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The E-Sylum: Volume 24, Number 23, June 6, 2021, Article 28

CENT CHARRED IN THE TULSA RACE MASSACRE

Earlier this year, Len Augsburger alerted us to the existence of a numismatic connection to the Tulsa Race Massacre. Anne Bentley passed along a May 24, 2021 Smithsonian article which illustrates the piece. Thanks! -Editor

66FA372981652_5001.tif Tulsa Race Massacre charred cent reverse

George Monroe was 5 years old when he collected this penny in the aftermath of the deadliest racial massacre in U.S. history. Lincoln's likeness is marred; the word liberty is barely legible. The back of the penny is so melted that nothing is visible.

Monroe survived the Tulsa Race Massacre, which began May 31, 1921, in a thriving African American community in Tulsa, Oklahoma. No one knows exactly how many people died, and no one was convicted. For nearly a century, the story was rarely told.

The Greenwood area of Tulsa was known as Black Wall Street. It had one of the largest concentrations of Black-owned businesses in the country at the time—a neighborhood full of stores, schools, churches, a hospital and a library.

Then Dick Rowland—a Black 19-year-old—was imprisoned, falsely accused of assaulting a white woman. A lynch mob gathered to hang Rowland. Black Tulsans hurried to the courthouse to protect him.

For two days, white mobs ransacked, razed and burned over a thousand properties across almost 40 blocks. They murdered as many as 300 African American residents, with significantly more missing and wounded. The Oklahoma National Guard rounded up Black residents of Greenwood and forced thousands into detention centers at the Convention Hall, the Tulsa County Fairgrounds and the baseball stadium, where they were held for up to eight days. The violence left about 10,000 people without homes.

Black Wall Street was destroyed.

In the decades that followed, the massacre was rarely discussed or acknowledged. Now, 100 years later, the Smithsonian is sharing reflections and resources for learning more about the event.

The pennies picked up by Monroe are on display at the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture. It's great to hear these artifacts are properly identified, cataloged and preserved. I'm still curious to learn more about the gold-plated medals presented by the state to the Tulsa event survivors. Have any of our readers seen one? -Editor

To read the complete article, see:
100 years ago, this penny was charred in the Tulsa Race Massacre (https://www.si.edu/stories/penny-charred-tulsa-race-massacre)

To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see:
NOTES FROM E-SYLUM READERS: JANUARY 31, 2021 : Tulsa Race Massacre Numismatic Survivors (https://www.coinbooks.org/v24/esylum_v24n05a09.html)

Kenny E-Sylum ad02 Books Literature



Wayne Homren, Editor

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