Killers of the Flower Moon: How the shocking Osage murders were nearly erased from US history (2024)

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Killers of the Flower Moon: How the shocking Osage murders were nearly erased from US history (1)

By Caryn James19th October 2023

As Martin Scorsese's latest epic Killers of the Flower Moon, which stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro and Lily Gladstone, is released this week, Caryn James explores the terrible true history that inspired the film.

"They won't remember", Robert De Niro's character says in Martin Scorsese's Killers of the Flower Moon. As the real-life William Hale, a cattle baron in 1920s Oklahoma, he is deluded in thinking that the Osage Nation would move past the memory that dozens of their members who had become rich from oil rights were systematically killed for their money. But the line leaps out of the film as a reminder that much of the world did forget, until the events were restored to the mainstream in David Grann's dynamic, deeply researched 2017 bestseller, Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI, which inspired the film. While he was writing the book and long after, Grann tells BBC Culture, "The most common comment I have received is: 'I can't believe I never learned about this'", adding, "I think that is a reflection to some degree of the underlying force that led to these crimes, which was prejudice."

Spoiler alert: This article contains plot spoilers for Killers of the Flower Moon.

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Those murders and their near-erasure from history go to the heart of US culture. "American democracy arose from the dispossession of American Indians", the Yale University historian Ned Blackhawk writes in his recent book The Rediscovery of America: Native Peoples and the Unmaking of US History. "Scholars have recently come to view African American slavery as central to the making of America, but few have seen Native Americans in a similar light," he writes. His work is part of a trend aiming to restore those injustices to their crucial place.

Killers of the Flower Moon: How the shocking Osage murders were nearly erased from US history (2)

Dozens of Osage people were systematically murdered for their money in the 1920s (Credit: Getty Images)

At the centre of Killers of the Flower Moon, both the book and film, is Mollie Burkhart (Lily Gladstone) a modest, oil-rich Osage whose family was especially targeted, one sister shot to death, another's house firebombed, their mother most likely poisoned. Later Mollie herself becomes mysteriously, gravely ill. Her true story offers a dramatic example of the cultural atmosphere that allowed what came to be called the "Reign of Terror" to happen, and then to be swept aside.

The pattern of dispossession that began with Columbus continued for hundreds of years. In the 19th Century, the US government forced the Osage off their land in Kansas, so they moved to Oklahoma, where in the 20th Century oil made them fabulously rich, for a time the world's richest people per capita. Even then, the US government labelled many Indigenous people "incompetent", a designation that often depended simply on how much Native blood they had. Guardians, often corrupt, were put in place to oversee and restrict how those designated spent their own money. Early in Scorsese's film we see Mollie meeting with a guardian, even though she is extremely intelligent and capable.

The more I dug into it, the more I realised this was really about a culture of killing and a culture of complicity – David Grann

Like the book, the film is extraordinary in the way it captures both Mollie's intense personal story and the cultural prejudice that fostered the crimes. (Unlike the book, which unfolds like a detective story, the film reveals the killers' identities early, and there are spoilers ahead for both accounts.) In the early 1920s, William Hale was a powerful force in Osage County, a venal man who regarded Native Americans as less than human while pretending to be the tribe's friend and benefactor. Hale encourages his equally greedy nephew, the World War One veteran Ernest Burkhart (Leonardo DiCaprio) to marry Mollie. We are deliberately left guessing whether Ernest genuinely loves her, wants to marry for money, or some combination of the two, a question that slowly comes to haunt Mollie as well.

Killers of the Flower Moon: How the shocking Osage murders were nearly erased from US history (3)

Leonardo DiCaprio plays Ernest Burkhart, a greedy World War One veteran who marries the well-off Osage, Mollie (Lily Gladstone) (Credit: Apple TV+)

Scorsese's film, using mock archival newsreels, depicts the baffled resentment with which white society regarded the wealthy Osage being driven by chauffeurs, and Native women dressed in fashionable furs and jewels. Mollie herself wore a traditional blanket as a coat and lived a simple life even though she had a large house and servants. But Grann's book cites a 1920 Harper's Monthly Magazine article called "Lo, the Rich Indian!" which refers to the oddity of "red millionaires". Another typical article in a 1922 travel magazine was called "Our Plutocratic Osage Indians".

Increased public awareness

Despite the condescension, many white people married into the Osage tribe, with sinister motives. When the US government allotted parcels of Oklahoma land to the Osage, the tribe members kept the rights to profit from the oil, called headrights, which importantly could only be inherited, not sold. Marrying an Osage for the inheritance was a way white people could get their hands on the oil money. As Grann tells BBC Culture, "There was a particular diabolical nature to these [murder] plots because they involve people marrying into families pretending to love you while simultaneously plotting to kill you." While planning murders in the film, Hale bluntly voices the opinion that the Osage are not worthy of their money and eventually not worthy of their lives.

