From FAIR <[email protected]>
Subject Press Remembers Oldest Survivor of Tulsa Massacre—But Not Press's Role in Massacre
Date November 26, 2025 11:33 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
[link removed]

FAIR
View article on FAIR's website ([link removed])
Press Remembers Oldest Survivor of Tulsa Massacre—But Not Press's Role in Massacre Janine Jackson ([link removed])


Free Press: How Local Media Fueled the Tulsa Massacre — and Covered It Up

Joe Torres (Free Press, 5/27/21 ([link removed]) ): "As Tulsa observes the 100th anniversary of the massacre, it’s crucial that we remember the role the city’s newspapers played in weaponizing anti-Black narratives."

The New York Times (11/24/25 ([link removed]) ), Washington Post (12/24/25 ([link removed]) ), CBS News (11/24/25 ([link removed]) ), USA Today (11/24/25 ([link removed]) )—seems as though everyone had space to acknowledge the passing, at age 111, of Viola Ford Fletcher, the oldest known survivor of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre ([link removed]) .

That’s when 300 overwhelmingly Black women, men and children were murdered, their killings sparked ([link removed]) by a sensationalized front-page article in the local Tulsa Tribune (5/31/1921) about a 19-year-old Black shoeshiner, Dick Rowland, falsely accused of assaulting a 17-year-old white girl. A white mob destroyed businesses, churches, doctor’s offices and groceries in Greenwood, a prosperous neighborhood known as Black Wall Street or Little Africa, along with the homes of more than 10,000 Black Tulsans.

As Joe Torres (Free Press, 5/27/21 ([link removed]) ), co-author of News for All the People ([link removed]) : The Epic Story of Race and the American Media, recounted, the local white-owned press didn't just fuel the massacre; it also helped cover it up. The other main local paper, the Tulsa World, provided the white narrative of the massacre in its headline (6/1/1921 ([link removed]) ) the next day: "Two Whites Dead in Race Riot."

The World (6/15/1921 ([link removed] statement made by mayor%22&resolution=5.931084122117377&lat=4599.300350633937&lon=2607.183382896604) ) explained the situation by quoting Tulsa Mayor T.D. Evans:

Let the blame for this Negro uprising lie right where it belongs—on those armed Negros and their followers who started this trouble and who instigated it. And any persons who seek to put half the blame on the white people are wrong, and should be told so in no uncertain language.

The newspaper (6/4/1921 ([link removed]) ) called on “the innocent, hardworking colored element of Tulsa” to “cooperate fully and with vast enthusiasm” with officials, and “band themselves together for their own protection against this element of non-working, worthless Negros.” (The World ([link removed]) is still published today, and is Oklahoma's second-biggest paper.)
NY Post: Viola Ford Fletcher, the oldest living survivor of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, dead at 111

The right-wing New York Post (11/24/25 ([link removed]) ) was one of the few outlets writing about Viola Fletcher that remembered the press's role in the massacre: "She was only 7 years old when a white mob stormed Tulsa’s prosperous, largely Black Greenwood district on May 31, 1921, after a local newspaper published a sensationalized report about a Black man accused of assaulting a white woman."

The Tribune (6/5/1921 ([link removed]) ), in an editorial replete with racial epithets, likewise blamed Black residents. It urged against the rebuilding of the neighborhood:

The bad elements among the negroes, long plotting and planning and collecting guns and ammunition, brought this upon Tulsa just as the winds gather into a cyclone and sweep upon a city. This bad element among the negroes must learn this is not a city of, for and by their kind. NEVER.

Torres reflected:

No one was ever held responsible for the murders committed during the massacre, or for the destruction of Greenwood. Instead, public and private institutions in Tulsa tried to erase the massacre from public consciousness. The Tribune didn’t even mention the massacre in its paper until 1971.

In its obituary, the New York Times (11/24/25 ([link removed]) ) was moved to poignantly recall how “Viola never received more than an elementary school education. Instead, she worked alongside her relatives as a sharecropper, picking cotton and tending to livestock for $1 a day.” But still, to this day, they and others have no room at all for serious examination of the role of the press in the racist nightmare that shaped her life—much less for any discussion of what they’re doing to prevent such a nightmare’s recurrence—beyond, that is, preparing sad obituaries for the victims.


Read more ([link removed])

Share this post: <a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="[link removed]" title="Twitter"><img border="0" height="15" width="15" src="[link removed]" title="Twitter" alt="Twitter" class="mc-share"></a>
<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="[link removed]" title="Facebook"><img border="0" height="15" width="15" src="[link removed]" title="Facebook" alt="Facebook" class="mc-share"></a>
<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="[link removed]" title="Pinterest"><img border="0" height="15" width="15" src="[link removed]" title="Pinterest" alt="Pinterest" class="mc-share"></a>
<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="[link removed]" title="LinkedIn"><img border="0" height="15" width="15" src="[link removed]" title="LinkedIn" alt="LinkedIn" class="mc-share"></a>
<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="[link removed]" title="Google Plus"><img border="0" height="15" width="15" src="[link removed]" title="Google Plus" alt="Google Plus" class="mc-share"></a>
<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="[link removed]" title="Instapaper"><img border="0" height="15" width="15" src="[link removed]" title="Instapaper" alt="Instapaper" class="mc-share"></a>


© 2021 Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting. All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you signed up for email alerts from
Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

Our mailing address is:
FAIRNESS & ACCURACY IN REPORTING
124 W. 30th Street, Suite 201
New York, NY 10001

FAIR's Website ([link removed])

FAIR counts on your support to do this work — please donate today ([link removed]) .

Follow us on Twitter ([link removed]) | Friend us on Facebook ([link removed])

change your preferences ([link removed])
Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp
[link removed]
unsubscribe ([link removed]) .
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis