Pathway to Hope
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Pathway to Hope - Partial reconnection of the Greenwood neighborhood
This walkway attempts to reconnect the Greenwood district with a walking path between the Interstate and OneOK Baseball Stadium. It features artwork and plaques honoring Greenwood residents. In particular, it provides easy walking access from the John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park and the core Greenwood District.
Images
Pathway to Hope - Sign and Plaque
Pathway near entrance on Elgin - looking east
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
Built in the early 1970’s Interstate I-244 provided the possible fatal blow to the Greenwood District that had partially rebuilt in the 50 years after the 1921 Race Massacre. Rather than route around the Greenwood district, it simply bisected it - removing a large percentage of the land and also providing a star barrier between North and South Tulsa. As Scott Ellsworth wrote in The Ground Breaking: “Not only did the new interstate deal a death blow to a nubmer of family-owned businesses that were trying to stay afloat in an age of franchises and national chains, but the highway cut off north Tulsa’s Black and poor white neighborhoods from the city’s booming south side.”
Sources
Trotter, Matt. "Pathway To Hope" Seeks To Start Conversation About Damage Building I-244 Did To Greenwood, Public Radio Tulsa. May 28th, 2021. Accessed November 7th, 2022. https://www.publicradiotulsa.org/local-regional/2021-05-28/pathway-to-hope-seeks-to-start-conversation-about-damage-building-i-244-did-to-greenwood.
Ellsworth, Scott. The Ground Breaking: An American City and Its Search for Justice. New York. Dutton, 2021.