“We Are All Loyal
Klansmen,” 1923
Six college students
founded the Ku Klux Klan between December 1865 and the summer of 1866 in the
town of Pulaski, Tennessee located about 70 miles south of Nashville. Yep, they were all former U S Confederate
officers; initially they figured to organize as a “social club”, (something
like a fraternity) of a sort and spent their spare time in horseplay of various
types, which included wearing disguises and galloping about town in the dark.
They were actually quite surprised to learn that their nightly shenanigans were
instigating fear, particularly among former slaves in the region. They quickly
took advantage of this “side effect” and the concept began to rapidly catch-on
throughout the south. Several factions formed in different states and towns,
which led to a meeting in April of 1867 to codify rules and the organizational
structure of the young organization or club.
At this
meeting, a former Confederate General, Nathan Bedford Forrest, was elected “Grand Wizard”, or supreme leader, of
all the Klan groups. To provide structure, the association was divided into a
number of jurisdictions, regions, and groups; you could say on a basis similar
to modern day Boy Scout Troops or Cub Scout Dens; which were in turn led by
Grand Dragons, Titans, Giants and Cyclopes in the stead of Scout Masters or Den
Leaders. Beyond that basic structural style,
there are few similarities.
You see, the policies of Southern
Reconstruction - intending to expand the rights of Southern blacks -- had the
unintended result of pushing hundreds of resentful and restless Confederate veterans
into the new “Social Clubs”, which in short order began implementing a policy
of violence that opposed the new social order; in other words, un-provoked
hangings and cross burnings became common “shenanigan” activities. Former slaves were the obvious targets of
this style of terrorism, but the Klan also harassed, intimidated and even
killed folks they suspected were from the Northern, such as judges, teachers, politicians
and “carpetbaggers” of all kind.
By late
1867, the movement had spread throughout the small towns of the former
Confederate South, though it did not initially take hold in urban areas, maybe
because at that time the larger towns / cities were not suffering the economic
hardships of rural areas. Klansmen expanded
their fight against reform by waging guerrilla warfare against what they considered
a corrupt system depriving them of their basic rights; such as the right to own
people, particularly those with a black skin hue.
Few of us realize that by
1869, internal strife led Klansmen to fight against each other as competing
factions struggled for control. In those
early days of distributing destruction and violence by members of the Social
Club, the Klan’s reputation led the more prominent former Confederate members
to drop out entirely because local chapters had become difficult, if not impossible, to
control. As a result criminals and the dispossessed quickly filled the void. In fact, former Confederate General, Nathan B.
Forrest (the first Grand Wizard), officially disbanded the organization in disgust
and the vast majority of local groups followed his lead. Never the less,
several local units or clubs continued to operate but were eventually disbanded
or sent “underground” by US (Federal) troops.
This action
more or less led to further feelings of grievance, which actually had their beginnings
during the early days of the first Klan. So the stage was set for the Klan’s
feelings, ideology, and hatred filled activity to play throughout the 20th
century against not only Black folks but Catholics and Jews were incorporated
into the mix; in addition there was an expansion of “causes” that the Klan opposed
or at least articulated. Such causes were
blatantly advertised by various forms of the available media in the early 1900’s.
The ads were predominately in opposition to: various forms of drugs,
bootlegging, political corruption, night clubs, road houses, violations of the
Sabbath, unfair business dealings, sex or just scandalous behavior.
Today (2013) there is often
an overlooked danger in America. You could say such a “state” has existed beginning
with the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks of the Twin Towers in New York
City. Since then, the attention of the
American public has been fixated on foreign terrorist groups such as al Qaeda
and perhaps understandably so. Even
when domestic terrorism surfaces such as that in Boston of resent date, the
emphasis is generally first on flashy neo-Nazi organizations, weapons-fixated
militia groups, or anti-government ideology groups like The Posse Comitatus, for
which charters were first issued in 1969 in Portland, Oregon. Posse members by the way believe there are no
legal forms of government above the local county level and no higher law
authority than a county sheriff.
In any
event, the Ku Klux Klan is America’s oldest terrorist organization and has
never really gone away; more importantly, it has never stopped trying to create
terror. There still remains at least eight major groups and around 40 minor
ones, comprising roughly 110 chapters or as they like to call themselves these days,
“Klaverns”. The fact is Klan groups are
still the most common type of hate group in America. Every year, member and sometimes sympathizers
of Ku Klux Klan groups commit crimes ranging from simple acts of intimidation
to major hate crimes and even terrorism.
Today’s Klan members are
apt to adopt one of two public stances. Some, taking a cue from David Duke -- former
Republican Louisiana State Representative for the 81st district (1990–1992)
and founder of the Louisiana-based Knights of the Ku Klux Klan for which he is a
former Grand Wizard -- have attempted to “mainstream” their image. They often use politically correct synonyms in
place of racial slurs and proclaim pride in their “heritage” rather than hatred
for other groups such as Catholics and those of the Jewish faith. Some even
participate in state-run, good-citizenship activities such as “Adopt-a-Highway”
cleanup programs, which often attract free publicity. On the
second front, Klan members / organizations consider themselves strictly “old
school” and take pride in their heritage as a terrorist group. They routinely take a
confrontational approach to law enforcement and make no effort to hide or tone
down their beliefs.
Perhaps
because the Klan is universally familiar, Americans are more apt to ignore or
even to laugh at it; never the less it’s a serious mistake to underestimate the
hatred that’s characteristic of the Klan’s ideology and the violent criminal
acts that this ideology often motivates its devotees to commit.
Sources:
http://archive.adl.org/learn/ext_us/kkk/history.asp?xpicked=4&item=kkk
http://www.uhv.edu/asa/articles/KKKAmericasForgottenTerrorists.pdf
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Duke
http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Ku_Klux_Klan
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posse_Comitatus_%28organization%29
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