was a commission in the late ’90s but their results never went anywhere.“

The violence in 1921 left as many as 300 dead on Tulsa’s Black Wall Street, two years after the summer of 1919 when hundreds of African Americans across the country were slain at the hands of white mob violence during the “Red Summer.” It was branded “Red Summer” because of the bloodshed and amounted to some of the nation’s worst whiteonbla­ck violence.

The recent findings in Tulsa come at a time when more communitie­s and institutio­ns are trying to reconcile these past atrocities.

Hammersted­t and Regnier said in their report that the anomalies found by the archaeolog­ists included indication­s of “a rather abrupt straightwa­lled boundary.” Their report added that “the straightne­ss of the sides combine to suggest that this anomaly may be a common grave.”

Two locations in particular were noted in the report — one at the homeless area known as “The Canes” and the other in Oaklawn Cemetery.

“This very much looks to be like a humandug pit of some sort,” Hammersted­t told the oversight committee. “The size of it is very indicative of what could be a common grave associated with the massacre.”

Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum said in October 2018 that the sites would be reexamined after inspection­s in the late 1990s and early 2000s failed to reveal suspected graves. Bynum said current technology “is light years” ahead of what was available then.

If human remains are found, that would be just the first step toward determinin­g that they are victims of the massacre, according to the release announcing the search for mass graves.

 ?? Mike Simons / Associated Press ?? An American flag lies in front of an area of a Tulsa cemetery, where forensic scientists believe they may have found an unmarked grave related to the victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.
Mike Simons / Associated Press An American flag lies in front of an area of a Tulsa cemetery, where forensic scientists believe they may have found an unmarked grave related to the victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.

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