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The media are rightfully bringing to our attention the horrific Tulsa massacre almost a century ago. But, what has never been brought to the attention of the public is that such actions were not uncommon at time. In the period from 1900 to the mid 1920s. extreme racism was the order of the day in the American south. Angry at (1) losing the Civil War (2) having to tolerate Union occupation during the Reconstruction period, and (3) having suffered the ultimate indignity of having Black men elected to public office in the South.
As a consequence, many southerners were chafing at the bit to "set things right.:

Southern states blocked attempts to provide attempts to provide any economic and educational opportunity for Blacks. They passed ? Black Code: laws which actually forbid Black people from serving in lucrative occupations and relegated them to segregation.

But for the most rabid In many small, rural southern towns, violent racists of the era that was not enough. They formed violent brutal gangs which sought to strip away any property owned by Blacks and force them to leave the area. They brutalized and intimidated Blacks into leaving and abandoning any property. Those who resisted were killed.

You will not find this information about these gangs in any history book or public records, but it is factual. It happened in he very small town in which I grew up. I could even tell you the name of the man who the gang in our area. And, it is a fact that there were no Blacks in he own for some 35 - 45 years.

If you find a small rural southern town or county in the rural south which has very few or no Blacks, I will guarantee you that there is a not very pretty story behind that.

wordywalt 9 June 15
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1

At the end of the Civil War, every black family in the South was promised 40 acres and a mule to start their new life outside slavery. Very few ever got to see that realized.

On top of that many Southern men fled the South after the war. Lack of jobs in the Reconstrction South drove them north and west. I have always postulated that a lot of the racism in the North was imported with this southern migration. Not that there wasnt racism, just it became amplified by southern emigres.

t1nick Level 8 June 15, 2020
1

Read about "Rosewood"...the massacre of a black community in Florida..early 1920s.

I know about Rosewood. It was an example of what II was talking about.

2

By keeping it out of schools and history books...they kept their ''skirts'' clean. If you saw ''60 Minutes" last night, you saw a well-educated man who was educated in that area, talking about how he initially denied the Tulsa massacre, because it had never been mentioned in schools! That segment was STUNNING, by the way. Bodies were buried in mass graves...unknown...unidentified.

Recently the mass grave has been located.

I grew up in Oklahoma. Not a mention in my Oklahoma History book. There were separate bathrooms and water fountains for blacks and whites. I cannot abide with even the slightest bit a racism. Good parenting and common sense is my reasoning.

@t1nick Yes..the good news is....DNA progress might help SOME of those families answer at least one question. And I'll be interested to see what sort of monument the Oklahoma government will erect in their memory......

@LucyLoohoo

Oklahoma, monument to blacks. I don't don't think do. They'll just wait until the bodies are removed and call it a landfill.

@t1nick Let's see about that....I suspect there will be a monument of some sort.....

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