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Tim Madigan
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On the morning of June 1, 1921, a white mob numbering in the thousands marched
across the railroad tracks dividing black from white in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
and obliterated a black community then celebrated as one of America's most
prosperous. Thirty-four square blocks of Tulsa's Greenwood community,
known then as the "Negro Wall Street of America," were reduced to smoldering
rubble.
Fort Worth Star Telegram writer Tim Madigan first read about the Tulsa
Race Riot in the winter of 2000. "A uniquely prosperous community of
African Americans - literally thousands of homes, businesses, churches, and
schools - had been obliterated by a white mob," Madigan writes, and wonders
"How could we not have known of such a thing?" Soon after, Madigan
traveled to Tulsa, where he interviewed a handful of elderly African Americans,
people who recalled the terror-filled hours of June 1, 1921, when the whites
swarmed over the railroad tracks separating white Tulsa from black.
As he researched The Burning, Madigan came to realize his vast ignorance
of "the terror and hardship that came with emancipation - the murderous rides
of the original Ku Klux Klan; the reign of Jim Crow; thousands of lynchings;
racial hatreds that were not only tolerated, but widely condoned and endorsed
at the highest levels of our society by people and institutions in the North
and South alike."
"I felt from the beginning that I was being provided with a piece of history
that would make a tremendous difference in the way I look at the world, and
the way I look at other people. This book was about an opportunity to perhaps
share that epiphany with other people," Madigan told us. This story
is finally being told, and Madigan spreads the word in our exclusive interview.
Interview Topics
About Tim Madigan
The Burning's sources
Tulsa prior to the rioting
A source of hatred
How the rioting was triggered
The role of the KKK
Burning Greenwood down
The reaction of the nation
The process of investigating
the riot
The findings of the
Tulsa Riot Commission
Casualties
Learning from the events of
1921
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What America was listening to in June, 1921
Wang-Wang Blues by Paul Whiteman
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JJM Before I get into the interview, I would like
to read something from your book. You write in the introduction to The Burning, "For me,
work on this book has been a life-changing odyssey. Early in the process,
I began to suspect that a crucial piece remained missing from America's long
attempts at racial reconciliation. Too many in this country remained as ignorant
as I was. Too many were just as oblivious to some of the darkest moments
in our history, a legacy of which Tulsa is both a tragic example and a shameful
metaphor. How can we heal when we don't know what we're healing from? I hope
this book contributes in some small way toward the broader understanding.
Such is the spirit in which it was written." And, it is in this spirit I
wish to publish this interview. Thanks for participating.
As a reader who spent the last week getting to know the tragic events that
occurred in Tulsa in 1921, I was deeply affected by what I learned. How did
the writing of this book affect you personally? Was it a difficult assignment
for you?
TM Well, it was not necessarily difficult emotionally.
From the very start of this project, it has been an extraordinary labor of
love for me. I found the subject matter, in addition to being appalling,
very compelling. I felt from the beginning that I was being provided with
a piece of history that would make a tremendous difference in the way I look
at the world, and the way I look at other people. This book was about an
opportunity to perhaps share that epiphany with other people. Part of my
strengths and success as a newspaper journalist, I think, is my "commonness"
or my "ordinariness." I have come to believe that if I am thinking
or feeling or not knowing something, there are likely to be millions
of other people out there in the same boat. To take that to the next step,
that if I was so ignorant about what happened in Tulsa in 1921 and the period
in our history that gave birth to that, I knew there were millions of other
people out there who were similarly ignorant. If they knew about this period,
it would make a huge difference in their lives. I feel very strongly that
the subject matter of this project is extremely compelling. During the course
of writing, there was never a point in the process where I got stuck or
discouraged. It just flowed from beginning to end. I think that in itself
is testament to the fact that I was, for whatever reason, meant to do the
work.
JJM
What sources did you use for the book?
TM A variety of different sources. I interviewed
as many of the living survivors, between 20 and 25, that I possibly could.
