After the Tulsa Race Massacre, the Red Cross announced plans to form a “Colored Hospital Association,” and provide a hospital building to be staffed by Black surgeons, physicians, and nurses. Oklahoma Sun article, 12/1/1921.
Series: Central Decimal Files, 1881 - 1982
Collection: Records of the American National Red Cross, 1881 - 2008
Transcription:
[handwritten vertically on left side of page] RC - 103 P4 [/handwritten]
[newspaper article]
Entered as second-class matter June 30, 1920, at the post office at Tulsa, Oklahoma, under the Act of March 3, 1879.
Published weekly, on Wednesday, at 126 N. Greenwood St., Tulsa, Oklahoma.
THE OKLAHOMA SUN
VOL. 2, NO. 35. TULSA, OKLAHOMA, DECEMBER 1, 1921 PRICE, $1.50 PER YEAR
RED CROSS A GREAT BENEFACTOR COLORED HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION ORGANIZED
AN INSTITUTION THAT HAS SHELTERED AND CARED FOR MANY COLORED SUFFERERS GOOD WORK STILL GOING ON
The old saying, "Tis an ill wind that blows no one good" is coming true. The colored population of Tulsa will always remember with gratitude and thanksgiving the fact that nothing has been left undone by the Red Cross to heal the wounds of the sick and maimed following the June riot. The best surgical, medical and nursing case has been provided every riot sufferer and no expense has been spared in caring for the sick whose homes were burned and where home (?)ome provisions for caring for sick people were limited.
When it became necessary for the Red cross to vacate the hospital at the Booker T. Washington School, the colored people were quick to respond to a suggestion made by the Red Cross that a new hospital be erected on a co-opeative plan whereby the Red Cross would furnish all the material necessary for a hospital building if the colored people, thru Central Relief Committee, would furnish the labor. With surprising swiftness, a thirty-bed hospital was built and equipped with every essential for scientific surgical care and treatment of the sick. The hospital building is located at 324 North Hartford on the site of the old Dunbar School. It has one large surgical ward for men, a surgical ward for women, a maternity ward a general medical woman's ward, dining room, kitchen, bath, linen closets, and best of all a thoroughly modern operating room, fully equiped. A large porch running the full length of the building on the east provides ample space for convalescent patients during the sunshiny days, and a like porch on the south side answers the same purpose during the chilly days. Two convalescent tents have been equipped for ambulatory patients. Likewise a tent for tuberculars is provided on the grounds.
Up to the present time, the Red Cross has conducted this hospital as a riot relief proposition. It has served its purpose so well that the institution has become indispensable. It has been the desire of the Red Cross Committee, County Officials and Mr. Willows particularly, for the Red Cross to leave a permanent institution for the care of the sick and wounded in Tulsa to the colored people as their own institution.
HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION FORMED
The first steps have been taken to form a Colored Hospital Association, which will be organized and incorporated under State laws. This association would be directed by a board of representative colored citizens with an advisory board of a small number of interested citizens. There will be in addition to the board of white directors, a Woman's Auxiliary made up of representative colored woman and organized in such fashion that every colored woman in the district can become identified with the movement. The title to the hospital building and equipment will be turned over to the Colored Hospital Association. The hospital will be generally supervised by Dr. Butler, County Physician, (white) who will have to assist him a staff of colored physicians and surgeons whose services will rotate. Colored nurses will be employed by the Association, and in every sense of the word the institution will be the property, a thoroughly democratic institution, operated, owned and controlled by the colored citizens.
Announcement will be made next week of the personnel of the Board of Directors elected; likewise the (illegible) or personal or (illegible) and gratitude is due the Red Cross for this splendid and adequate provision made.
THE PRESENT STANDARD TO BE MAINTAINED
It is the present intentions of the association to maintain the highest standard hospital care for our people, and we have every assurance from the county officials Red Cross and others that the colored people will be given full support in this new venture.
The suggestion has been unanimous that the hospital be named after the Red Cross Director who has established for the white population of Tulsa a reputation for sympathetic and fair dealing with our people in their time of trouble, sickness and destitution.
[photo of building with car parked in front]
[Caption: Front View of 9 room Hospital Building.]
“The question of whether or not the city has a legal right to pass a fire ordinance for the express purpose of preventing negroes rebuilding frame shacks in the burned area ... is being squarely tried out on its merits today….” Tulsa Tribune, 9/1/1921
Series: Central Decimal Files, 1881 - 1982
Collection: Records of the American National Red Cross, 1881 - 2008
Transcription:
[newspaper article]
TULSA TRIBUNE, TULSA, OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1921.
BLACKS ATTACK NEW ORDINANCE PASSED BY CITY
Three Judges to Make Final Ruling
The question of whether or not the city has a legal right to pass a fire ordinance for the express purpose of preventing negroes rebuilding frame shacks in the burned area, which was avoided when the negroes won the recent injunction suit on a technicality, is being squarely tried out on its merits today before District Judge W. B. Williams, Valjean Biddison and A. C. Hunt, sitting as a single court.
