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Survivors say the state, Tulsa owe them financial compensation.
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The city's latest search for more victims of the 1921 Race Massacre wrapped up with experts from the research team updating members of the media before the final set of remains was exhumed.
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Researchers announced a "geophysical anomaly" had been detected during a test excavation this summer. Now, they're digging deeper.
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Tulsa’s North Peoria Church of Christ used to call Greenwood home. That was before I-244 displaced it and cut through historic Black Wall Street. Democratic State Rep. Regina Goodwin represents the area and attends the church, about its legacy and a planning grant to study the removal of the expressway.
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Survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre are hoping the Oklahoma Supreme Court will hear their case.
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Crews finished "test excavations" a day earlier than scheduled.
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Over 100 years ago, one of the deadliest race riots in American history destroyed the prosperous neighborhood of Greenwood, in Tulsa, Okla. Will victims ever get justice?
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The decision by Judge Caroline Wall dashes an effort to obtain a measure of legal justice by survivors of the deadly racist rampage that left hundreds of Black residents dead in 1921.
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One family, the Goodwins, was forever changed by the attacks in Oklahoma more than a century ago and worked to ensure Tulsa acknowledged the truth about what happened.
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NPR's Michel Martin talks to Victor Luckerson, author of Built from the Fire, and Oklahoma state Rep. Regina Goodwin, about the lasting effects of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.