HIS 100 Module Three Activity Revising Questions Template (4)
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Ultimate Medical Academy, Tampa *
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101
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History
Date
Apr 3, 2024
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docx
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Uploaded by ChiefWolfPerson690
HIS 100 Module Three Activity Template: Revising Questions Replace the bracketed text below with your responses.
Identify the topic you chose to explore:
The Tulsa Massacre
Identify a historical perspective that could be applied to your historical event.
[Insert text.] America has witnessed many massacres in its history. However, one of the massa America has witnessed many massacres in its history. However, one of the massacres that
have been isolated from others because of their magnitude is the Tulsa race massacre. The Tulscres that
have been isolated from others because of their magnitude is the Tulsa race massacre. The Tulsa
To get to where they are on Black Wall Street, African Americans used their own resources and built from the ground up, resulting in the birth of businesses such as real estate agents, doctors, grocery stores, schools, churches, and even their own newspaper. Many upper- and middle-class residents of Black Wall Street formed their own community.
Revise your research question based on evidence from your primary and secondary sources.
What impact the Tulsa Massacre had on Black Wall Street?
How did Black Wall Street recover from the devastation caused by the Tulsa Massacre?
Explain how historical perspective and evidence from sources influenced your finalized research question.
According to the historical perspective and evidence from sources that influence my final
research question, based on what I read, that the rest of the state forces arrived in Tulsa only when it was too late. When the Oklahoma City chapter of the National Guard arrived in Tulsa, "more than 5000 men had surrounded the Negro section." Jones and Parrish (1998) There was almost nothing left to save. The Tulsa Race Riots and War came to an end, destroying over 1256 homes and killing 314 people. Residents' homes were looted and robbed by rioters (O'Dell 2001: 144). In 1920s prices, the actual damage to the 199 recorded cases was calculated at 1.5 million dollars (Jones and Parrish, 1998) and 1.8 million dollars (Ellsworth, 1992: 72).
1
Reference
Karatzas, K. D. (2018). Interpreting violence: The 1921 Tulsa Race Riot and its legacy.
European Journal of American Culture
,
37
(2), 127–140.
2
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