Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Remains sought in ’21 Tulsa massacre

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TULSA — The city of Tulsa will conduct a test excavation at an area cemetery as part of an ongoing effort to find remains of victims of a 1921 race massacre, officials said.

The test excavation at Oaklawn Cemetery, planned for April, was announced during the city’s Mass Graves Investigat­ion Public Oversight Committee meeting on Monday, the Tulsa World reported. The meeting came a little more than a month after investigat­ors announced that geophysica­l surveys conducted in October had found anomalies consistent with possible graves.

“We would see this as an intermedia­te step,” Kary Stackelbec­k, a state archaeolog­ist, said. “If we were to identify evidence that we seem to believe at the time is consistent with race massacre victims, we would want to leave them in a state that allows for us to come back and undertake future investigat­ions and a recovery effort in a more thoughtful and well-planned-out fashion.”

Tulsa’s mayor announced in 2018 that the city would re-examine sites in search of victims of the 1921 massacre. The sites were last inspected by the Tulsa Race Riot Commission in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

The massacre happened over the course of 16 hours, from May 31 to June 1, 1921, when mobs of white residents attacked black residents and businesses. As many as 300 people were killed, hundreds more were injured and thousands were left homeless. Tulsa’s prosperous black business district known as Black Wall Street was destroyed.

Stackelbec­k said the test excavation at Oaklawn will provide much more detail than the geophysica­l surveys did.

“With the geophysica­l data, it doesn’t see bodies,” Stackelbec­k said. “It doesn’t tell us who’s down there. It doesn’t tell us, are there people there? And if they are there, are they in coffins?”

City officials also provided an update on its search at Rolling Oaks Cemetery.

The city has said that the cemetery’s owners have been reluctant to allow a site identified by historical investigat­ors to be surveyed because it is beneath some known interments.

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