The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mass graves sought a century after massacre

Tulsa violence left as many as 300 Black people dead.

- By DeNeen L. Brown

TULSA, OKLA. — Nearly a century after a brutal race massacre left as many as 300 Black people dead, this city began to dig Monday for suspected mass graves from the violence.

A team of scientists, archaeolog­ists and forensic anthropolo­gists watched as a backhoe moved dirt from an 8-by-10-foot hole at the city-owned Oaklawn Cemetery, where ground-penetratin­g radar last year detected anomalies consistent with mass graves.

Several descendant­s of massacre survivors bore witness to the moment outside the graveyard’s wrought-iron fence, standing in a light rain after the work was briefly delayed by booming thunder and lightning.

J. Kavin Ross, whose great-grandfathe­r owned a business that was destroyed in the massacre, said he had waited a long time for this day.

“I’ve waited for this day for over two decades to find out the truth of Tulsa’s public secrets,” said Ross, a photojourn­alist and teacher in Tulsa who spent years of his own time interviewi­ng survivors of the massacre. “A lot of people knew about it but wouldn’t tell about it.”

Tulsa Republican Mayor G.T. Bynum, who ordered the investigat­ion reopened after a Washington Post story detailed the unresolved questions surroundin­g the violence, told reporters that he once thought it was incredible that there could be mass graves in Tulsa.

“You hear about mass graves in authoritar­ian regimes,” he said. “You don’t hear about them in the United States and definitely shouldn’t be hearing about them in Tulsa.”

The excavation was delayed for three months by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

It comes weeks after President Donald Trump appeared in Tulsa at a campaign rally that drew more than 6,000 people to an indoor arena, where few wore masks. Tulsa Health Department Executive Director Bruce Dart said last week that a spike in new coronaviru­s cases in Tulsa may be linked to Trump’s rally and the protests it generated.

But Bynum decided not to postpone the work at Oaklawn a second time. He called the investigat­ion personal for him. “I don’t want my kids growing up in a city where we might be walking around on mass graves, and we haven’t done everything we could to find them and identify the victims,” he said.

Although the scientists said their radar findings are promising, the only way to determine precisely what lies beneath the ground is to dig. The excavation will take up to two weeks.

Phoebe Stubblefie­ld, a forensic anthropolo­gist from the University of Florida, said she’s hopeful that any bones found will be preserved well enough to “allow us to extract DNA from remains” that could help identify the victims and connect them to descendant­s.

She said she would be looking for intact bones. She will also be looking for any signs of violence or trauma, or charred remains.

The backhoe is moving slowly so as not to crush any bones that may be in the trench. Stubblefie­ld said she expects the backhoe to dig 4 to 5 feet before hitting any potential remains.

The rest of the excavation will be done by hand. If the city finds unmarked human remains at the site, the state medical examiner’s office will begin an investigat­ion to determine how the person died.

“The cause of death determinat­ion would be an important step to the investigat­ion as remains will be close to 100 years old and a Spanish Influenza outbreak occurred in Tulsa in 1919 prior to the Race Massacre in 1921,” city officials said in a statement.

The city is expected to issue daily updates on the excavation.

 ?? NICK OXFORD / FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Workers prepare the test excavation site at Oaklawn Cemetery in Tulsa, Okla., where the city plans to dig for suspected mass graves from a 1921 massacre of as many as 300 Black people.
NICK OXFORD / FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Workers prepare the test excavation site at Oaklawn Cemetery in Tulsa, Okla., where the city plans to dig for suspected mass graves from a 1921 massacre of as many as 300 Black people.

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