His arrest sparked the Tulsa Race Massacre. Then Dick Rowland disappeared. By   DeNeen L. Brown
  May 30, 2021 at 12:00 p.m. EDT
 
  
  Black  men in Tulsa are marched under armed guard during the race massacre on  June 1, 1921. (Department of Special Collections/McFarlin  Library/University of Tulsa/AP) 
  He liked to call himself “Diamond Dick.”
  Dick  Rowland, a tall teenager with velvet skin, wore a diamond ring as he  shined shoes in downtown Tulsa. Rowland, 19, had recently dropped out of  Booker T. Washington High School, where he was a star football player,  because he was making so much money polishing the shoes of oilmen in a  city that billed itself as the “oil capital of the world.”
  On  May 30, 1921, Rowland took a break from his shoe stand inside a pool  hall and walked to the Drexel Building to use the only public restroom  for Black people in segregated Tulsa.
  Rowland  passed Renberg’s, a department store that occupied the first two floors  of the Drexel Building, and stepped into an open wire-caged elevator  operated by a 17-year-old White girl named Sarah Page.
   The devasation of the Tulsa Race Massacre
  What  happened next remains murky, according to historians and reports about  one of the worst episodes of racial violence in U.S. history. Rowland  may have accidentally stepped on Page’s foot, prompting her to shriek.  Or tripped and bumped into her.
  When the elevator doors reopened, Dick Rowland ran, and a clerk in Renberg’s called police.
  Rowland  was arrested and accused of assaulting a White girl. Though the charges  were eventually dropped and Page later wrote a letter exonerating him,  the accusation was enough to infuriate White Tulsa.
 
   Historians say this 1921 Tulsa Tribune newspaper story helped incite the massacre. (DeNeen L. Brown/The Washington Post) 
  Three  hours after the Tulsa Tribune hit the street with the headline “Nab  Negro for Attacking Girl in Elevator,” hundreds of White men gathered at  the Tulsa courthouse, where Rowland was being held.
  Black  World War I veterans who wanted to protect Rowland from being lynched  rushed to the courthouse to defend him. A shot was fired and “all hell  broke loose,” a massacre survivor recalled later.
  “As  the whites moved north, they set fire to practically every building in  the African American community, including a dozen churches, five hotels,  31 restaurants, four drug stores, eight doctor’s offices, more than two  dozen grocery stores, and the Black public library,” according to a  2001 report by the Oklahoma Commission to Study the Tulsa Race Riot of  1921. “By the time the violence ended, the city had been placed under  martial law, thousands of Tulsans were being held under armed guard, and  the state’s second-largest African American community had been burned  to the ground.”
  As  many as 300 people were killed, 10,000 were left homeless and 35 square  blocks of Greenwood, one of the country’s most prosperous Black  communities, were destroyed. Witnesses reported seeing bodies tossed  into the muddy Arkansas River or dumped into mass graves, making it  impossible to count the dead.
 
