What have you told your kids about Black Wall Street? The first thing they should know is that itโs not in New York. The basic thing they should come to understand and appreciate is the legacy of Black Wall Street is one of success.
Tell all willing to listen that in 1921, the Greenwood district neighborhood of Tulsa, Oklahoma, was site of one of Americaโs the most devastating mass execution. It was a massacre so ghastly, many chose to forget it. Contemporary African-Americans need to know and understand the exceptional history of Tulsaโs โBlack Wall Streetโ and understand what happened to it.
In early 1900, Greenwood, with its Archer and Pine Streets tracts, was a thriving business district of African-American-owned businesses, a middle- and upper-class area with schools, hospitals and theaters. It was a bustling commercial and social โislandโ on the Northeast side of Boomtown Tulsa.
But in just two days in 1921, Black Wall Street was destroyed. Acts perpetrated during the two days inflicted $50 million in damage in todayโs dollars. Three-hundred blacks were killed, and 800 injured. Blacksโ family fortunes evaporated overnight.
Black school kids need to know that Black Wall Streetโs demise was due to a terrorist attack whites perpetrated on affluent blacks. Todayโs blacks still suffer as result of white riotersโ envy and their subsequent terrorism of the Mecca of black entrepreneurs.
When not lured by โintegrationโ and attraction of whitesโ โcolder ice,โ blacks have had significant business acumen and independence. Oklahoma, which was rich in oil deposits, became a state in 1907. It offered a โbetter lifeโ for formerly enslaved African-Americans to get away from the still-repressive South and start over. In Tulsa, the Frisco railroad tracks divided the โwhiteโ part of town from the โLittle Africaโ Greenwood District. Laws of the period prevented whites and blacks from living in neighborhoods populated by 75 percent or more of the other race.
Black Wall Street came about as blacks made do with their lot. But as the black community flourished, disgruntlement and hatred did as well. With veterans returning from World War I and jobs scarce, envy and racial tension grew among whites. This all came to a head on May 31 and June 1, 1921. Over 16 hours, almost every blackโs business was burned to the ground.
Blacks are owed for Greenwoodโs destruction. Black Wall Street was the personification of blacks owning and operating businesses. In Tulsa, blacks ruled the roost. In the Black Wall Streetโs destruction, 35 city blocks comprised of 1,256 residences were razed. Itโs important that blacks start to articulate what Black Wall Street means to them and why.
Much is owed to early black pioneers that built self-sustaining businesses only 50 years after emancipation. Icons of blacksโ business legacy include O. W. Gurley, who opened a grocery store to service the black community in 1905. Gurley then bought tracts of undeveloped land and constructed homes for sale and rent to blacks migrating to Tulsa. Gurley ultimately built one of Tulsaโs finest hotels. John B. Stradford built the 54-room Stradford Hotel, at the time, the finest black-owned hotel in America. Stradford owned rental houses and apartment buildings and believed that if blacks pooled their resources and spent within their communities they could become self-sufficient and independent. Greenwood resident Mabel Little, owner of Little Rose Beauty Salon, lost her beauty parlor, her and her husbandโs restaurant next door and rental properties as result of whitesโ rioting.
Itโs time black Americans saw the results of whitesโ Tulsa riots and used that mold to examine and address inequalities and debts this country owes them. The men and women of Greenwood are models of outstanding business acumen, and evidence the black race has always overcome tremendous odds and accomplished great feats while in America. Black Wall Street showed our strengths and accomplishments โ separate from whites.
William Reed is publisher of โWhoโs Who in Black Corporate Americaโ and available for projects via Busxchng@his.com.

