Regrann from @autochthonsofamerica - Full video in biođŠđŠđŠđŠđŠ @chididdy69 @okcthunder @intellocgent @johnnieaborigine @karuizm_ @mamaayona @aintnothingnewunderthesun @subconsciouscelebrity In its prime Boley was home to many businesses and institutions. There were numerous cotton gins and banks, schools both public and private, several fraternal clubs, and churches of every denomination. Boley had a railroad depot, a post office, a telephone company, and a power plant. The municipality also successfully bid to host Oklahomaâs main black fraternal lodge, a black tuberculosis hospital and the State Training School for Negro Boys. All who visited Boley, including Booker T. Washington, marveled at the ambition and vigor of the townspeople. Upon Oklahoma statehood in 1907, the citizens of Boley, like all African Americans in Oklahoma, experienced major setbacks in their civil rights. Although the day to day effects of segregation were muted in Boley, most people in the town were disfranchised in 1910 when the grandfather clause became law. You are the indigenous American. Why was Tulsa in 1921 able to achieve the economics, the infrastructure and the sustainability that has yet to be replicated today in 2018? Hint: They were not Pan African... Approved by the Subconscious Community. #AutochthonsStandUp⢠#AfricanAmericanâ #PanAfricanismDebunked #PanglobalistParadigm #AboriginalTitle #AboriginalAmerican #Intercontinental #IndigenousStatus #OriginalUnitedKingdom #OriginalAustralian #BoundToTheLandByBlood #UntoldHeritage #StolenLegacy #ForbiddenHistory #TulapitWapakisinep #AutochthonsStandUp⢠#MuursStandUpâ˘#Ouchita #TaMeri #Autochthons #Indigenous #Original - #regrann