   A  photograph depicts a morbid scene from June 1, 1921. (Collection of the  Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture) 
  While  smoke still rose from the ashes of Greenwood, Tulsa’s sheriff, Willard  McCullough, and his deputy, Barney Cleaver, one of the first Black  lawmen in Oklahoma, hustled Dick Rowland out of town.
  While  smoke still rose from the ashes of Greenwood, Tulsa’s sheriff, Willard  McCullough, and his deputy, Barney Cleaver, one of the first Black  lawmen in Oklahoma, hustled Dick Rowland out of town.
  Rowland,  the central figure in the race massacre, would disappear, adding to the  uncertainties that surround the century-old attack.
   Tensions erupt in Tulsa as city commemorates 1921 race massacre
  As  Tulsa commemorates the centennial of the massacre this weekend, the  city is still haunted by unresolved questions about it: How many people  were killed? What happened to the bodies? Who were the White  perpetrators? Are there mass graves? What happened to Dick Rowland?
  “It  is mysterious because we just don’t know [much] about Dick Rowland, the  teenager whose arrest was a catalyst for the massacre,” said Kristi  Williams, an educator and a community organizer in Greenwood.
  In Tulsa, Rowland has become almost a mythical figure and a subject of legend and folklore.
  “Who  is Dick Rowland in history? We know he was a hard-working Black man,  whom racists falsely accused,” said Black Oklahoma state Rep. Regina  Goodwin (D).
  Goodwin said from her research that she believes Sarah Page never accused Rowland of anything. And Page disappeared, too.
  Dick  Rowland and Sarah Page survive the massacre, “all the pain and the  turmoil,” Goodwin said, “and they leave Tulsa with not even the smell of  smoke on them.”
  Who was Dick Rowland?
  One fact many historians agree upon is Dick Rowland was not his original name.
  “He  was born Jimmy Jones,” around the year 1903, said Marc Carlson,  director of special collections at the University of Tulsa’s McFarlin  Library.
  “He  and his two sisters were orphans in Vinita,” a small Oklahoma town  about 60 miles from Tulsa, Carlson said. “They were unofficially adopted  by a woman named Damie Ford.”
  He  was probably 3 or 4 years old when she took him in. Ford eventually  moved to Tulsa and married Dave Rowland, whose last name is sometimes  spelled Roland or Rolland in public records.
  A  John Roland is listed in the 1920 Census in Tulsa on East Archer Street  with Damie Rowland and Dave Rowland. John Roland, historians say, was  still a child when he told people he wanted his first name to be Dick.
  “He liked the name Diamond Dick, which is what he was calling himself,” Carlson said.
  Dick  Rowland is pictured in the 1921 yearbook for Booker T. Washington High  School. “He could have dropped out after picture taken,” Carlson said.
  Ellouise  Cochrane-Price, the daughter of massacre survivor Clarence Rowland and a  cousin of Dick Rowland, claims Dick and Sarah not only knew each other  before he stepped on the elevator but were in love and were planning to  defy Oklahoma’s ban on interracial marriage.
  “They  were planning on getting married,” she told an audience at the Oklahoma  Black Caucus gala last month. “They had spent many Sundays over my  grandma’s house, at family dinners.”
  When  the White mob gathered outside the Tulsa courthouse, she said, “the  mayor, the sheriff and the marshal were aware that Dick had not attacked  Sarah. There had been no attempted rape of any kind. However, that  information was not given up or not received by the mob that was  gathered to hang Dick Rowland.”
  In September 1921, the charges against Dick Rowland were dropped, according to records.
  Charles  Franklin Barrett, the Oklahoma National Guard adjutant general whose  troops were called into Tulsa during the rampage, concluded the massacre  was caused by “an impudent Negro, a hysterical girl and a yellow  journal.”
 
   A  group of soldiers march through Tulsa during the massacre. (Collection  of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and  Culture) 
  On  Sept. 28, 1921, the Topeka Plaindealer newspaper reported: “It was  brought out in the investigation that he was entirely innocent, the girl  never having complained that such were the facts as published in a  local WHITE PAPER. Sarah Page has vanished and has never been  apprehended since the day she made a statement refuting the charges  alleged against Rowland.”
  Most historians agree Rowland escaped Tulsa. Where he landed is another story.
  Several  reports say Sheriff McCullough took Rowland to Kansas City. But Rowland  may have secretly returned to Tulsa in the fall of 1921.
  He  came to the tent where Damie Rowland was living after her boardinghouse  was burned down in the massacre. “She fed him and they talked some and  Dick said he was so sorry, but there were only so many ways he could  express his remorse,” Tim Madigan wrote in his book  “The Burning.” “What was done was done, Damie said.”
 
  Smoke rises from buildings during the race massacre. (Alvin C. Krupnick Co./Library of Congress/Reuters) 
  In  a 1970 interview with Tulsa historian Ruth Avery, Damie Rowland said he  had asked her about people who died in the massacre and those who  survived. He left the tent before dawn.
  “He wrote to her every month from Kansas City,” Madigan wrote. He told her that Page was in Kansas City, too.
  “Dick  said that Sarah felt terrible that the police had arrested him for  something he didn’t do, but she never talked at all about the burning  and killing set in motion by her lies,” according to Madigan. “If Dick  still loved Sarah, he didn’t say.”
  Then  her name disappeared from Dick’s letters and not long after that, he  moved to Oregon, where he found work in shipyards along the coast.
  Damie  Rowland told Avery that she continued to receive letters from Dick,  until the 1960s. Finally, Damie told Avery, she received a letter from a  friend of Dick, saying he had been killed in an accident on the wharf.
  Carlson said Rowland may have been killed in a port explosion in Oregon.
  But Dick Rowland’s name does not appear on the list of people killed in that explosion.
  “He  was probably using a different name altogether,” Carlson said. “I  suspect when you are in the center of something like this, he was  probably terrified to be more public. We have no documentation  whatsoever. That’s part of the folklore around the whole massacre. There  is a lot of stuff we don’t know. Unless something concrete shows up, we  will never know.”
  Read more Retropolis:
   ‘They was killing black people’: A century-old race massacre still haunts Tulsa
   One of the last survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre — 107 years old — wants justice
   She sued her enslaver for reparations and won. Her descendants never knew.
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