Workers bring equipment to the site where excavation will take place at Oaklawn Cemetery in a search for victims of the Tulsa Race Massacre believed to be buried in a mass grave (Photo | AP) 
World

Cemetery search resumes for victims of Tulsa Race Massacre

Crews worked to define the boundaries of a mass-grave site that was discovered in October at the Oaklawn Cemetery.

Associated Press

TULSA: The City of Tulsa resumed its search Wednesday of a cemetery for possible victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.

Crews worked to define the boundaries of a mass-grave site that was discovered in October at the Oaklawn Cemetery.

State archaeologist Kary Stackelbeck said crews were able to locate three of the four corners of the mass-grave site, giving searchers an overall sense of its dimensions. She said searchers have also determined there are three additional burials in the area, bringing to 15 the number of coffins they've found at the site.

The search began last year, and researchers in October found at least 12 sets of remains in coffins, although the remains were covered back up for further study at a later date and authorities haven’t yet confirmed they are those of massacre victims. Stackelbeck has said they’ve estimated 30 or more bodies could be in the site.

Not long after the massacre, the state officially declared the death toll to be only 36 people, including 12 who were white. But for various reasons, including contemporaneous news reports, witness accounts and looser standards for tracking deaths, most historians who have studied the event estimate it to be between 75 and 300.

Karur stampede caused immense anguish; police could have warned us, says TN CM Vijay

Mumbai-Pune rail disruption till July 17 as Central Railway cancels 30 trains after landslides

'They may arrest or kill me': Sheikh Hasina vows to return to Bangladesh in December

China achieves first controlled recovery of reusable rocket booster after SpaceX

Simultaneous polls could be operational by 2029 general elections: JPC chief

SCROLL FOR NEXT