Though resources on the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre can be found throughout the Tulsa City-County Library system, TCCL's African-American Resource Center (AARC) at Rudisill Regional Library, in particular, and the Research Center at Central Library house the greatest number of resources. This guide is intended to supplement the AARC Tulsa Race Massacre subject guide and to point to resources that may be found in the Research Center or are available from other reliable entities online. There may be some overlap between the two guides. 

Content
1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Materials in the Research Center

City Directories and Maps

City Directories

Ancestry Library Edition
The 1909-1935 Tulsa City Directories are available in the Ancestry Library Edition database. If you don't have your own subscription to Ancestry.com, Ancestry Library Edition is accessible at any library location.

City Directory Digital Collection
The 1910, 1920, 1921, and 1922 Tulsa City Directories have been digitized and are accessible from outside of the library.

Maps

National Park Service: 1921 Tulsa Race Riot Reconnaissance Survey

Sanborn Maps For pre and post Tulsa Race Riot Sanborn maps, use the 1915 and the 1939 maps.

Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 National Register Nomination

Newspapers and Vertical File Content

Microfilm: 

Tulsa World: 1906-present

Tulsa Tribune: 1904-1992

Print: 

Bound photocopied Tulsa World articles from the first week of June, 1921 are available in the Research Center workroom.

Bound photocopied Tulsa Tribune articles from the first week of June, 1921 are available in he Research Center workroom.

 Online:

Black Dispatch
The Black Dispatch, an Oklahoma City Newspaper that covered the Tulsa Race Riot, is available online from the Oklahoma Historical Society.

Oklahoman Archives
The online archives date back to 1901.

Race Riot Vertical File
The Library's Race Riot vertical file content has been digitized. Content published before 1923 is freely accessible. Other content has been restricted to in-house use due to copyright concerns. From the link above, select advanced search, choose "the exact phrase" from the drop-down menu and use the phrase "race riot."

Tulsa Tribune
The June 1st, 1921 Tulsa Tribune state edition is available online.

Tulsa World
The Library of Congress has digitized pre-1923 newspapers, including the 1921 Tulsa World (titled Morning Tulsa Daily World in 1921).

Photographs and Film

Photographs

Library of Congress

Tulsa City-County Library: 1921 Tulsa Race Riot

University of Tulsa: Tulsa Race Riot of 1921

Film

The Solomon Sir Jones film collection is available online from Yale University's Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library. The collection consists of 29 silent black and white films that document  African-American communities in Oklahoma from 1924 to 1928.

Solomon Sir Jones was a Baptist minister, a businessman and an amateur filmmaker. Jones was born in Tennessee to former slaves and grew up in the South before moving to Oklahoma in 1889. Jones became an influential Baptist minister, building and pastoring fifteen churches. He was head of the Boyd Faction of Negro Baptists in America and was a successful businessman.

Jones filmed Oklahoma residents in their homes, in the businesses that they owned, and during their social, school, and church activities. The films document several Oklahoma communities, including Muskogee, Okmulgee, Tulsa, Wewoka, Bristow and Taft.

Tulsa footage can be found in at least five of the films (film two, film eighteen, film twenty, film twenty-seven, and film twenty-eight) and includes several shots of the Greenwood area.

Timeline and Other Resources

Tulsa World Race Riot Timeline

Oklahoma Department of Libraries: Tulsa Race Riot

Tulsa Race Massacre Research Materials at Oklahoma State University

Tulsa-Greenwood Race Riot Claims Accountability Act of 2007

ODL Tulsa Race Riot

 

Other Resources

The list are representative of some of the resources, committees and grants formed around the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial.

 

1921 Race Massacre Resources – Tulsa, Oklahoma

1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission

Programs – Grants – Curriculum

COMMEMORATIVE GRANTS

GREENWOOD RISING

GREENWOOD ART PROJECT

African-American Resource Center | Tulsa Library

Gilcrease Museum to Receive Eddie Faye Gates Tulsa Race Massacre Collection

Greenwood Cultural Center

John Hope Franklin Center for Reconciliation Historic Greenwood Curriculum Resources 

Tulsa Race Massacre Materials at McFarlin Library- University of Tulsa

Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 - Oklahoma State University

1921 Tulsa Race Massacre – Tulsa Community College

Tulsa Historical Society and Museum

 

1921 Race Riot Resources within the State of Oklahoma 

Oklahoma Digital Prairie - Tulsa Race Massacre

Oklahoma Historical Society – Black Dispatch

Oklahoma Historical Society – The Tulsa Race Massacre

 

1921 Race Riot Sources Outside of Oklahoma

Reparations, African Americans: Tulsa Race Riot: Call for Reparations - Cornell University

Ohio State University – Destruction of Black Wall Street – The Tulsa Riot

Huffpost – These Unforgettable Images Expose The Horror of the Tulsa Race Riots

Zinn Education Project – May 31, 1921: Tulsa Massacre

Bookshelf