The 'whitewashing' of Black Wall Street
Business
The whitewashing of Black Wall Street
A century after the Tulsa massacre, Black entrepreneurs in the citys Greenwood district feel threatened with erasure yet again, amid demands for reparations
By Tracy Jan
JANUARY 17, 2021
TULSA When Guy Troupe returned to his hometown after a career in sports consulting to open a coffee shop, he envisioned a gathering spot for Black business owners who would resurrect the commercial district so prosperous that it became known as Black Wall Street.
New businesses are indeed rising all around Tulsas historic Greenwood district: The Vast Bank headquarters features a French sidewalk bistro and a rooftop sushi bar. Across the street from Troupes cafe, cranes hover over the construction of an office and retail complex and a $20 million museum dedicated to that early paragon of Black enterprise and a century-old massacre that obliterated it.
But as Tulsa authorities provide millions in financial incentives to revitalize the district ahead of an anticipated influx of tourists for this years centennial of the 1921 bloodshed, Black entrepreneurs say they are being threatened with erasure yet again, shut out of Greenwoods most prestigious development projects and priced out of prime retail locations. ... Some $42 million in city tax incentives and loans race-blind under Oklahoma law has largely benefited White-owned firms that won the majority of contracts to develop lucrative parcels closest to downtown, according to city officials and business leaders.
Tulsa officials say the city has just begun paying attention to the dearth of Black property ownership and will soon open up more land for redevelopment, north of the interstate and farther from the central business district. But it is already too late to make a difference in the most desirable part of Greenwood.
{snip}
Alice Crites and Andrew Van Dam contributed to this report.
Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly identified the developer of Vast Bank as a White-owned firm. The company is certified by the Cherokee Nations Tribal Employment Rights Office as Indian-owned. The story has been updated.