Black History Month Spotlight: J.B. Stradford
John B. Stradford (J.B.) was born in 1861 in Versailles, Kentucky to J.C. Stradford, a former slave. J.B. attended the Oberlin Preparatory Department (much like a modern day high school or secondary school) from 1882-85 and did not graduate. He went on to attend the Indianapolis School of Law, graduating in 1899.
Soon after receiving his law degree, J.B. Stradford had multiple interests in the social growth of Black Americans and Native Americans, real estate, and the oil boom in America. This led him to Tulsa, Oklahoma. He was admitted to the Oklahoma bar after arriving around 1899.
Not long after Stradford made his way to Tulsa, O.W. Gurley began developing an area in Tulsa for Black owned businesses, naming the main avenue “Greenwood.” Greenwood would soon be known as Black Wall Street, allowing Black citizens to participate in the American dream and grow their businesses and their wealth.
Stradford’s interest in real estate led him to build an over 50 room hotel on Greenwood Ave. in Tulsa, and it was the largest Black owned and Black operated hotel at the time. Stradford also owned the Stradford Library and the Stradford Building in the Greenwood area.
Unfortunately, racial tensions were growing in the south and struck Tulsa on May 30, 1921, when a Black man was accused of assaulting a white woman. This accusation has never been proven, but was enough for a fight to break out that evening. On June 1, white mobs descended on Greenwood, burning buildings and even dropping bombs from airplanes. Stradford’s businesses and real estate were destroyed, along with most of the Greenwood area.
Stradford was arrested for inciting violence during the race riots, and his son, C.F. Stradford (Oberlin College A.B. 1912) filed a writ for his release. J.B., fearing for his life, never paid bail upon release and escaped, eventually settling in Chicago and never returning to Tulsa. He died in 1935
Thanks to the efforts of J.B. Stradford’s family, including his granddaughter Jewel (Stradford) LaFontant-MANkarious (Oberlin College A.B. 1943), a Tulsa jury found Stradford innocent of all charges for inciting a riot, and Oklahoma governor Frank Keating gave Stradford a posthumous executive pardon in 1996.
(Citation given to the Stradford family, recognizing J.B. Stradford’s achievements on the day of his executive pardon, October 18, 1996. From the Jewel LaFontant-MANkarious papers, Oberlin College Archives)
More information about the notable Stradford family can be found in the papers of Jewel LaFontant-MANkarious, held in the Oberlin College Archives. Jewel’s own career as a lawyer, United Nations Ambassador, and other United States government positions is well documented in the collection