Tulsa and Black Wall Street

May 05, 2021 
/ Contributed By: Tricia Martineau Wagner

Deep Greenwood

Deep Greenwood

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[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]This entry is for juvenile audiences. To see the full version of this entry, click here.[/vc_column_text][vc_column_text]What happened:

Black Wall Street became one of the wealthiest black communities in America. Greenwood was a neighborhood in Tulsa, Oklahoma. In the early 1900s, Booker T. Washington visited Greenwood. He saw it was a successful town and called it “Negro Wall Street.” It is now called “Black Wall Street.”

Why it is important to know about:

Black people were not always welcome in white towns. They formed their own communities. Black people founded twenty all-black towns in Oklahoma. That was more than any other U.S. state. Black people were proud to support themselves. They invested money into their own towns. That helped other black people to improve their lives.

Details of the event:

Black Wall Street was on the Arkansas River in Tulsa, Oklahoma. It was a fast-growing town. Railroad tracks separated where people lived. Whites lived in southern Tulsa. Blacks lived in northern Tulsa. Blacks could work for white people in Tulsa. But they could not shop in the white neighborhoods. Black people set up their own neighborhood around Greenwood Street. Many people came for jobs when oil was discovered. Tulsa had tall office buildings and electric trolley cars. The city had four railroads, telephone service, and an airport by 1921. Many rich black people settled in Black Wall Street. There were beautiful homes. Black Wall Street had over two hundred black businesses. Black Wall Street had newspapers, schools, and theaters. It had restaurants and hotels. It had pharmacies, parks, and churches. It also had grocery stores and a library. The people of Black Wall Street did not need anything outside their town. They had their own doctors, lawyers, and teachers. They had their own dentists and entertainers. Black Wall Street was a symbol of success. It was one of the wealthiest black towns in America for fifteen years. In 1921, a group of angry white men burned the town to the ground. This is known as the Tulsa Race Riot. Recently, people are learning more about this event and why it happened.

The lasting impact:

Wall Street is an eight-block-long area in New York City. It is where banks are located and lots of money is traded. The name “Black Wall Street” meant that it was a wealthy town. Black Wall Street became a symbol of black accomplishment.

What we learned from this event:

There is power in believing in yourself. Uniting together and supporting your own race uplifts people. Looking out for others gives them a chance to succeed.

For more information, please go to BlackPast.org.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Author Profile

Tricia Martineau Wagner is a North Carolina author and hands-on living history presenter. She is an experienced elementary teacher, reading specialist, and independent historian. Her four non-fiction books are: It Happened on the Underground Railroad (2007; 2nd edition 2015), Black Cowboys of the Old West (2011), African American Women of the Old West (2007), and It Happened on the Oregon Trail (2004; 2nd edition 2014). Ms. Wagner is a well-versed and entertaining speaker who brings history to life. She enjoys conducting presentations for schools around the country in grades 2 – 8 on: the Underground Railroad, Black Cowboys of the Old West, African American Women of the Old West, and the history of the Oregon Trail. She has spoken at the 4th Annual Black History Conference in Seattle, Washington sponsored by the Association for African American Historical Research and Preservation (AAAHRP), Presentation title: “Rewriting American History: The Untold Story of the Contributions & Achievements of African American Citizens.” Ms. Wagner also spoke at the Western Heritage Symposium for the National Day of the American Cowboy, Arlington Texas, (National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum in association with University of Texas at Arlington), Presentation title: “America’s New Vision of the Old West: Black Cowboys & Black Women Who Reformed and Refined Society.”

Categories:
Children's Page

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Martineau Wagner, T. (2021, May 05). Tulsa and Black Wall Street. BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/childrens-page/tulsa-and-black-wall-street/

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