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ManOfDiscovery t1_j97kl3z wrote
This event, the Tulsa race riot, etc. were all well covered in my high school history courses during “reconstruction period” lectures. Kind of blows me away when people say they never heard it discussed. I had thought this was all already standard.
heyohhhh84 t1_j981u0x wrote
I’m from Wilmington and didn’t hear about this until just a few years ago.
Jaevric t1_j988bvz wrote
I lived in Wilmington, NC for 6 years - middle school and most of high school - and never heard of this.
...Admittedly, that was 25 years ago, but damn.
elmonoenano t1_j989g7z wrote
Just so people are clear on timelines, Reconstruction ended with the election of 1876 and the Compromise of 1877 and election of Hayes. Then the US entered a period generally known as Redemption in the south. It started a little earlier than 1877 and was more powerful in different places, and continued until the early 1910s. The violence in Wilmington is part of that period and redemption is marked by racial violence against Black Americans, the solidifying of Democrat Party rule of the South, Lochner Era jurisprudence gutting the 14th and 15th Amendment, and the development of Jim Crow and segregation.
After WWI, there was a period of racist violence from 1919 to about 1923 that generally coincides with the kicking off with the Red Summer. Chicago's famous riot in 1919 is considered part of the Red Summer. The Rosewood massacre in Florida happened near the end of this period, where there are still incidence of racist violence but they don't happen as frequently and aren't was wide spread.
Tulsa was part of that wave of violence. It's tied to the push by Black Americans for Civil Rights, partially based on their service in WWI and is marked by frequent lynching of veterans returning to the south. There was a pretty consistent pattern of attacking and stealing Black wealth, whether it's things like the looting and burning of Greenwood in Tulsa, or the stealing of land in places like Rosewood.
NewspaperNelson t1_j97tdfy wrote
Went to high school in Alabama and didn’t even learn about unionist/secessionist violence in my own county. Leaned about Tulsa a few years back when the rest of the nation did.
Caveman108 t1_j97z5a0 wrote
What year did you graduate? Class of 2014 here, I remember a lot of talk of the Civil War and ending slavery in my US History year. However there was very little to no discussion of the reconstruction and race struggles afterwards. I remember a little bit of stuff about sharecropping and some other stuff. No more real talk of race issues until we got to the civil rights movement.
This was in a very rural area of a pretty red state, for reference. The ironic thing is my state, Indiana, was on the side of the North and never had much slavery. Now you see all kinds of idiots flying confederate flags, and I remember kids in my class at the time saying we should never have given black people freedom. Specifically remember a particular dirtbag say “them n*****s should still be slaves today” in class, out loud, and not even getting detention for it.
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Syllogism19 t1_j982ggr wrote
You must not have gone to school in Texas. We got nothing. We did learn that Lincoln was going to help the South and that the Radical Republicans, scalawags and carpet baggers were terrible people.
illegible t1_j98az7n wrote
I had never been taught about the Tulsa race riots until i learned about them here on reddit. On top of that, 'race riots' makes it sound like black people rioting, rather than the white people rioting and killing black people, just another subtle white washing.
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ricottapie t1_j99212u wrote
I'm Canadian, and I only learned about them a year or two ago.
wilde_man t1_j99fz1o wrote
That would make sense, seeing as you live in Canada.
ricottapie t1_j9b5j3k wrote
Yeah, but with our exposure to American and international media and history being as high as it is, you'd think that it would've come up before. At the same time, a lot of Canadians were, and remain, woefully (maybe wilfully!) unaware of some our own history, so...
But I know now.
Regretful_pie_23 t1_j9a96gr wrote
I live in Washington state and they went over Tulsa a few times while I was in high school. I graduated in 2018
occasional_cynic t1_j9895xu wrote
Tulsa happened a looong time after reconstruction.
maximillian_arturo t1_j99c5rn wrote
It's almost like different schools don't all teach the same exact curriculum.
ManOfDiscovery t1_j99hj9v wrote
That’s my point. I’d been operating under the belief this side of US history was well-taught and part of a standardized curriculum. I was honestly shocked when I realized people were only first hearing about Tulsa from the watchmen…of all places. And I’m confronted again with the reality that our educational system is so ad-hoc that what happened in Wilmington isn’t even mentioned in Wilmington schools.