The problem with that, or the limitations, were that most of these people
were young children when this happened. Their recollections were in large
part shaped by how old they were. A lack of maturity kind of context in which
to put this. The opening anecdote of the book, about a young girl being awakened
early in the morning by her mother as this event unfolds, is drawn from one
of those interviews. I also made a very thorough review of the two major
Tulsa papers. Even though they each had their own philosophical and political
slants to things, I found the straight news reporting to be invaluable in
terms of the sights and sounds and smells and mood of the city while this
was going on. Subsequent to the event, the national papers came in for a
week or so and covered it pretty thoroughly. In the last thirty years or
so, there have been people who have made an attempt to preserve the recollections
of people who were young adults or teenagers when this happened. Their testimony,
either in transcripts or on tape is available, so I made use of them. There
were a variety of different court transcripts from court cases contemporary
to that time that sprang up as a result of what happened in Tulsa. One was
the criminal case against the Tulsa police chief. Another one was a law suit
stemming from someone trying to make an insurance claim in which there was
a great deal of detailed testimony about the events of that day. So, I used
a combination of those resources.
| JJM
Talk a little about what Tulsa was like prior to the rioting.
TM Tulsa was an extraordinary community in many
respects. For one thing, it was a new city. Until the 1905 - 1910 period,
it was an isolated little village of no more than 1,000 people in what was
still Indian Territory. Then, in that time period, there was a huge oil find
just south of Tulsa. Almost overnight Tulsa was transformed into an oil capital.
By the time of the rioting in 1921, Tulsa was approaching 90,000 people.
It was by most accounts a uniquely lawless place. It had the quintessential
oil boomtown spirit and an "anything goes" mentality, and not enough civilized
influences. The law enforcement there, if it existed at all, was fairly corrupt.
On the other side of the tracks, on the north side, there was this uniquely
affluent, very proud African-American community called Greenwood. Blacks
came to Tulsa for the same reason whites did - to try to prosper somehow
from the oil discovery. Blacks, of course, prospered in a much different
way, as mammies, chauffeurs, boot-blacks, elevator operators, doormen, gardeners,
etc. They would make this pilgrimage, this daily jaunt across the tracks
to work every day and then return home at night. Many others stayed in servants
quarters on the white side of town during the week, coming home on Thursday
- Sunday nights to spend their money. The thing about it is, of course, is
that they made money on the white side of town but weren't allowed to spend
it there. So, this professional and entrepreneurial class grew up in Greenwood
itself. It was, in every respect, a self-contained community with a number
of lawyers, doctors, entrepreneurs, restaurants, pool halls, the equivalent
of department stores, drug stores and theaters. The spiritual heart of it,
Deep Greenwood, on the corner of Greenwood and Archer, is where the scene
of these magnificent, spirit-filled nights would take place. The maids would
come back across the tracks on Thursday nights, and the streets would be
filled with people promenading, as they called it. In this group, there were
several people who rose above and distinguished themselves even more as
entrepreneurs, journalists, physicians. You had a real gentry in Greenwood
of very prominent, conspicuous people who had done very well for themselves
and who were increasingly of the mind that they weren't willing to tolerate
Jim Crow any longer. |
Downtown Tulsa, 1908
|
JJM That
was the source of the hatred that simmered in Tulsa prior to the rioting,
wasn't it?
TM That was a source, yes. In the century after
the Civil War, it did not pay for Negroes to be too overtly successful in
the South during the years of Jim Crow. Invariably that sparked jealousy
on top of the hatred and on top of the vile racial stereotyping that had
gone on and been basically promoted at the highest level of white society,
from the White House on down. So, the jealousy and the resentment promoted
by the success of Greenwood was certainly one reason why there was such ill
will on the white side of the tracks.
JJM
The rioting itself was triggered by an incident involving a young black man
and a young white woman, the sort of relationship that most threatened white
men of that era. What seems to have happened?
