Today Americans still debate what occurred between Dick Rowland and Sarah Page in the Drexel building elevator on downtown of Tulsa’s Main Street on May 30, 1921. Dr. Scott A. Ellsworth, a University of Michigan professor who teaches courses on African American history, Southern literature, and crime and justice in contemporary U.S. society, concludes that Rowland, to save himself from falling after tripping in an elevator on his way to the ‘colored’ bathroom, grabbed onto the first thing in his line of sight. That thing he caught happened to be the arm of a white elevator operator, Sarah Page.1
This encounter alarmed Page, causing her to scream. After hearing Page’s cry and seeing Rowland flee from the elevator, an unknown white store clerk called the police to report an attempted assault. The following day, May 31, police arrested 19-year-old Rowland based on accusations from both Ms. Page and the clerk. In none of the accounts studied today is there evidence that Rowland attempted to assault Page.2 Although we agree on this fact today, Tulsans at the time believed the rumors published by local newspapers that Rowland had attacked, and even attempted to rape Page, “scratching her hands and ripping her clothes.”3 This incident became the catalyst for one of the worst race riots in American history. And shockingly, this story does not usually appear in history textbooks.
Dick Rowland, born Jimmie Jones, lived with his two orphaned sisters in Vinita, Oklahoma during his childhood. Their birthplace is unknown. An African American woman by the name of Damie Ford informally adopted Jones by the time he was six years old. By 1909, Jones and Ford had moved to Tulsa to join Ford’s family, the Rowlands, where he then adopted their surname and chose his own first name, Dick.4
Greenwood in Tulsa, Oklahoma, established as a town in the early 1900s, still abided by the laws of Jim Crow and segregation even though it had a lot of independent African American economic activity.5 Rowland began his schooling in Tulsa, then later dropped out of Booker T. Washington High School at the age of 19 to work at a white-owned parlor as a shoe shiner. This behavior was not unusual seeing as a shoe shiner in Tulsa, whether African American or white, could get a tip anywhere from $1-$5, which was decent money in the early twentieth century. Greenwood district in Tulsa, with over 6,000 residents, black-owned businesses, schools, hospitals, newspapers, staffed with African American professionals, was one of the most prosperous African American communities in the country at the time.6
At approximately 3:15 PM on the day of Rowland’s trial, the Tulsa Tribune published and released the article “Nab Negro for Attacking Girl in Elevator” to the general public. At this time, the Tulsa Tribune was a Republican paper, edited and published since 1919 by the controversial racist Richard Lloyd Jones. This inflammatory article gave Rowland the pejorative nickname “Diamond Dick” and strongly implied that Rowland had raped Sarah Page. This issue also published an editorial warning titled “To Lynch a Negro Tonight,” which started the rumor that Rowland would be lynched that night. This rumor, in addition to others stirred up by the publishings of the Tulsa Tribune, fueled high emotion in the surrounding community.7 This build-up of concern, confusion, and anger ravaged the community and led to the gathering of armed white World War I veterans to rally for Rowland being put in jail, alongside African American locals anxious that the boy would be killed over a misunderstanding. The two groups gathered outside of the courthouse where Rowland’s case was held. Around 8:20 PM, the crowd grew, and so did the tension. Shots were fired, and twelve people were killed within the hour. These shots began a riot that would continue for the next sixteen hours.8
As witnesses later recounted the events of that night, they argued that the white rioters had forgotten about Dick Rowland entirely, and their motivation became to “settle for nothing less than scorched earth. They would not be satisfied to kill the Negroes, or to arrest them. They would also try to destroy every vestige of black prosperity.”9 The Tulsa Race Race Riot was the first race riot of its kind in America. The violence and vandalism resulted in upwards of 300 people killed, with most being African American. Even the goal of the Tulsa police on the night of May 31, was to “put down a negro uprising.”10 The police department, in tandem with local units of the National Guard, worked to disarm Greenwood residents and swept through the town.
