African American District of Tulsa aflame, c. June 1, 1921 |
Jeffrey B Perry
One hundred years ago St. Croix-born, Harlem-based, Hubert Harrison (1883-1927), “the father of Harlem radicalism,” spoke out against the white supremacist attacks on the African American Greenwood community of Tulsa, Oklahoma.
On May 31 and June 1, 1921, Tulsa was torn by white supremacist attacks
(including aerial bombing) on its African American Greenwood
district.
Hubert Harrison called a 4 p.m. meeting for Sunday, June 5, at the
135th St. Public Library in Harlem to “protest against the
Tulsa massacre.” On behalf of the recently revived Liberty League (which
he had originally founded in 1917 as the first organization of the militant
“New Negro Movement”) Harrison sent a telegram to Oklahoma Governor, James B.
Robertson, warning that unless the authorities took dramatic measures against
those responsible “this condition will give an immense impetus to the movement
among the Negroes for arming themselves against white aggression.” He
added, “Unless the state authorities repudiate and punish such lawlessness,
Negroes will develop as militant a spirit as the Irish in Ireland.” Other
scheduled speakers at the rally were Rev. Dr. Williams the elder, Irena Moorman
Blackstone, president of the Women’s National Business Association, Arthur E.
King, publicist, and Edgar M. Grey, secretary of the Liberty League, who was to
preside.
June 6, 1921, Harrison wrote a letter to the editor of the New York
Times that was not published that quoted from the League’s telegram
to the Governor of Oklahoma – “If this sort of thing can be done with impunity
in a southern state, then it will become necessary for Negroes all over the
South to arm for self-defense.” He reasoned, that “a Negro who shoots down
lawless murderers in defense of his home is contributing to the creation of a
wholesome respect for law and order and orderly legal processes.”
Harrison insisted that this “right of self-defense is conceded by all laws,
Southern as well as Northern" and he explained, "my people are
defending themselves now, as a last resort.”
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