TM A black teenager named Dick Rowland was a shoeshine
boy in downtown Tulsa. The teenage girl, Sarah Page, was an elevator operator
in the building in which the black's downtown would use the restrooms. There
has been much speculation over the years as to whether Rowland and Page had
some sort of pre-existing relationship. Rowland's mother, according to later
interviews, seemed to think so. One day, Memorial Day weekend, 1921, when
Rowland got on the elevator and was riding down with Page, something happened.
Either the elevator jerked unexpectedly and he fell into her, or he made
advances that she rebuffed. This caused her to start screaming. When the
elevator reached the ground floor, Dick Rowland took off and ran. Law enforcement
authorities in Tulsa, and you have to remember that authorities at that time
were not inclined to give Negroes benefit of the doubt in such a matter,
seemed to be in the process of coming to the conclusion that there wasn't
a lot there. They did arrest Rowland, although it may have been as much for
his own protection as anything else. Had matters been allowed to run its
course, this whole thing probably would have died very quietly.
Richard Jones |
JJM The publisher of the Tulsa Tribune,
a man named Richard Jones, may have been Tulsa's most vocal racist. How did
he enflame the situation? Did his editorial concerning the elevator incident
incite the conflict?
TM The Tulsa World, Jones' competitor, never
mentioned Rowland's arrest. My suspicion is they never mentioned it for the
same reason that the police thought Sarah Page's allegations were fairly
dubious. But the way Jones competed in those days was in the typical yellow
journalism fashion, and he insisted that his paper cover the arrest in the
most inflammatory way. He contributed an editorial on the front page of his
paper on May 30, 1921, the contents of which are unknown because the editorial
had been cut out of surviving newspapers. To this day, if you go to that
issue in the Tulsa Public Library, for instance, you will just see a big
gaping hole on the page where that editorial was supposed to be. |
JJM Pretty symbolic
TM There is a $5,000 reward offered by the Oklahoma State Historical Association for that editorial. It seems to have disappeared into
history. What hasn't disappeared is the headline, which many years later,
the people living in Tulsa seemed to have no problem recalling. The headline
was "To Lynch Negro Tonight." That single-handedly was responsible for attracting
a large crowd to the Tulsa courthouse, where Rowland was being held on the
evening of May 31. Whether it was a mob initially is anybody's guess, but
it quickly seemed to be developing into a lynch mob that had been legitimized
by one of the most prominent white citizens of Tulsa.
JJM What
role did the KKK play in all of this? Did they incite the rioting in order
to increase their own membership?
TM That has never been documented in any kind of
certainty, and what we are left with is circumstantial evidence. I think
the answer to the question is that the Klan was very prominent in what went
on that night.. Whether or not they were ultimately the controlling body
in that, I don't think anybody knows for sure. I believe the KKK played a
large role. Klansmen were active in Tulsa as early as 1918, so it had a very
strong presence in Tulsa in May of 1921, although it wasn't officially organized
until August of 1921. Whether the Klan promoted the riot as a membership
tool or not, it certainly worked because thousands of people packed a meeting
hall in August of 1921 to hear a Klan organizer speak. For the next decade
it was probably the dominant institution in Tulsa.
JJM The black citizens of Greenwood came to Rowland's
defense outside of the sheriff's office. There was a scuffle that ensued
between a handful of blacks and whites
TM Right, this took place on the stairs or in the
street.
"Ugly passions that had been brewing in the white community
since the Civil War came spilling out that night in a very historic
way." |
JJM A white man was killed by a black man, is
that right?
TM As the story was told, a white citizen lunged
for the gun of a black man. The first shot was evidently shot accidentally.
Whether or not that was the shot that killed the white man, I don't know.
In any event, it was a charged atmosphere. Both sides were very heavily armed,
and after the first shot there were many more all at once. Men, black and
white, were dead on the street in front of the courthouse. Blacks retreated
eight blocks or so north across the railroad tracks into their own community,
firing as they went, and as they were being pursued by the whites. By midnight
of that night, the battle line had been drawn. The whites massed on the south
side of the tracks, and the blacks took up positions in Greenwood to try
to repel the invasion that seemed to be expected by almost everybody in Tulsa
that night. |
JJM It's amazing they were able to mobilize so many
people to fight in such short notice. How many people participated in this?
