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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, "Black Wall Street" was a prospering African | ||||||
3 | American neighborhood in Tulsa, Oklahoma, that went up in | ||||||
4 | flames 98 years ago; incredibly, most Americans have never | ||||||
5 | heard of the shameful events of June 1, 1921, when whites | ||||||
6 | firebombed the neighborhood and an estimated 300 African | ||||||
7 | Americans were murdered; and
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8 | WHEREAS, During the course of 18 hours on May 31 and June | ||||||
9 | 1, 1921, more than 1,000 homes and businesses in Tulsa, | ||||||
10 | Oklahoma were destroyed, and an estimated number of between 50 | ||||||
11 | to 300 people were killed during the race bombing; and
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12 | WHEREAS, By early 1921, Tulsa, Oklahoma was a modern city | ||||||
13 | with a population of more than 100,000; most of the city's | ||||||
14 | 10,000 African American residents lived in the Greenwood | ||||||
15 | District, a vibrant neighborhood that was home to two | ||||||
16 | newspapers, several churches, a library branch, and scores of | ||||||
17 | Black-owned businesses; and
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18 | WHEREAS, On May 30, 1921, an incident involving Dick | ||||||
19 | Rowland, an African American shoe shiner, and Sarah Page, a | ||||||
20 | white elevator operator, in the Drexel Building in Tulsa would | ||||||
21 | rapidly escalate into one of the single worst incidents of | ||||||
22 | racial violence in American history; the most common |
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1 | explanation is that Rowland stepped on Page's foot as he | ||||||
2 | entered the elevator, causing her to scream, and Rowland was | ||||||
3 | arrested by the police; and
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4 | WHEREAS, On May 30, 1921, the Tulsa Tribune, the city's | ||||||
5 | afternoon daily newspaper, reported that Rowland had attempted | ||||||
6 | to rape Page; by 7:30 P.M., hundreds of whites had gathered | ||||||
7 | outside the Tulsa County Courthouse demanding that the | ||||||
8 | authorities hand over Rowland, but the sheriff refused; at | ||||||
9 | around 9 P.M., after reports of the dire conditions downtown | ||||||
10 | reached Greenwood, a group of approximately 25 armed African | ||||||
11 | American men, many of them World War I veterans, went to the | ||||||
12 | courthouse and offered their services to the authorities to | ||||||
13 | help protect Rowland but were rebuffed by the sheriff; at | ||||||
14 | around 10 P.M., a false rumor circulated through Greenwood | ||||||
15 | that whites were storming the courthouse, prompting a second | ||||||
16 | contingent of African American men to go back to the | ||||||
17 | courthouse and offer their services to the authorities, who | ||||||
18 | were once again turned away; as the group was leaving, a white | ||||||
19 | man tried to disarm a Black veteran, and a shot was fired, an | ||||||
20 | incident that became the start of the race bombing; and
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21 | WHEREAS, Over the next 6 hours, Tulsa was plunged into | ||||||
22 | chaos as angry whites, frustrated over the failed lynching, | ||||||
23 | began to vent their rage at African Americans in general; | ||||||
24 | furious fighting erupted along the Frisco railroad tracks, |
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1 | where Black defenders were able to hold off members of the | ||||||
2 | white mob; an unarmed African American man was murdered inside | ||||||
3 | a downtown movie theater, while carloads of armed whites began | ||||||
4 | making "drive-by" shootings in Black residential | ||||||
5 | neighborhoods; by midnight, fires had been set along the edge | ||||||
6 | of the African American commercial district; in some of the | ||||||
7 | city's all-night cafes, whites began to organize for a dawn | ||||||
8 | invasion of Greenwood; and
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9 | WHEREAS, During the early hours of the race bombing, local | ||||||
10 | authorities did little to stem the growing crisis, and Tulsa | ||||||
11 | police officers had deputized former members of the lynch mob; | ||||||
12 | local units of the National Guard were mobilized, but they | ||||||
13 | spent most of the night protecting a white neighborhood from a | ||||||
14 | nonexistent Black counterattack; and | ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, Shortly before dawn on June 1, 1921, thousands of | ||||||
16 | armed whites had gathered along the fringes of Greenwood; | ||||||
17 | after daybreak, they poured into the African American | ||||||
18 | district, looting homes and businesses and setting them on | ||||||
19 | fire; numerous atrocities occurred, including the murder of A. | ||||||
20 | C. Jackson, a renowned Black surgeon, who was shot after he | ||||||
21 | surrendered to a group of whites; at least one machine gun was | ||||||
22 | utilized by the invading whites, and some have claimed that | ||||||
23 | airplanes were used in the attack; Black Tulsans fought hard | ||||||
24 | to protect their homes and businesses, with particularly sharp |
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1 | fighting occurring off of Standpipe Hill, but they were | ||||||
2 | outgunned and outnumbered in the end; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, Following the race bombing, a brief period of | ||||||
4 | martial law was followed by various legal maneuvers; even | ||||||
5 | though Dick Rowland was exonerated, an all-white grand jury | ||||||
6 | blamed Black Tulsans for the events that transpired; despite | ||||||
7 | overwhelming evidence, no whites were ever sent to prison for | ||||||
8 | the murders and arson that had occurred; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, The vast majority of Tulsa's African American | ||||||
10 | population had been made homeless by the race bombing; despite | ||||||
11 | efforts by the white establishment to force the relocation of | ||||||
12 | the Black community, Black Tulsans had already begun the long | ||||||
13 | and arduous process of rebuilding Greenwood within days; | ||||||
14 | thousands were forced to spend the winter of 1921-1922 living | ||||||
15 | in tents; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, The deep scars left by the race bombing remained | ||||||
17 | visible for years, and it became a taboo subject, particularly | ||||||
18 | in Tulsa, for many years; in 1997, a state commission was | ||||||
19 | formed to investigate the race bombing; the commission | ||||||
20 | recommended that reparations be paid to the remaining | ||||||
21 | survivors, while a team of scientists and historians uncovered | ||||||
22 | evidence supporting long-held beliefs that unidentified | ||||||
23 | victims had been buried in unmarked grave sites; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, In support of the Black Wall Street efforts, Soul | ||||||
2 | City Chicago is hosting a trip to Tulsa to tour the site of one | ||||||
3 | of the greatest Black business corridors to ever exist on May | ||||||
4 | 26-28, 2023; and | ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, It is important that the people of the State of | ||||||
6 | Illinois and the nation do not forget this terrible tragedy; | ||||||
7 | therefore, be it
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8 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
9 | HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
10 | we mourn the loss of life and the loss of the Black economy of | ||||||
11 | Tulsa, Oklahoma that took place on May 31 and June 1, 1921; and | ||||||
12 | be it further | ||||||
13 | RESOLVED, That we support the efforts in Tulsa to have the | ||||||
14 | Historic Greenwood District Main Street added to the historic | ||||||
15 | registry and are currently working with Executive Director | ||||||
16 | Bill White; and be it further | ||||||
17 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
18 | presented to the people of Tulsa as an expression of our | ||||||
19 | respect and esteem and our desire to support Black businesses | ||||||
20 | and communities throughout the nation.
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