Hale was not alone. "The more I dug into it, the more I realised this was really about a culture of killing and a culture of complicity," Grann says. "I found evidence of doctors who were administering poison. I found evidence of morticians who were covering up bullet wounds. Some of the guardians and the lawmen and the prosecutors were on the take and either not investigating these crimes or sometimes maybe even had a hand in them, and many others were complicit in their silence."

Killers of the Flower Moon: How the shocking Osage murders were nearly erased from US history (4)

William Hale (Robert De Niro) was a cattle baron in 1920s Oklahoma who befriended the Osage, while covertly plotting to kill them (Credit: Apple TV+)

The film reflects that real-life culture of white supremacy. There is a glimpse of the nearby Tulsa Race Massacre in 1921, contemporaneous with the Osage murders, in which a prosperous black neighbourhood called Black Wall Street was burned to the ground by a white mob. The film depicts a parade on the main street of the Burkharts' town, with robed and hooded Ku Klux Klan members marching in the parade just behind a group of women carrying a banner reading "Indian Mothers of Veterans", a clear indication of how blatant and entrenched in society white supremacy was.

As the Osage murders accumulated, the crimes became so alarming and so frequent that the FBI investigated. Soon the story was receiving national attention. When Hale was convicted of a single murder, it was reported in The New York Times, but the headline was telling in the way it focused on the white criminals and not their Native victim: 'King of Osage Hills' Guilty of Murder: Hale, Cattleman, and a Cowboy Are Convicted of Killing an Indian.

What happened to the Osage People during this terrible time in our history is American history, and this story needs to be told – Tara Damron

Why did such a volatile story, skewed though it was, then virtually disappear? Tara Damron, program director at the White Hair Memorial, a repository of Osage history, and a member of the Osage Nation herself, tells BBC Culture that the erasure "goes to the overall treatment of Native Americans, and indigenous history not being taught, not being included and those voices being silenced". Indigenous tribes, she says, "have a government to government relationship with the United States that goes back to treaties. What happened to the Osage People during this terrible time in our history is American history, and this story needs to be told."

Killers of the Flower Moon: How the shocking Osage murders were nearly erased from US history (5)

At the centre of Killers of the Flower Moon is Mollie Burkhart (played by Lily Gladstone in the film) (Credit: Getty Images)

Killers of the Flower Moon in both forms can now be seen as part of a larger cultural reclamation. In 2011, for $380 million, the US government settled a 12-year-long lawsuit the Osage Nation brought against it for mismanaging the tribe's funds. In announcing it, a statement from the Department of the Interior said the settlement signalled "President Obama's commitment to reconciliation and empowerment for American Indian nations". Today's Secretary of the Interior, Deb Haaland, is the first ever Native American cabinet secretary, another sign of change.

[The FBI] did not actually uncover this much deeper and darker conspiracy that existed – David Grann

But some injustices can never be redressed. Grann's research uncovered many Osage murders that were not investigated and can likely never be solved. "Many killers went free," Grann says, because the FBI "did not actually uncover this much deeper and darker conspiracy that existed." The witnesses are now dead and the crimes were often not recorded. "Often you just can't find the evidentiary material to even identify who the perpetrator was and resolve these cases", Grann says. As the film and book remind us, though, they can be brought to light and remembered. Since the book was published, Damron has found increased public awareness of the murders. She says, "I hope that cultural attitudes have changed but the impact is yet to be seen".

Killers of the Flower Moon is released on 20 October.

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Killers of the Flower Moon: How the shocking Osage murders were nearly erased from US history (2024)

FAQs

Killers of the Flower Moon: How the shocking Osage murders were nearly erased from US history? ›

Grann's research uncovered many Osage murders that were not investigated and can likely never be solved. "Many killers went free," Grann says, because the FBI "did not actually uncover this much deeper and darker conspiracy that existed." The witnesses are now dead and the crimes were often not recorded.

How historically accurate is Killers of the Flower Moon? ›

The story that Killers of the Flower Moon projects onto the big screen is one that's hard for many of us to confront, and the horrific nature of the events might even cause some viewers to chalk it up to creative Hollywood writers. But the great majority of the events of the film are, unfortunately, accurate.

Why were the Osages being murdered as you read in Killers of the Flower Moon? ›

It was really about a culture of killing and a culture of complicity… [with] many of these murders carried out by individuals who were profiting from this very corrupt system of targeting the Osage, often marrying into their families and then plotting to kill them to steal their oil money and inheritance.”