TM That is why there had to have been some sort
of controlling organization, and I suspect that the Klan had a lot to do
with that. Tulsa's city fathers had to have had something to do with it also.
JJM Sure, because the sheriff or mayor deputized
countless citizens
TM Somebody was calling the shots. The police
department deputized up to 500 men, teenagers and many others who had been
part of that mob at the courthouse, calling for Dick Rowland's head. Many
of the men were known to be Klansmen. The estimates of the number of people
who participated on the white side has gone as high as 10,000. The recruiting
began late that night and continued on throughout the night, and it was done
fairly efficiently. There are accounts that survive of white's amassing at
various points and being given orders to go to a gathering place and wait
there for further instructions.. So, thousands of whites amassed at strategic
points on the outskirts of the Greenwood community. Then, at 5:08 am on June
1, 1921, some sort of a whistle blew. There is some disagreement as to what
that whistle was, whether it was a factory or from a locomotive, but clearly
it was the signal for the white invasion to begin. At first, the whites were
repelled by blacks defending their homes and businesses, but the blacks were
greatly outnumbered and faced a serious disadvantage in terms of ammunition.
Thus, within a couple of hours, Greenwood was overrun.
| JJM
Was it the intent of the white fighters to burn Greenwood down, or
did that happen on its own?
TM I think that I have to answer that question
based on what happened. After Greenwood was overrun, there was a systematic
effort that proceeded simultaneously, and in many different places. Mobs
ranging from five to twenty people going from house-to-house and
business-to-business would order the occupants to come out of the building.
These mobs ransacked homes. White women would often come behind the men and
fill up shopping bags with Negro possessions. Possessions that no white person
wanted were trashed in the middle of the floor, and the kerosene was sprinkled
around and the places were torched. The photographs of the aftermath are
eerily reminiscent of Hiroshima. The burning and the destruction was so thorough
and widespread, essentially the only things left standing were the outhouses,
apparently because the mobsters didn't want to waste their kerosene on them.
So, it was done so efficiently and so thoroughly that you would have to conclude
that once this outbreak happened at the courthouse, the whites had seized
upon this as an opportunity to essentially destroy this community. |
Greenwood burning |
JJM
The National Guard was called in. What was the reaction of President Harding
to this massacre?
TM He condemned it in a more or less perfunctory
fashion. There was no great call for a national investigation. There is very
little official intercession by the national government into this, and the
national media covered it. It was the lead story in the major newspapers
all across the country for the few days after it happened. The news media
has a very short attention span, and they were off to other things. Tulsa
was then left to deal with this pretty much on its own, which made it much
easier for the community to stick this event, as horrible and enormous as
it was, "into the closet" where it remained for 80 years. Of course, editorials
in papers across the country spoke out about this in a big way. But in terms
of the official world and nationally, there was very little said. It's rather
extraordinary to think about now. The other thing I wrote in the book was
how Harding had been sworn into the KKK in the White House sometime around
that time or a few years prior. That alone demonstrates what even people
in the highest positions of authority were thinking and feeling at that time.
JJM It's hard to look at an event like Tulsa, 1921,
and put it into a context of today, because clearly if that were to happen
now there would be images all over television 24 hours a day, and the world
media would be all over it. In those days, there were probably just a handful
of photographs for newspaper editors to sort through, and their quality may
not have left much of an impression. The primitive technology and the pace
of its distribution may have helped the whites of their day carry out this
conspiracy of silence. Were there any heroes of this story's aftermath? In
the few days following June 1, were there any white Tulsans who spoke out
against the actions of fellow whites?
