The Oklahoman

Tulsa digs again for victims of 1921 race massacre

- By Ken Miller

TULSA — A second excavation begins Monday at a cemetery in an effort to find and identify victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and shed light on violence that left hundreds dead and decimated an area that was once a cultural and economic mecca for African Americans.

"I realize we can tell this story the way it needs to be told, now," said Phoebe St u b b l e f i e l d , a f o r e n - sic anthropolo­gist at the University of Florida and a descendant of a survivor of the massacre who is assisting the search, told The Associated Press. "The story is no longer hidden. We're putting the completion on this event."

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

"People, they were just r o b b e d , wh i t e p e o p l e coming i n saying Black people had better property than they had and that that was just not right," said Stubblefie­ld, whose greataunt Anna Walker Woods had her home burned and property taken. "Burning, thieving, killing wasn't enough. They had to prevent Black people from recovering.

"Personally, profession­ally, spirituall­y I have an investment in this," said Stubblefie­ld, a Los Angeles native who said she is in her early 50s and learned of the massacre and her ancestor, who she doesn't recall ever meeting, in the 1990s.

The two locations to be searched are in Oaklawn Cemetery in north Tulsa, where a dig for remains of victims ended without success in July, and near the Greenwood District where the massacre took place.

The earlier excavation was done in an area identified by ground-penetratin­g radar scans as appearing to be a human-dug pit indicative of a mass grave. It turned out be a filled-in creek, said Mayor G. T. Bynum, who first proposed looking for victims of the violence in 2018 and later budgeted $100,000 to fund it after previous searches failed to find victims.

The massacre — which happened two years after what is known as the "Red Summer," when hundreds o f A f r i c a n A mer i c a n s died at the hands of white mobs in violence around t h e U . S . — h a s b e e n depicted in recent HBO shows "Watchmen" and "Lovecraft County."

It also received renewed attention after President Donald 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.

Bynum, who is 43, said he didn't learn of the massacre until about 20 years ago during the mayoral campaign of his uncle Bill LaFortune, and his grandparen­ts c onfi r med t he events.

"That's a very common thing in Tulsa. That's how you learned about it, not through books or the media or in school," Bynum said. "People didn't start talking about this event in Tulsa until about 20 years ago."

Bodies, if discovered, will not be disturbed, he said. The excavation would stop, and investigat­ors would "do what they need to do to identify them and determine a cause of death."

Efforts would also be made to find any descendant­s, a project that could prove difficult, according to Bynum.

"A hundred years after the fact, the descendant­s are scattered all around the world. Tracking down the descendant­s could take years," he said.

One site to be searched, known as the Original 18, is where old funeral home records indicate up to 18 Black people who were massacre victims were buried. The other site is where a man named Clyde Eddy said i n the 1990s that, as a 10-year-old boy, he saw Black bodies being prepared for burial shortly after the massacre, but was told to leave the area.

Ar c h a e o l o g i s t s h a v e i d e n t i f i e d t w o a d d i - tional possible sites, said state archaeolog­ist Kary Stackelbec­k, who is leading the investigat­ion.

"We have multiple areas that we have identified as having merits for investigat­ion," based on the 2019 radar scans, Stackelbec­k said. "We just have to ask

for grace and patience" during the search.

The l a t e s t s e a r c h i s scheduled to last about a we e k , b u t c o u l d b e extended, Stubblefie­ld said.

"I'm fully prepared to f i n d h u man r e mai n s , "s h e s a i d . "T h e q u e s - t i ons ar e j ust whether they're the remains we're looking for."

 ?? [AP FILE PHOTO] ?? Workers climb out of the excavation site on July 14 at a potential unmarked mass grave from the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre at Oaklawn Cemetery in Tulsa. A second excavation is to begin Monday in an effort to find and identify victims.
[AP FILE PHOTO] Workers climb out of the excavation site on July 14 at a potential unmarked mass grave from the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre at Oaklawn Cemetery in Tulsa. A second excavation is to begin Monday in an effort to find and identify victims.
 ??  ?? Forensic anthropolo­gist Phoebe Stubblefie­ld carries on July 21 a tray of items found at Oaklawn Cemetery during a test excavation in the search for possible mass graves from the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. [MIKE SIMONS/ TULSA WORLD]
Forensic anthropolo­gist Phoebe Stubblefie­ld carries on July 21 a tray of items found at Oaklawn Cemetery during a test excavation in the search for possible mass graves from the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. [MIKE SIMONS/ TULSA WORLD]

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