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When Black veterans defended D C from a white supremacist siege
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Acting Comptroller Marks Anniversary of Freedman s Bank and the National Currency Act
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Comptroller of the Currency Marks the 155th Anniversary of the Freedman s Savings and Trust Company
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Ajia Meux for The Transcript Jun 13, 2021
10 hrs ago
In January 2021, Showtime aired an episode of âThe Circusâ that featured a segment where two sets of people were interviewed on the Enbridge Line 3 pipeline construction in Montana: Native Peoples committed to protecting the land and water, and white townspeople that would be impacted economically by the loss of the project.
Indigenous activists openly declared that the land was stolen, and construction was operating illegally. White people held town halls with their elected officials to discuss how halting construction could have detrimental effects on frontline employees, power companies, schools and jobs.
While I was watching the segment, I was reminded of the opening of Randy Krehbielâs book âTulsa 1921: Reporting a Massacre,â in which he described how white land runners manipulated Native Peoples into giving their land away.
Beyond Tulsa: The Historic Legacies and Overlooked Stories of America’s ‘Black Wall Streets’ Time 1 hr ago Olivia B. Waxman © Courtesy of National Park Service, Maggie L. Walker National Historic Site A circa 1917 interior photo of St. Luke s Penny Savings Bank.
Between May 31 and June 1, 1921, as many as 300 people were killed in one of the deadliest race massacres in U.S. history. Riled up by rumors of a Black man raping a young white woman, a white mob burned down the Tulsa, Okla., neighborhood of Greenwood a.k.a. “Black Wall Street,” the affluent commercial and residential neighborhood founded in the city by Black Americans who went west after the Civil War.