Tulsa Benevolent Association Explained

The Tulsa Benevolent Association was the holding company of the Oklahoma chapter of the Ku Klux Klan during the 1920s.

History

On January 5, 1922, the Tulsa Benevolent Association was incorporated as the holding company for the Oklahoma chapter of the Ku Klux Klan. The five trustees of the corporation were Washington E. Hudson, John Rogers, C. W. Benedict, "William Shelly" Rogers, and Alf Heggem, and they officed out of the Mayo Building.

In 1923, the organization built Beno Hall, a 3,000 seat and 3-story meeting hall.[1] Beno Hall was intentionally built near the Greenwood District, Tulsa, a large African American neighborhood in north Tulsa. W. Tate Brady supplied part of the land for Beno Hall.[2] It was colloquially called "Be No Hall," a reference to how there would "Be No Nigger, Jew, Catholic, or Immigrant" at the hall.

The association ceased to exist in 1925 after infighting caused the departure of Washington E. Hudson. Beno Hall was insolvent by 1929, and was sold to the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office. In 1976 Beno Hall was demolished.[3]

Notes and References

  1. News: Gerkin . Steve . The White Knight Vigilantes: Exposing the founders of Tulsa’s KKK . 22 April 2024 . The Frontier . May 8, 2016.
  2. Web site: Ewton . Travis . Methodism and the Tulsa Race Massacre . www.okumc.org . Oklahoma Conference of the United Methodist Church . 22 April 2024 . en.
  3. News: Gerkin . Steve . Beno Hall: Tulsa's Den of Terror . 22 April 2024 . This Land Press . September 3, 2011.