National Guard troops escort unarmed black men
|
TM Yes. There seemed to be a definite and distinct
temperament when the media like the New York Times was there. Many
expressions of remorse came from the highest levels of white Tulsa. One of
the leaders was quoted as saying that this was white Tulsa's fault, that
it needed to bear the responsibility for rebuilding Greenwood and making
right this terrible catastrophe. But when the national media left, they seemed
to change their opinion fairly quickly. In fact, within a couple of weeks
of the event, it passed a city ordinance that effectively would have precluded
the Negroes from rebuilding in places where their homes and businesses had
been, and would have pushed that community a mile or two further north into
the country. The results of that would have been for whites to be able to
appropriate the land on which Greenwood had stood for their own uses -
warehouses, train stations, etc. Only through actions of black lawyers at
the time was that ordinance ruled unconstitutional, and eventually Greenwood
was allowed to rebuild where it had been. |
JJM Yes, but while it was being rebuilt, the proposed
solution after the riots was that they demanded segregation and a policing
of black Tulsa by white officers. Ultimately, racist whites got what they
wanted after the riots, didn't they?
TM Obviously, there were many white people in Tulsa
who were absolutely stricken by what happened and ashamed of it and could
see it immediately for the evil that it was. In other quarters, there was
an almost celebratory mood and a sense that this was a "lesson for Negroes,"
that it demonstrated what would happen when Negroes "got out of hand" or
when they stepped out of "their place." Of course, that was the mood that
was being promulgated by the Tulsa Tribune at the time. In the subsequent
investigation by the state, of the 70 indictments that were returned, 50
were brought against black people. The mythology of the event that survived
in Tulsa for decades afterwards was that somehow the Negroes had brought
this upon themselves. That certainly is not the case according to my own
research. From start to finish that night, the Negroes acted lawfully and
reasonably. Ugly passions that had been brewing in the white community since
the Civil War came spilling out that night in a very historic way.
JJM
When did journalists and historians begin to take a closer look at what happened
that day?
TM A few moved to Tulsa a year or two after the
event. You could have lived there for the next 50 years and not known it
had happened, the conspiracy of silence was so extraordinary. On various
appearances I have been on since the book came out, I have been approached
by people who grew up in Tulsa who were absolutely appalled and shocked that
they could have lived there for so long - in some cases 50 years - and never
knew this happened. Things started to change a little bit in the 1970's.
A white journalist published a piece in a black magazine in 1971. Historian
Scott Ellsworth did a book called "Death in the Promised Land" that was published
around 1982. A woman named Ruth Avery took it upon herself to preserve the
memories of the people who were there. She had 600 pages of unpublished interview
transcripts that were my greatest source. The Tulsa Race Riot Commission
was formed in 1997, and once that happened, the world media showed up in
Tulsa en masse.
JJM Did you meet any resistance while doing interviews
for this book?
TM I don't know if I would go so far as call it
resistance. There are probably 150 identifiable black survivors in various
stages of health. It is almost impossible to find white people who were alive
then willing to talk about what happened. Of the descendents of the white
people I talked to, there was a discernable defensiveness and this attitude
that even now, in the face of irrefutable evidence, they would insist that
somehow the blacks were to blame and they brought this upon themselves.
| JJM What was the finding of the Tulsa Riot Commission?
TM Essentially, they found that the initial charge
of Sarah Page was dubious, that the events were precipitated by Richard Lloyd
Jones, that the Negroes acted reasonably and lawfully, and that this was
just a monstrously criminal act perpetrated on black Tulsa by white Tulsa.
I don't think any of these findings are any longer in dispute. |
Riot aftermath |
JJM Has there been any restitution?
TM The legislature appropriated some money to build
a monument in Greenwood and passed legislation that created some scholarships
for descendents of survivors as well as some sort of business enterprise
zone, but decided against paying reparations. The reparation movement, however,
is still moving along, only privately. The Tulsa Chamber of Commerce has
made some overtures in that direction. Just recently, the National Unitarian
Church has been involved in collecting money, approximately $30,000, that
is being distributed in small parcels to the living survivors.
