The Columbus Dispatch

Remains found in search for victims

Investigat­ors find bodies from Tulsa massacre

- Ken Miller

OKLAHOMA CITY – One set of human remains, and perhaps a second, have been found in a Tulsa cemetery where investigat­ors are searching for victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, Oklahoma state archaeolog­ist Kary Stackelbec­k said Tuesday.

“We do have one confirmed individual and the possibilit­y of a second” body found, Stackelbec­k said. “We are still in the process of analyzing those remains to the best of our ability. … We don’t have a whole lot of details,” Stackelbec­k said.

The confirmed human remains were found little more than 3 feet undergroun­d in an area known as the “Original 18,” where funeral home records show massacre victims are buried.

It is not yet known if the remains, which were found in a wooden coffin, are of a victim of the massacre, Stackelbec­k said.

“We are still analyzing what has come out of the ground at this point in time and so no, unfortunat­ely we have not been able to assess the trauma at this point in time, or potential trauma,” that would indicate the person was among the massacre victims.

After an examinatio­n of the remains, they will be returned to the coffin and reburied, Stackelbec­k said.

Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum, who first proposed looking for victims of the violence in 2018 and later budgeted $100,000 to fund it after previous searches failed to find victims has said efforts will be made to find any descendant­s of the victims who are identified.

Oaklawn Cemetery in north Tulsa, where a search for remains of victims ended without success in July and where the excavation resumed Monday, is near the Greenwood District where the massacre took place.

The violence took place on May 31 and June 1 in 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.

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