What happened after the Osage murders? ›

Most of the murders were never prosecuted. Nevertheless, several perpetrators were convicted of murder, including William Hale, a powerful rancher who ordered the murders of his nephew's wife and other members of her family to gain control of their headrights and oil wealth.

Who was the mastermind behind the Osage murders? ›

William King Hale (December 24, 1874 – August 15, 1962) was an American political and crime boss in Osage County, Oklahoma, who was responsible for the Osage Indian murders, for which he was later convicted. He made a fortune through cattle ranching, contract killings, and insurance fraud.

Do the Osages still have oil money? ›

Whenever there's oil production, the revenue goes into that big pot, called the Osage Mineral Estate, and is divided quarterly out to Osage headright holders. It is still called the Osage Mineral Estate today, and it is still held in trust by the US government on behalf of the Osage Nation.

Does the Osage tribe still exist? ›

Our history is full of hardship and sorrow but also determination and resilience. Over 2,000 Osage individuals made it to the Osage Nation Reservation in 1872; today, our Nation's population is over 25,000 strong, with 4,467 individuals living in Osage County on the Osage Nation Reservation.

Did Mollie Burkhart survive? ›

"At 44, Mollie could finally spend her money as she pleased, and was recognized as a full-fledged American citizen," Grann wrote in his book. Margie Burkhart, Mollie's granddaughter, told Grann that living on the Osage Reservation with Cobb was a period of happiness for her, and in 1937, Mollie died at the age of 50.

Why did so many Osages get diabetes? ›

Type 2 diabetes among American Indians is the result of decreasing traditional foods of wild game, garden produce, and seasonal fruits, vegetables, tubers, and herbs, in favor of overindulging in sugary, starchy, and fatty foods and adopting a sedentary way of life.

Are the Osage tribe still rich? ›

Current Financial Situation: While the Osage Tribe is no longer among the richest people, the effects of the oil industry are still felt today. Many Osages continue to receive quarterly royalty payments, known as headrights, from oil production in Osage County [1].

Who was responsible for Osage murders? ›

Hale was even the self-proclaimed “King of the Osage Hills.” He was a wealthy rancher with several banking and business interests throughout Osage County. Hale, along with his accomplices, Ernest Burkhart, John Ramsey, and several others, were allegedly tied to more than 20 killings.

Were the Osage murders a reign of terror? ›

The “Reign of Terror” that overtook the Osage Reservation in 1921 is just one chapter in the long story of mistreatment of Native Americans by whites—but is one of the most horrifying. Before the chapter ends, untold dozens of Osage tribal members (and those who dared support them) are murdered.

What is the main point of Killers of the Flower Moon? ›

In the 1920s, members of the Osage tribe were killed as part of a plot to deprive them of their oil wealth. Author David Grann studies the murders, the resulting FBI investigation, and the structural discrimination against Native American people which inspired and enabled the killings.

How true is Killers of the Flower Moon? ›

When audiences saw Martin Scorsese's Killers of the Flowers Moon, they may have experienced a brutal piece of American history for the first time. The three-and-a-half-hour drama starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro is based on a real series of murders in Oklahoma's Osage Nation during the 1920s.

Are there any Osage people left? ›

In the 21st century, the federally recognized Osage Nation has approximately 20,000 enrolled members, 6,780 of whom reside in the tribe's jurisdictional area. Members also live outside the nation's tribal land in Oklahoma and in other states around the country.

Was Hale convicted in the Osage murders? ›

He would go on to be convicted as the ruthless mastermind behind the Osage Murders, a shocking spate of killings that became the FBI's first major case. A 1926 newspaper account described Hale as about 5'7” and 155 pounds, with “a splendid physique” and “unusually large” chest.

Is the Osage tribe still wealthy? ›

Between 1901 and 1950, the tribe received nearly $300 million, which would be worth about $4 billion today [2]. Current Financial Situation: While the Osage Tribe is no longer among the richest people, the effects of the oil industry are still felt today.

How many people were killed in the Osage murders? ›

Estimates vary, but approximately twenty-four Osage Indians died violent or suspicious deaths during the early 1920s.

How woke is Killers of the Flower Moon? ›

WOKE ELEMENTS

Killers of the Flower Moon certainly covers a dark page in our history. However, it is a story of greed and only incidentally revolves around American Indians. Evil men of avarice don't care what color a person's skin is. They only care about how they can exploit in order to achieve.

Did Mollie Burkhart really have diabetes? ›

Then Mollie, a diabetic, began to become ill herself. As depicted in the film, she was slowly being poisoned through her insulin shots, Grann reported. Once she was taken to a local hospital and taken out of the care of her doctors, she recovered.

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