On June 1,1921, the unincorporated community of Greenwood Oklahoma was systematically looted and burned by a white mob. The conflict derived from an attempt by the mob to lynch a young African American man, Dick Rowland, who had been accused of assaulting a white woman. Thirty-nine deaths were documented by death certificates, but the actual number of deaths is unknown due to the period of martial law which ended the rioting, poor documentation, and focus on recovery. Twenty African American adult males were buried in the Tulsa city cemetery, Oaklawn, in unmarked graves. In 2020 former mayor GT Bynum initiated the investigation, which continues today, to recover these and any other victims of the race massacre and return them to their families. Our team of anthropologists have recovered over 50 individuals from unmarked graves in Oaklawn, and forensic analysis has identified six with gunshot wounds that make them potential victims of the riot. Collaboration with our historians, geneticists, and genealogists resulted in the first victim identification in July 2024, of Pvt. CL Daniel. Further identifications of victims and community members have followed.
This program is presented by the Clarke Forum for Contemporary Issues and co-sponsored by the departments of anthropology and American studies.
Biography (provided by the speaker)
Headshot of Phoebe StubblefieldDr. Phoebe R. Stubblefield is the director of the C.A. Pound Human Identification Laboratory, the forensic anthropology laboratory at the University of Florida. A fellow of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences since 2007, she served two terms as chair of the Anthropology Section. Previously director of the Forensic Science Program at the University of North Dakota, she created a trace evidence teaching laboratory, and assisted undergraduates with entry into the spectrum of forensic science careers. In the late nineties she joined the scientific consultants for the Tulsa Race Riot Commission, and now serves as the lead forensic anthropologist in the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Investigation. In 2023 she was inducted as a fellow in Section H (Anthropology) of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, based on her contributions to the Tulsa Race Massacre Investigation.
Event Links
Website: https://go.evvnt.com/3452880-0