By the afternoon of June 1, the vandalism escalated to burning down the neighborhood, and the city was placed under martial law.11 This stopped the physical violence, however, reverberations continued for years to come. More than 35 blocks, including 1,256 residences of the African American neighborhood of Greenwood in Tulsa had burned almost out of existence. Virtually every African American person from this area was now homeless, and the displaced were held in custody in internment centers. White rioters were sent home by police and National Guard, and were never held accountable for any destruction of the town.12
The case against Rowland was dismissed by September of 1921, accompanied by a letter from Sarah Page stating that she no longer wished to prosecute. Rowland, once exonerated, immediately left Tulsa, relocating to Kansas City.13
Greenwood’s economy came to a halt without the assistance of its African American counterparts. This inspired white employers to advocate for the release of the African American members of the community from the detention centers in hopes of regaining what they lost. White employers made arrangements to grant the African American citizens their freedom by issuing wearable green tags which, in order to be valid, needed to be signed by a white employer. On top of those stipulations, African American victims of the riot were expected to rebuild their community from scratch which inadvertently forced many to live in tent-cities. On top of that, the city refused to accept responsibility for the riot or for the reconstruction and blamed the mayhem on the African American residents of Greenwood.14
The white political and business leaders of Tulsa were ashamed once they recognized the reality of the unapologetic racism displayed by the white mobs during the night of which the destruction of the primarily African American portion of the city ensued. This realization led to the city beginning a reconstruction commission. This commission, however, tried to repurpose the land previously inhabited by the African American community rather than trying to restore it to its residential state. They planned to use the land as an industrial park or a railroad station, and passed strict building ordinances requiring the use of fireproof material.15 The cost of the requirements made the rebuilding of Greenwood nearly impossible for its African American residents. Members of the community, including lawyer Buck C. Franklin and his partners, challenged those ordinances, paving the way for African Americans to finally rebuild. The discussion of the rioting did not go much further than rebuilding.16
As time passed, the consciousness of the surrounding community developed further, more balanced reflection about the riot. It must be noted that not all members of the white community believed that Rowland committed those actions. Many white members of the NAACP later wondered why so many were ready to believe that Rowland attempted to rape or assault a woman in a crowded office building. Dick Rowland was said to have been arrested by two police officers, one white and one black. And while the officers conducted the investigation quietly, The Tulsa Tribune printed their article, intentionally portraying the incident with a skewed perspective.17
The riot was finally brought back into public discussion with a commission established in 1997. This commission recommended in 2001 that the Oklahoma legislature pay reparations to the African American members of the community, but the legislature declined. Since then, many efforts have been made to erase this event from American history. In the 1930s, when the 1921 issue of the Tulsa Tribune was microfilmed, someone conveniently removed the “To Lynch a Negro Tonight” editorial, and later someone found that the entire original bound volumes of the newspaper had been destroyed in attempt to cover up the racist, unaccredited perspective held by the Tulsa Tribune. Along with this, the Oklahoma Bureau of Vital Statistics officially documented about 40 deaths from the riot.18 In attempt to maintain white supremacy in the United States, those who tell the history need to reconstruct the narrative in order to hold others accountable for their racist actions. It is essential that stories such as this are not suppressed in history, so that we can not only understand how things occur, but why.
- Black Wall Street, The History Channel (1999), https://youtu.be/oJbF9SGB3Yk. ↵
- Scott Ellsworth, Death in a Promised Land: The Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1992), 46-48. ↵
- Richard Lloyd Jones, “Nab Negro for Attacking Girl in Elevator,” The Tulsa Tribune (1921), 1-2 ↵
- Scott Ellsworth, “Tulsa’s Successful History,” Black Wall Street (2008), 1 ↵
- Griff Palmer, “Tulsa’s Greenwood Centre Was Once ‘Black Wall Street of the Southwest’,” The Daily Oklahoman, (1985). ↵
- Griff Palmer, “Tulsa’s Greenwood Centre Was Once ‘Black Wall Street of the Southwest’,” The Daily Oklahoman, (1985). ↵
- Vincent E. Miles, “Tulsa Oklahoma, Race Riot of 1921,” Encyclopedia of Race and Crime, Vol. 2 (2009), 814-817. ↵
- Oklahoma Historical Society, 2000, s.v. “Tulsa Race Riot.” ↵
- Adam Nossiter, “Something Tulsa Forgot,” New York Times (November 11, 2001). ↵
- William A. Darity, Jr., “Tulsa Riot,” International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, Vol. 8, 2nd ed. (2008), 465-466. ↵
- Tim Madigan, The Burning: Massacre, Destruction, and the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 (Basingstoke: Macmillan, 2013). ↵
- Black Wall Street, The History Channel (1999), https://youtu.be/oJbF9SGB3Yk. ↵
- Scott Ellsworth, “Tulsa’s Successful History,” Black Wall Street (2008), 1 ↵
- Bill Reck, “ Race Riots,” Encyclopedia of Race and Racism, Vol 3 (2013), 358-360. ↵
- Black Wall Street, The History Channel (1999), https://youtu.be/oJbF9SGB3Yk. ↵
- Black Wall Street, The History Channel (1999), https://youtu.be/oJbF9SGB3Yk. ↵
- Alfred L. Brophy, “Tulsa, Oklahoma, Race Riot of 1921,” Encyclopedia of African American History, Vol. 3 (2010), 1059-1060. ↵
- Jim Yardley, “Panel Recommends Reparations In Long-Ignored Tulsa Race Riot,” New York Times, (February 5, 2000), 1-2. ↵
66 comments
Christopher Hohman
Nice article. Is is terrible what happened to Rowland. It just goes to show you that at this time so many white people were willing to believe a colored person guilty for no other reason then they hated the color of their skin. It is also really sad that the prosperity enjoyed by the black community there was destroyed because the racist and bigoted tendencies of Americans in the early 20th century. I hope that one day this country and the world will be able to finally see past race, and look instead to people’s character to determine what kind of person they are. I also think that it would have been fair if the Oklahoma legislature had paid damages to the members of the black community, that would have been a step in thr right direction.