Their decision this afternoon is expected to settle for all time the rebuilding controversy so far as the local courts are concerned.
The case being tried involves only the north half of the burned district as the same judges recently held that the fire ordinance passed long before the riot effectively prevented the re-construction in the south half of "Little Africa" of all except fireproof buildings.
The present case is an application for a temporary restraining order brought by Judge Mather M. Eakes, prominent white attorney, in behalf of 10 or 12 negro property owners and seeks to enjoin the city from molesting the blacks in rebuilding or otherwise putting in force the fire limit ordinance passed last week after the court held the one enacted just after the riot invalid because of a defect in its publication.
No Frame Buildings.
When the previous ordinance was held invalid City Attorney Frank Duncan announced that he believed the negroes should be permitted to build temporary shacks in the burned area and would urge such an ordinance on the mayor and commissioners. Duncan made such a recommendation but it was not followed and the new ordinance is identical with the one set aside except that it has been properly published. The new ordinance went into effect today.
It includes the north half of the devastated area within the city fire limits thereby prohibiting the erection thereon of frame buildings held unlawful under the fire restrictions imposed.
Judge Eakes is attacking the ordinance on the ground that it is unconstitutional. He argued before the court today that it is invalid and should be set aside because it involves an unreasonable and unjust exercise of the police power of the city. He gave the further reason that it was enacted in bad faith, not for the purpose of crating fire limits but to force the conversion of the area into an industrial district and thereby prohibiting the negro owners from using the land for its original and rightful purpose.
Unconstitutional He Says.
"We are raising the question in this case," explained Judge Eakes to the court "that this ordinance is a direct attempt to take property without due process of law, herefore violates the constitution of the United States and also the constitution of Oklahoma, which provides that property cannot be taken for private purposes, either with or without compensation, without the consent of the owner."
Should a temporary restraining order be granted, it was generally admitted that a permanent injunction would follow as a matter of course, for the points argued involve permanent rather than temporary conditions. For that reason lawyers said the decision today would settle the case or force an appeal to the supreme court.
The courtroom was crowded with negro property owners and riot suffers during the hearing, a number of them taking the witness stand and describing in detail present conditions in the area, which, they declared, are unsatisfactory, unsanitary and do not admit of being made permanent.
[Two other September 2, 1921 newspaper articles are underneath.]
Our thoughts and prayers are with the people of Tulsa, Oklahoma today as they commemorate the horrific events of May 31 and June 1, 1921, known as the Tulsa Race Massacre. The mural below was painted by Michael Rosato, the artist who created the Harriet Tubman Mural, to remember and honor what was lost in the Greenwood neighborhood over a two day period--35 blocks of black-owned homes and businesses burned to the ground, 10,000 people made homeless, hundreds killed, a thriving black community systematically destroyed by the white community. The brutality of the act and magnitude of the loss is beyond comprehension. #neverforget!! #TulsaRaceMassacre #tulsa100 #tulsaoklahoma #michaelrosato #blackwallstreet #blacktherapists #letyourselfbegreat #blacktherapist #blackcounselors #therapyforblackmen #blackmaletherapist #melantedtherapist #melanatedsocialwork #blackpipeology #bigsexyistheillest #healblackman #blackcounselorsrock #melantedmindfulness #healblackmanheal #begreatonpurpose 👑 #BlackMaletherapist #mentalhealthmatters #MindoVaMaterial ##FaithovaFear #kingsraisingkings #howmuchshitareyouwillingtoeat #brokenness https://www.instagram.com/p/CPizH05DjST/?utm_medium=tumblr
I’m in #Tulsa, Oklahoma to recognize the 100 Years that has passed since the terrorist attack on my people 1921-2001. ✊🏾 #Tulsa100 #Oklahoma #TulsaOklahoma #BLM #BlackLivesMatter #NativeAmerican #Melanin ALWAYS REMEMBER 😔 #Greenwood #BlackWallStreet #art #mural (at Greenwood Cultural Center) https://www.instagram.com/p/CPeSanfMZcHAxU8Im__VPFBiW5tpVnT6ztqs9U0/?utm_medium=tumblr
The HISTORY® Channel sets the premiere date for its new two-hour documentary “Tulsa Burning: The 1921 Race Massacre” on Sunday, May 30 at ...
The HISTORY® Channel sets the premiere date for its new two-hour documentary “Tulsa Burning: The 1921 Race Massacre” on Sunday, May 30 at 8PM ET/PT. Executive produced by NBA super star and philanthropist Russell Westbrook, and directed by Peabody and Emmy-Award winning director Stanley Nelson (“Freedom Riders”) and Peabody and duPont-Award winner Marco Williams (“Two Towns of Jasper”), the documentary commemorates the 100th anniversary of the horrific Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921, one of the worst acts of racial violence in American history, and calls attention to the previously ignored but necessary repair of a town once devastated.