In 1921 a thriving Black neighborhood in Tulsa Oklahoma was destroyed by a mob. Buildings burned. People killed. A prosperous community that had been called Black Wall Street was reduced to rubble over two days.
For decades this event barely appeared in any history book. It was not widely taught in schools. Many people in Tulsa grew up not knowing it had happened. It took until 1996 for an official state commission to formally investigate the massacre and until 2021 for it to receive widespread national attention.
An entire community was destroyed. And history looked away for a hundred years.
This is not just one story.
Why Poor Neighborhoods Get Ignored
Wealthy neighborhoods and wealthy institutions generate records. They have lawyers and accountants and archivists and PR people. They have the resources to document themselves and the connections to get their stories into the papers and the history books.
Poor neighborhoods do not have those resources. Their stories depend on someone outside the community deciding to document them, or on community members doing the work themselves with no institutional support.
When something happens in a poor neighborhood, a protest, a disaster, a crime wave, a community effort, the coverage tends to focus on the event itself. Not on the history of the community. Not on the people who live there. Not on what came before or what the place means to the people who call it home.
And when the event is over the cameras leave and the neighborhood goes back to being invisible to the people who write official history.
What That Means for the Record
It means that the history of poverty in America is almost invisible in official accounts. We have detailed histories of the decisions made in Washington about economic policy. We have almost no documented record of what it was actually like to live through those policies in the communities they affected.
It means that community organizations, mutual aid networks, local leaders and everyday acts of survival and resistance that happen in poor neighborhoods every single day are going unrecorded.
It means that the people doing the most important work of keeping communities together under the hardest conditions are doing that work without anyone writing it down.
What You Can Do
If you live in or grew up in a community that does not have a written history, you can start one. A blog. A Facebook page. A collection of photographs with captions. A series of interviews with longtime residents. It does not have to be formal or polished. It just has to exist somewhere.
If you know people who have lived through things worth documenting, ask them to tell you about it. Record it. Write it down.
If you see community organizations doing important work in your area, document what they do. Put names to the people involved. Describe what the work actually looks like day to day.
The Tulsa massacre survived in memory because community members refused to forget it even when the official record ignored it. That is the power ordinary people have. The power to refuse to let things disappear.
Use it.
Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.
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