TULSA, Okla. — Tulsa's city leaders are divided over whether to rename a popular downtown street named for a businessman who was in the Ku Klux Klan, but some residents worry a drawn-out fight could send the message that the city still embraces intolerance.
After a three-hours-plus public hearing Thursday night on changing the name of Brady Street, the City Council arrived at an informal 4-4 tie on the issue. The ninth council member, Phil Lakin, was absent Thursday and could break the tie when at next week's official vote. Lakin did not respond to a message seeking comment Friday, and it's unclear which way he will vote.
Regardless, the debate revealed divisions on the council.
Supporters warned that if city leaders decide to keep the name, it would only prove what some blacks believe now about the city of 400,000: There is still a white Tulsa and a black Tulsa.
"If it doesn't pass, we will continue to have a need for a much better education process about the role of the KKK in Tulsa historically and the impact it has had on our black friends and neighbors in this community," said Councilor G.T. Bynum, who supports the name change. "Black people in Tulsa have had a very difficult time in Tulsa over the last 100 years."
Wyatt Tate Brady, the street's namesake, was a shoe salesman who became a prominent Tulsa businessman. He signed the city's incorporation papers, started a newspaper and pumped his wealth into promoting Tulsa to the rest of the country.
But Brady, the son of a Confederate veteran, was also a member of the Klan. New questions arose after a magazine article looked at whether he was involved in the most notorious event in Tulsa history: a 1921 race riot that left some 300 black residents dead.
Today, Brady Street cuts through the heart of the Brady Arts District, a glitzy downtown area that represents arguably the most successful redevelopment project the city has ever pursued. Boarded-up warehouses, overgrown lots and blight have been replaced with trendy bistros, a cigar bar and a museum and park honoring Dust Bowl music legend Woody Guthrie.