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    They Called Themselves the K.K.K.

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      To my gaffe-protection force, I extend a very special thank-you. These include my husband Joe; Dr. Lawrence Kennedy, professor of U.S. history with an emphasis in Reconstruction history, urban studies, and race and ethnic studies at the University of Scranton (Pennsylvania); middle school librarian extraordinaire Janice Borland, sixth grade teacher Becky Brown, and retired eighth-grade English teacher Esther Smith at the Garland Independent School District (Garland, Texas). All mistakes are my own.

      I thank the following individuals and institutions for their help in obtaining images, documents, and other important resources: Joshua Brown (American Social History Project, City University of New York); the South Carolina Historical Society; the New York Historical Society; the Beck Center Civil War Site at Emory College; Tim Turner, Tourism Coordinator, Giles County Tourism Foundation (Tennessee); George Newman, Giles County Historical Society (Tennessee); Robert Pickett (Vicksburg, Mississippi); Mark Putuck, Southern Poverty Law Center (Montgomery, Alabama); the amazing reference librarians in the Prints and Photographs Division at the Library of Congress; the reference librarians at the National Archives; and Roxanne Loney at the Scranton Public Library.

      Susan Campbell Bartoletti

      June 2009

      Index

      A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I |J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X |Y | Z

      Page numbers in bold type refer to illustrations and their captions.

