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NORTH TULSA OKLAHOMA
History
ELLIS WALKER WOODS MEMORIAL
A monument to the first Principal of BTW, NORTH TULSA's first high school, the ELLIS WALKER WOODS MEMORIAL tells the history of NORTH TULSA from 1913-1951.
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NORTH TULSA's story begins in the late 1700s when the new US federal government decides to relocate all American Indian nations in the east into territory west of the Mississippi river.
Enslaved and Free Africans arrived with these nations, and after treacherous journeys, spent nearly a century building over 100 All-Black towns and communities in Indian Territory, which entered The Union as the State of Oklahoma in 1907.
BLACK WALL STREET
Designed, built and rebuilt by architects, JC & WS Latimer, Tuskegee graduates, on land purchased from the Cherokee allotment of Mary Turley.
NORTH TULSA
The PERRYMAN FAMILY, the Muskogee & African American family whose 1870s ranch you know today as South Tulsa.
GREENWOOD RISING
At Greenwood Rising, a new museum, and at the Greenwood Cultural Center you'll find the history of the 1921 massacre, a conflict ignited with the intention of removing all African Americans from their remaining lands in Tulsa, as outsiders jockeyed for the wealth of The Oil Capital of the World

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NORTH
EVERYDAY



Celebrating FELX COLE
@ Lacy Park
