The Day

NO BODIES FOUND YET IN SEARCH FOR TULSA MASSACRE VICTIMS

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Tulsa, Okla. — Archaeolog­ists resumed searching a Tulsa cemetery on Tuesday but found no signs of human remains from victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, state Archaeolog­ist Kary Stackelbec­k said. The search of Tulsa’s Oaklawn Cemetery had thus far turned up only common household items such as broken bottles, in addition to a shell casing that is likely not related to the massacre, Stackelbec­k said. “I know that anything to do with firearms is going to be of interest,” but “shell casings are going to something that is found at the scene of the crime, not the scene of the burial,” Stackelbec­k said. Researcher­s on Monday began opening an area where ground-penetratin­g radar earlier this year determined there was an anomaly consistent with mass graves. On May 31 and June 1 in 1921, white residents looted and burned Tulsa’s Black Greenwood district, killing as many as 300 people.

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