Tulsa’s origins trace back to the Lochapoka Band of the Creek Nation, who settled in the area in the early 19th century after forced relocation during the Trail of Tears. The name "Tulsa" derives from the Creek word "Tallasi," meaning "old town." By the late 1800s, the discovery of massive oil reserves transformed Tulsa into the "Oil Capital of the World." The Glenn Pool oil field, discovered in 1905, attracted wildcatters, entrepreneurs, and fortune-seekers, fueling rapid growth and wealth.
One of Tulsa’s most significant—and tragic—chapters unfolded in the Greenwood District, home to a thriving African American community known as Black Wall Street. By 1921, Greenwood boasted over 600 businesses, including banks, theaters, and luxury shops, a testament to Black resilience and entrepreneurship in the Jim Crow South.
On May 31, 1921, a white mob, fueled by racial tensions and false allegations against a Black teenager, attacked Greenwood. Over 18 hours, they burned 35 city blocks, murdered an estimated 300 Black residents, and left 10,000 homeless. The massacre was deliberately erased from history books for decades, but recent efforts have sought justice and reparations.
In 2020, the massacre gained renewed attention amid global Black Lives Matter protests. Survivors like Viola Fletcher, 109 years old in 2023, testified before Congress, demanding accountability. Oklahoma now requires schools to teach the event, and a $30 million Greenwood Rising history center opened in 2021. Yet, calls for direct reparations remain unfulfilled, mirroring national debates over racial justice.
After World War II, Tulsa’s economy diversified beyond oil. Aerospace (thanks to American Airlines’ maintenance hub), technology, and healthcare now drive growth. The city’s low cost of living and business-friendly policies attract startups, though wealth disparities persist, particularly in North Tulsa, where systemic underinvestment lingers.
Tulsa sits on Muscogee (Creek) land, and Native culture remains vibrant. The Gilcrease Museum houses one of the world’s largest collections of Native American art. Recent Supreme Court rulings, like McGirt v. Oklahoma (2020), affirmed tribal sovereignty over much of eastern Oklahoma, reshaping criminal jurisdiction and sparking political clashes.
Oklahoma faces intensifying climate crises, from tornadoes to droughts. Tulsa’s flood control system, built after catastrophic 1984 floods, is a model for climate adaptation. Yet, the state’s reliance on fossil fuels complicates its green transition. Wind energy now supplies over 40% of Oklahoma’s electricity, but oil lobbyists resist stronger regulations.
COVID-19 hit Tulsa hard, exposing healthcare gaps. A controversial 2020 Trump rally at the BOK Center became a superspreader event, highlighting political divides over public health. Meanwhile, remote work accelerated migration from coastal cities, boosting Tulsa’s population.
Tulsa’s arts scene thrives, from the Woody Guthrie Center to the Bob Dylan Archive. The Gathering Place, a $465 million riverfront park, symbolizes urban renewal. Yet, tensions flare over Confederate monuments and how to memorialize history without glorifying oppression.
As Tulsa approaches its 2028 bicentennial, it grapples with its past while forging a more inclusive future. The city’s resilience—from oil busts to racial violence—offers lessons for a divided America. Whether it can bridge racial and economic gaps will define its next century.