Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HR0450
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Full Text of HR0450  98th General Assembly

HR0450 98TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY


  

 


 
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1
HOUSE RESOLUTION

 
2    WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of
3Representatives wish to acknowledge the Tulsa, Oklahoma race
4riot of May 31 and June 1, 1921; and
 
5    WHEREAS, During the course of 18 hours on May 31 and June
61, 1921, more than 1,000 homes and businesses in Tulsa,
7Oklahoma were destroyed and estimates of 50 to 300 people were
8killed during the riot; and
 
9    WHEREAS, By early 1921, Tulsa, Oklahoma was a modern city
10with a population of more than 100,000; most of the city's
1110,000 African-American residents lived in the Greenwood
12District, a vibrant neighborhood that was home to two
13newspapers, several churches, a library branch, and scores of
14black-owned businesses; and
 
15    WHEREAS, On May 30, 1921, an incident involving Dick
16Rowland, an African-American shoe shiner, and Sarah Page, a
17white elevator operator, in the Drexel Building in Tulsa would
18rapidly escalate into one of the single worst incidents of
19racial violence in American history; the most common
20explanation is that Rowland stepped on Page's foot as he
21entered the elevator, causing her to scream, and Rowland was
22arrested by the police; and
 

 

 

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1    WHEREAS, On May 30, 1921, the Tulsa Tribune, the city's
2afternoon daily newspaper, reported that Rowland had attempted
3to rape Page; by 7:30 P.M., hundreds of whites had gathered
4outside the Tulsa County Courthouse, demanding that the
5authorities hand over Rowland, but the sheriff refused; at
6around 9 P.M., after reports of the dire conditions downtown
7reached Greenwood, a group of approximately 25 armed
8African-American men, many of them World War I veterans, went
9down to the courthouse and offered their services to the
10authorities to help protect Rowland, but were rebuffed by the
11sheriff; at around 10 P.M., a false rumor hit Greenwood that
12whites were storming the courthouse, prompting a second
13contingent of African-American men to go back to the courthouse
14and offer their services to the authorities, who were once
15again turned away; as the group was leaving, a white man tried
16to disarm a black veteran and a shot was fired, an incident
17that became the start of the riot; and
 
18    WHEREAS, Over the next 6 hours, Tulsa was plunged into
19chaos as angry whites, frustrated over the failed lynching,
20began to vent their rage at African-Americans in general;
21furious fighting erupted along the Frisco railroad tracks,
22where black defenders were able to hold off members of the
23white mob; an unarmed African-American man was murdered inside
24a downtown movie theater, while carloads of armed whites began

 

 

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1making "drive-by" shootings in black residential
2neighborhoods; by midnight, fires had been set along the edge
3of the African-American commercial district; in some of the
4city's all-night cafes, whites began to organize for a dawn
5invasion of Greenwood; and
 
6    WHEREAS, During the early hours of the riot, local
7authorities did little to stem the growing crisis and Tulsa
8police officers had deputized former members of the lynch mob;
9local units of the National Guard were mobilized, but they
10spent most of the night protecting a white neighborhood from a
11nonexistent black counterattack; and
 
12    WHEREAS, Shortly before dawn on June 1, 1921, thousands of
13armed whites had gathered along the fringes of Greenwood; after
14daybreak, they poured into the African-American district,
15looting homes and businesses and setting them on fire; numerous
16atrocities occurred, including the murder of A. C. Jackson, a
17renowned black surgeon, who was shot after he surrendered to a
18group of whites; at least one machine gun was utilized by the
19invading whites and some have claimed that airplanes were used
20in the attack; black Tulsans fought hard to protect their homes
21and businesses, with particularly sharp fighting occurring off
22of Standpipe Hill, but were outgunned and outnumbered in the
23end; and
 

 

 

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1    WHEREAS, Following the riot, a brief period of martial law
2was followed by various legal maneuvers; even though Dick
3Rowland was exonerated, an all-white grand jury blamed black
4Tulsans for the riot; despite overwhelming evidence, no whites
5were ever sent to prison for the murders and arson that
6occurred during the riot; and
 
7    WHEREAS, The vast majority of Tulsa's African-American
8population had been made homeless by the riot; despite efforts
9by the white establishment to force the relocation of the black
10community, black Tulsans had already begun the long and arduous
11process of rebuilding Greenwood within days of the riot;
12thousands were forced to spend the winter of 1921-1922 living
13in tents; and
 
14    WHEREAS, The deep scars left by the riot remained visible
15for years and the riot became a taboo subject, particularly in
16Tulsa, for many years; in 1997, a state commission was formed
17to investigate the riot; the commission recommended that
18reparations be paid to the remaining riot survivors, while a
19team of scientists and historians uncovered evidence
20supporting long-held beliefs that unidentified riot victims
21had been buried in unmarked grave sites; and
 
22    WHEREAS, It is important that the people of the State of
23Illinois and the nation do not forget this terrible tragedy;

 

 

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1therefore, be it
 
2    RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE
3NINETY-EIGHTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that
4we acknowledge the Tulsa, Oklahoma race riot of May 31 and June
51, 1921 and express our regret at this terrible event in
6American history.