MeowMeowCollyer t1_j99f76f wrote
Tulsa Massacre, not race riot. It was a one sided attack, not a match between two equal sides.
ManOfDiscovery t1_j99hro8 wrote
Yes, but it was labeled as such when I was in high school, hence why I referred to it this way. Fair to clarify though
Vince_stormbane t1_j9azx5k wrote
I taught the Tulsa race riot and Waco horror last week spent a whole day on the 2 was a pretty depressing class period
EmperorsCourt t1_ja1ujsf wrote
same, and that was in the mid 90s.
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fractiousrhubarb t1_j98ic0w wrote
What state do you do high school in?
ManOfDiscovery t1_j98jfdx wrote
Virginia.
I will caveat this before anyone says how progressive that was for the south…
My elementary school still very much taught the Civil War as “the war of northern aggression.”
So, still certainly a mixed bag on the education side I guess.
SwaggermicDaddy t1_j992siw wrote
I tell a lot of people about the Tulsa race riot, I’m from Canada and it’s virtually unknown from what I can tell, at leas with my age range (25)
skankingmike t1_j98f8s6 wrote
I honestly cant remember the 90s it being discussed but then I was a terrible student in HS. College for sure but I was a history major and I went as an adult so.. 10+ year difference.
erraticsleeper t1_j9792un wrote
I absolutely agree. And for that to happen we need strong education reform in this country that CANNOT be left of to the whims of individual states and their racist and bias policymakers. It's going to be a long hard fight to get it done. But it will be so worth it in the end.
TimeEddyChesterfield t1_j982foc wrote
The down votes you're getting make me sad, because it's just more proof that there's no will to fix our problems.
What you proposed isn't radical or unreasonable. It's ridiculous and unfair that kids growing up in Kansas don't have the same opportunity to be, say, an engineer when they grow up as kids growing up in California because of the difference in educational quality. Even the educational quality between towns and cities in any state is dramatically differnt because school funding is based on property taxes in many places. Its a system that simply does not work. It's outright shameful and a betrayal of everything we insist we stand for.
There are solutions but too many of us are too easily angered and frightened to move forward with any kind of meaningful change.
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MistressofTechDeath t1_j98ec2z wrote
I went to HS in Wilmington, NC in the late 90’s and it was never mentioned. There was a sign on Market St heading into downtown that called the event a “race riot” (The sign has now been amended to “massacre”, I believe). The only race that rioted was the whites .
I’m glad to see all the research being brought to light recently. I read “Wilmington‘s Lie” by David Zucchino. It is very heavy, but the truth should be known.
janjinx OP t1_j9aj41a wrote
That's an interesting tidbit about the street sign. Thanks.
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Individual_Ad2579 t1_j9a0ay4 wrote
Something I will never understand is why we keep certain parts of history out of school. No matter how bad or good it built this country and we should learn about it
MeowMeowCollyer t1_j99fket wrote
Wilmingtons Lie: The Murderous Coup of 1898 & the Rise of White Supremacy by David Zucchino is one of the best books I read on the topic of the Wilmington coup an the galvanization of American white supremacy during Reconstruction. Highly recommend!
janjinx OP t1_j9aidg6 wrote
Thanks!
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Ok-Jury-7577 t1_j9eifu9 wrote
It was then in Africa that people were seeking to share knowledge, unite the world, and set everyone free. Nobody wanted to be anything; everyone only wanted to be. Illusions like time have no bearing on the spirit. Find the smallest beginning, fight for the group at all times, and acknowledge that incarnation is not a myth. Writing on papyrus, never again aimless Raus aus dem Büros, pyrotechnic fire
You're messed up, Hollywood 🥂 all without distinction until the end of the world Karma like a boomerang, no one is distracted Revolution of Consciousness, My Century Plan
You're messed up, Hollywood 🥂. all without distinction until the end of the world Karma like a boomerang, no one is distracted Revolution of Consciousness, My Century Plan
There was a time in Mama Africa when there were no cities and everything was unfathomable.
SurroundTiny t1_jaalxqr wrote
What?
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sevathelover t1_j9enmqm wrote
People saying we never reach this part of history have never been to the Raleigh museum of history
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janjinx OP t1_j95wkew wrote
Instead of hiding or covering up this part of American history it should be included in a segment on 'post civil war after effects' at some point in high school. All history must be examined no matter how disgusting.