The latest search for the remains of victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre has ended with 32 additional caskets discovered and eight sets of remains exhumed, the Oklahoma city said.
The excavation and exhumations at Tulsa’s Oaklawn Cemetery that began on Oct. 26 ended on Friday, and the remains were sent to a nearby lab for analysis and DNA collection.
Searchers sought unmarked graves of people who were probably male, in plain caskets with signs of gunshot trauma — criteria for further investigation that were based on newspaper reports at the time, forensic anthropologist Phoebe Stubblefield said.
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Two sets of the 66 remains found in the past two years have been confirmed to have gunshot wounds, although none have been identified to be victims of the massacre, Stubblefield said.
DNA taken from 14 sets of the nearly three dozen remains found last year were sent to Intermountain Forensics in Salt Lake City, Utah, for further study.
DNA from teeth and thigh bones, known as femurs, are to be extracted from the eight recently exhumed remains and also sent to Intermountain Forensics, Stubblefield said.
State archeologist Kary Stackelbeck said that 62 of the 66 burials found thus far were in unmarked graves.
Investigators are looking for a possible mass grave of victims of the massacre at the hands of a white mob that descended on the black section of Tulsa — Greenwood. More than 1,000 homes were burned, hundreds more were looted and destroyed and a thriving business district known as “Black Wall Street” was destroyed.
Most historians who have studied the event estimate the death toll to be between 75 and 300. Historians say that many of the victims were buried in unmarked graves, their locations never recorded and rumors have persisted for decades of mass graves in the area.
Stackelbeck said that the remains meeting the criteria for possible massacre victims and exhumed thus far are not in a mass grave, but instead interspersed in the search area.
Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum said he considers the entire cemetery to be a mass grave.
“Is there a mass grave where there are people lined up in a row like we thought might be? That is not the case,” Bynum said. “Is Oaklawn Cemetery still a mass grave? Yes.”
Investigators have recommended additional scanning of a nearby park and adjacent homeless camp, where oral histories have indicated massacre victims were buried.
Bynum said the city would decide the next step after reviewing the next report from researchers that is expected sometime next year.
All the exhumed remains are to be reburied, at least temporarily, at Oaklawn, where the previous reburial was closed to the public.
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