JJM The early reports
were that 25 or 30 people were killed in the rioting. As best as you can
tell, what were the numbers of casualties?
TM White journalists of the 1970's seemed to think
the numbers that were being disseminated at the time were ridiculously low.
One of them came across a police document that seems to be a casualty list,
listing up to 250 people dead. One of the most powerful and common memories
of the people who were alive at the time is of watching truckloads of black
bodies heading out of town somewhere.
JJM
Is this now a part of the history books? Is it something that is talked about
openly in Oklahoma schools?
TM I don't know. I would certainly hope so. That
is kind of the whole point here, to have this event put in its proper place
in history. How that happens, how it makes it into college curriculums or
grade school classes, is beyond me. I don't know what the next step is. On
one of the radio shows I did, a person who said he grew up in Oklahoma in
the 70's called and said there wasn't one word of this in school, and asked
me what was being taught in Oklahoma today about this. I told him I would
be curious to find out. I guess the next few years will tell. People now have the ability to know what happened in Tulsa. Whether
or not Oklahoma itself is ready to own that part of its history is anyone's
guess.
 |
JJM My guess is that this sort of event is more
likely to be taught in schools with large numbers of black students rather
than white suburban schools.
TM Going back to where we started, it is the white
classrooms that need to hear about this. I feel that while everyone will
agree we have made a lot of progress in this country during the last 50 years,
I think a chasm exists that would be much less true if the dominant society
could understand where African-Americans are coming from and what they have
been through. I think that would go a long ways toward helping us understand
why they feel the way they feel. I know that is true in my case. I am terribly
grateful that this story ended up in my lap and provided an important piece
of the puzzle to me. |
JJM You said the catastrophe known as the Tulsa
Race Riot was a gross misnomer. If it was not a race riot, what was it?
TM I think it was a massacre. It was ethnic cleansing,
the kind of atrocity we in this country have convinced ourselves we are incapable
of perpetrating. Maybe today we are, but in 1921, we surely were not.
JJM What became of Dick Rowland and Sarah Page?
TM Dick was taken off to Kansas City by the sheriff
for safe keeping while all this was going on. A couple months later the charges
against him were dismissed, and he made one trip back to Tulsa to visit his
mother. Then, according to his mother, he found his way back to Kansas City,
where Sara Page also had moved. They were acquainted there - to what extent
is anybody's guess. Subsequent to that time, according to Rowland's mother,
he moved to the west coast. He was working on a dock and was killed in an
accident in the 60's. What became of Sarah Page after she moved to Kansas
City, I don't know.
The
Burning:
Massacre, Destruction, and the
Tulsa Race Riot of 1921
by Tim Madigan
JJM Who was your hero when you were a child?
TM I have never been asked that question. It would
have been a sports figure, probably someone who played for the Minnesota
Twins during the Killebrew, Oliva and Carew era. Probably Harmon Killebrew.
I was pretty much a sports fanatic, and still am. I wanted to be a big league
baseball player. I always was a fairly avid reader as a kid, too, and my
favorite books were the Sherlock Holmes mysteries by Conan Doyle.
JJM What is your background?
TM I was born and raised in a small, 10,000 population
farming community in northwestern Minnesota, near the Canadian border. My
dad ran a lumberyard, and my mother was a nurse. It was a Garrison Keillor
type of upbringing. Then I went to college at a state school in North Dakota.
I have been winding my way south since graduating in 1980. I started out
as a sportswriter and went to cop reporter and then became a feature writer
in the newspaper. My first book was written in 1993 on the Branch Davidian
episode in Waco. I have written for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram
since 1984, and am now Senior Features Writer.
_______________________________
Tim Madigan products at Amazon.com
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This interview took place on April 12, 2002
*
If you enjoyed this interview, you may want to read our interview with Pulitzer Prize winning author Diane McWhorter on Birmingham, Alabama and the events leading to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
*
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