“On April 19, 1995, at 9:02 a.m. a bomb exploded in a Ryder truck parked outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in downtown Oklahoma City killing 168 people and injuring approximately 850.” Oklahoma Historical Society
Trigger warning: this story contains references to racial violence.
Adam W. McKinney remembers the first time he encountered the name Fred Rouse. It was in a book he had bought at the Underground Railroad Museum in Flushing, Ohio, while on tour with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater troupe. He read the book later, in 2007, after he’d moved to Fort Worth to become an assistant dance professor at TCU, conducting research and choreographic work that delves into racism. That’s when he learned that on December 11, 1921, a badly beaten Rouse was seized from the Tarrant County hospital by a mob of White men, who then hanged him from a tree.