The Drillers play at ONEOK Field (pronounced "wun-oak"), in downtown Tulsa's Greenwood district.
Some state leaders expressed more interest in the commission's recommendations for a memorial to the victims and possibly some kind of economic empowerment zone for the Greenwood district than in reparations.
The 1921 Tulsa Race Riot in Tulsa, Oklahoma was even more deadly; white mobs invaded and burned the Greenwood district of Tulsa.
Whites retaliated by rioting, during which they burned 1,256 homes and as many as 200 businesses in the segregated Greenwood district, destroying what had been a thriving area.
At around 1 a.m., the white mob began setting fires, mainly to businesses on commercial Archer Street at the southern edge of the Greenwood district.
White mobs set fire to the black Greenwood district, destroying 1,256 homes and as many as 200 businesses.
Whites flooded into the Greenwood district and destroyed the businesses and homes of African American residents.
Troops were eventually deployed on the afternoon of June 1, but by that time there was not much left of the once thriving Greenwood district.
The building was located at the corner of Elgin Avenue and Easton Street, in the Greenwood district of Tulsa.
The next day, after armed whites invaded the Greenwood district, black clergymen again called Kerr for assistance.