John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park

August 14, 2024 
/ Contributed By: Otis Alexander

John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park

John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park

Courtesy of the Quintard Taylor Collection

The John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park, on two and a half acres at the intersection of the African American community of Greenwood (Black Wall Street) and downtown Tulsa, is one of the most unusual parks in the United States. Situated in Tulsa, which currently has a population of 70,000, including 9,000 African American residents, the Park recalls one of the worst urban racial atrocities in the 20th century, the 1921 Tulsa Massacre.

HOPE at the JHF Reconciliation Park (Courtesy of the Quintard Taylor Collection)

HOPE at the JHF Reconciliation Park (Courtesy of the Quintard Taylor Collection)

To preserve a proper and complete recounting of events and to promote racial reconciliation in Tulsa, a group of corporations and private citizens planned to recognize John Hope Franklin’s contribution to history. Together, they created the John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park at 321 North Detroit Avenue in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The locating of the Park on the edge of Deep Greenwood, the historically Black community destroyed during the Massacre, was a powerful and intentional reminder of the estimated 300 people killed and more than 10,000 residents made homeless in what was at the time one of the wealthiest and most educated African American communities in the nation. The term Black Wall Street was coined and given to this community by the renowned educator Booker T. Washington.

After the massacre, Black nurses and physicians pooled their resources and skills to set up a full-service hospital in North Tulsa with relief efforts provided by the American Red Cross. John Hope Franklin’s father, Buck Franklin, one of the attorneys in the region, immediately set up shop in the ruins of Deep Greenwood to provide legal services to the thousands of homeless residents.

Bronze Obelist, JHF Reconciliation Park, (Courtesy of the Quintard Taylor Collection)

Bronze Obelist, JHF Reconciliation Park, (Courtesy of the Quintard Taylor Collection)

The groundbreaking for this park was in 2008; a decade later, it was dedicated on May 31, 2018. The Reconciliation Park features Hope Plaza and the Tower of Reconciliation, the 26-foot-tall memorial tower surrounded by plaques that describe the history of the region going back to the days when Tulsa was on the boundary of the Creek and Cherokee nations to the present. Some of the memorial plaques include references to the enslaved Blacks who accompanied native people on the Trail of Tears in the 1830s, as well as descriptions of prominent Black citizens and institutions both before and after the Massacre.

This project, which grew out of the 2001 Oklahoma Commission to Study the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921, includes a bronze man armed for assault, a surrendering man with hands extended in the air, and a man holding a baby born June 1921. These designs were created by the renowned sculptor Edward Joseph Dwight Jr., the first African American astronaut.

One of the More Than One Dozen Stone Tablets at the JHF Reconciliation Park (Courtesy of the Quintard Taylor Collection)

One of the More Than One Dozen Stone Tablets at the JHF Reconciliation Park (Courtesy of the Quintard Taylor Collection)

Dr. John Hope Franklin, a Tulsa resident and a recipient of more than 130 honorary doctorates, was appointed to the Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy in 1979 by President Jimmy Carter, awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Bill Clinton in 1995, and served on Clinton’s Advisory Board for the President’s Initiative on Race from 1997 to 1998. Also, in 2007, Franklin was recognized with the Fulbright Association’s Fulbright Lifetime Achievement Award as a Fulbright Scholar in Australia, Brazil, the United Kingdom, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe, and served as Chair of the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board for three years.

In June 2020, the John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park became part of the African American Civil Rights Network (AACRN), a collection of properties, facilities, and programs that offers a comprehensive overview of the people, places, and events associated with the African American civil rights movement office entrusted through an official order and created by the African American Civil Rights Act of 2017.

About the Author

Author Profile

Otis D. Alexander, Library Director at Saint John Vianney College Seminary & Graduate School in Miami, Florida, has also directed academic and public libraries in the District of Columbia, Indiana, Texas, and Virginia. In addition, he has been a library manager in the Virgin Islands of the United States as well as in the Republic of Liberia. His research has appeared in Public Library Quarterly, Scribner’s Encyclopedia of American Lives, and Virginia Libraries journal. Alexander received the Bachelor of Arts and Master of Science degrees from the University of the District of Columbia and the Master of Library & Information Science degree from Ball State University. He earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree from International University and studied additionally at Harvard Graduate School of Education Leadership for Academic Librarians, Oberlin Conservatory of Music Voice Performance Pedagogy, and Atlanta University School of Library & Information Studies.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Alexander, O. (2024, August 14). John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park. BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/john-hope-franklin-reconciliation-park/

Source of the Author's Information:

“John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park: From Tragedy to Triumph,” https://www.jhfcenter.org/reconciliation-park;

Malik Simba, “John Hope Franklin (1915-2009),” https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/john-hope-franklin-1915/

Herb Ruffin, “We Can Best Honor Our Past by Not Burying It: The Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921,” https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/perspectives-african-american-history/we-can-best-honor-our-past-by-not-burying-it-the-tulsa-race-massacre-of-1921

Further Reading