Annissa Noblejas
This is a horrible example of blind hatred. I asked my grandmother, who’s family is from Tulsa, OK if she had ever learned of this. Even three generations ago, this was not taught in public schools, the public happy to just sweep violence such as this under the rug as if it never happened. I’m appalled that the newspaper took such liberties and fabricated the story in such a way, and those people should have been held accountable for their part in this riot.
Micaela Cruz
Why the Tulsa riots of 1921 are not mentioned in any history textbook is truly puzzling and unsettling to me. This event caused not only deaths of many individuals but also left citizens of Greenwood homeless, and it was these same citizens who were made responsible of the madness that happened. Rowland did nothing wrong and it’s a shame that a public newspaper went out of their way to twist the story, and then later trying to cover up the article… shameful.
Ysenia Rodriguez
300 people died and I never knew this event happened. This is shameful and slightly infuriating. History is shaped by those in power and sadly never tells the full story. After all the destruction and fires were put out, African Americans in the community of Tulsa continued their uphill battle to be released from the detention centers as well as fighting for the right to rebuild their houses. 300 people dead, 1,256 residents without a home, and not a single textbook stating the details of this tragedy.
Jocelyn Moreno
I’ve never heard of the Tulsa Riots. It infuriates me, that they are trying to erase this history. Attempting to rewrite history in order for the people in charge to remain in charge. I believe people should know about this, it became the worst race riots in America. It hurts my heart how no one attempted to help them after the destruction was made. The officials just wanted to save themselves from the backlash they would’ve received and they succeeded on doing so. But they left the people out their to die .
Crystal Baeza
It’s so unfortunate there are many events such as this one that many people have not heard of. It’s good the white leaders realized their actions were wrong but why would they bother try to cover up the mess. It makes me upset how problems of racism still exists in today’s world but hope something as drastic as this would never happen again. I wonder is Rowland actually had the intention to assault Page or it was just miscommunication? It still doesn’t give the rights for the whites to burn down an entire neighborhood.
Aneesa Zubair
I wish the Tulsa riots were mentioned more often in textbooks, as not that many people have heard of them. It’s horrifying to think that simply tripping and falling could lead to such anger and eventually the destruction of Tulsa’s entire African-American neighborhood. The rioters weren’t even arrested. Even when city officials tried to rebuild the neighborhood, they focused on industrial purposes rather than residential, so that African Americans had nowhere to restore their homes. I agree that the public should be educated about events like this one. Textbooks tend to mention race riots only when discussing the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 60s, when in reality they had been occurring for a much longer time.
Sabrina Hsu
It’s so shocking that such a huge riot can start over something so small, but no matter how small something like this should be talked about more because of the fact that it did start something so big. There are so many other events in history like this where the cause is often not talked about but the cause is the most important part of it. It’s so sad what Rowland was accused of, especially how fast he was accused. The most shocking part however was that they tried to cover it up after finally realizing they may have been wrong. I’m really glad I read this article and was able to learn about this because it really does need to be talked about more.
Alexandria Zapata
When you think about the situation, it is so unfair that African American people get treated this way. If it was a white man, who tripped and fell, there wouldn’t be as much of a repercussion. They made the situation, worse than it seemed, by saying that he was “scratching her hands, and ripping her clothes”, and it turned into a riot. Its horrible to think, that this is what the world has come to.
Jasmine Rocha
Not only is this article very informative on the burning of black wall street but this article was also able to carry a message. The events at Tulsa are the types of events that were repressed in history and now this author is trying to bring to light because they should be a big part of history. I think we can look back at what happened in Tulsa and related to events in the modern day and hope that history does not repeat itself again.