Inquiry finds for 121 survivors of Tulsa rampage by white mob, but governor fears it may open door to wider claims
Mr Monroe, now 85 and a slim, dignified war veteran, said: “Everything was burning outside and you could hear gunshots. She told us kids – I was five – to get under the bed and hide.”
He can still remember peering from under the bed at the men’s boots as they stomped in and set fire to the curtains.
False rumours that a black shoe-shiner called Dick Rowland had molested a white lift operator called Sarah Page had swept Tulsa that week and on May 31 1921 – as the local newspaper, the Tulsa Tribune, ran the headline “To Lynch Negro Tonight” – a white mob, including the Ku Klux Klan, rampaged through the middle-class Greenwood area, known at the time as the “black Wall Street”.
Rowland escaped. It is not known what happened to him later, but one rumour is that he eloped to Kansas with Page.
Many of the people of Greenwood were not so fortunate. At the end of the night’s mayhem at least 40 members of the thriving black community had been killed in one of the worst race riots the US has seen. » Read the rest of this entry «