      A

      African Americans. See freedmen; slaves Amnesty Act, 142

      Avary, Myrta Lockhart, 93, 130

      Avery, Edward, 137

      B

      Belefont, Charles, 66–67

      Black Codes, 20, 20–21, 22

      black militia company attacks on, 122–27

      charter of, 116, 121

      drills and patrols, 122

      governor’s order to disarm, 124

      guns, 121–24

      blacks. See freedmen; slaves

      Blair, Francis P., 66

      Bond, Hugh, 139

      Bost, W. L., 82

      Bratton, James Rufus, 126, 137

      Brown, Henry Edwards, 100

      Brown, Mary Davis, 124

      Brown, William Garrott, 94

      Burnett, W. P., 49

      Butler, Benjamin, 130

      C

      Carroll, Milus, 117, 125–27, 130, 139

      churches

      attacks on, 110, 113–14, 114, 115, 116

      as center of community, 108

      establishment of schools, 90, 91

      failure of whites to defend, 118–19

      political meetings in, 108, 109–12, 113–14, 117–18

      preachers, 107, 113

      style of worship, 112, 112–13

      temporary locations, 108–9, 110

      worship under slavery, 107–8, 108, 111

      Civil Rights Acts

      of 1866 (citizenship and equal protection), 22, 22, 59–60, 141

      of 1871 (Ku Klux Klan Act), 129, 129–30

      of 1964 (ban on discrimination), 149

      civil rights movement, 149

      civil rights timeline, 151–56

      Civil War

      black Union soldiers, 39, 121, 144

      casualties and cost, 14, 15, 17, 30

      Chickamauga battle, 30, 30

      destruction of South, 2, 2–3, 8, 8, 15, 15, 95

      Fort Pillow massacre, 39

      friends and relatives on opposing sides, 13–14

      Memorial Day observances of, 144, 144–46

      Missionary Ridge battle, 15

      Sherman’s march to the sea, 8

      surrender of Confederacy, 6, 6

      Clansman, The (Dixon), 147, 147

      Clayton, Victoria, 8

      Coleman, Daniel, 28, 49–50

      Coleman, John Tayloe, 84, 85

      Confederacy. See also South

      casualties in war, 14, 14, 15, 30

      paper money, 9

      surrender to Union, 6, 6

      war debts, 9

      Confederates. See also Southern whites

      amnesty for, 142

      presidential pardon and oath of loyalty, 18, 19, 38, 38

      voting rights, 18, 24, 38–39, 142

      Congress. See United States Congress Cooper, Robert E., 119

      Craig, Patrick, 98

      Crowe, James R., 13, 13, 26

      D

      Davis, Jacob, 53

      Democrats

      fear of black political power, 71

      Jim Crow laws, 144

      Nashville state convention, 43–44

      white supremacy platform, 65, 66

      Dixon, Thomas, 147, 147

      Douglass, Frederick, 143–44, 150

      Dox, Peter, 137

      Du Bois, W. E. B., iv, 57, 58

      E

      education

      attacks on schools and teachers, 97–105, 101, 136

      black illiteracy at end of war, 93

      black teachers, 91

      church-established schools, 90, 91

      establishment of schools by

      Freedmen’s Bureau, 90, 91, 105

      Freedmen’s Second Reader, 94

      Northern teachers, 89–91, 93

      objections to education of blacks, 93–96

      preachers as teachers, 109

      school attendance, 106

      school desegregation, 143

      spread of learning to elders, 105, 106

      Emancipation Proclamation, 3, 4

      Evans, Ann Ulrich, 32

      Evers, Medgar, 148

      Ezell, Lorenza, 42, 69

      F

      Federal Hate Crimes Law, 149

      Fifteenth Amendment, 74, 75

      Ford, Sarah, 12

      Forrest, Nathan Bedford

      on disenfranchisement of Southern whites, 38–39, 39

      immunity from prosecution, 137–38

      on Klan membership, 49, 57

      leadership of Klan, 47

      order to disband Klan, 74–75, 138

      presidential pardon of, 39

      promotion of Klan throughout South, 51

      statue of, 163

      threat against Republicans, 58, 67

      on vigilantism in South, 47–49

      Fourteenth Amendment, 37, 59, 62, 129, 142–43

      freedmen. See also churches; education; voting by blacks

      achievements, 78, 119

      arming of, 98–99, 121–24

      Black Code restrictions on, 20, 20–21, 22

      challenge to white authority, 22–23

      departure from plantations, 18–19

      hopes for future, 87

      move to Liberia, 134, 135

      retaliation against whites, 116–18, 123

      sharecropping, 78, 78–82, 85–88

      violence against, 23, 23, 30–33, 31, 33, 52, 86, 86–87

      work as families, 77, 78–79

      work for former masters, 77–78

      Freedmen’s Bureau

      beneficiaries of, 36

      creation and expansion of, 34–35

      establishment of schools, 90, 91, 105

      improvement of working conditions for blacks, 77

      limited resources, 80

      presidential opposition to, 34, 35

      protection of blacks, 81

      Freeman, Mittie (formerly Mittie Williams), 1–2, 7, 150

      G

      Garner, George, 82

      Gelray, Joseph W., 84

      Gholson, Samuel, 8

      Gleed, Robert, 66

      Grant, James, 55–56, 113

      Grant, Ulysses S.

      action against Klan, 131, 136

      pardon of Klansmen, 142

      presidential election, 62, 63, 69, 70

      signing of Ku Klux Klan Act, 128–29, 129

      surrender of Confederacy to, 6, 6

      Green Isaiah, 65

      H

      Harrill, John, 55

      Harris, Frederick, 139

      Hayes, Rutherford B., 143

      Henry, Jefferson Franklin, 88

      Hill, Elias, 63, 107, 118, 134


      Hines, Gabe, 76

      Horton, Samuel, 55

      Huggins, Allen P., 84

      J

      Jackson, Martin, 11, 140

      James, Fred, 80

      Jim Crow laws, 144

      Johnson, Andrew

      disputes with Republicans over Reconstruction, 21, 21, 35, 59–60

      impeachment proceedings against, 60, 60–61

      opposition to Fourteenth Amendment, 59

      pardon of Confederates, 18, 38, 38

      presidency, 11, 17

      reconstruction of South, 17–18

      stance on war and Reconstruction, 17

      veto of Civil Rights Act, 22, 59–60

      veto of Freedmen’s Bureau expansion, 34, 35

      veto of Reconstruction Acts, 59–60

      Johnson, Henry, 71

      Jolly, William, 56

      Jones, Calvin, 13, 13, 25, 26

      Judkins, Oscar, 97

      Justice, James, 54

      K

      Kennedy, John (Klan founder), 13, 13, 25

      Ku Klux Klan

      arrests and prosecutions of Klansmen, 136–39, 141–42

      birthplace of, 16, 16, 162

      corrupt officials in, 83–84, 115, 128

      costume, 26, 27, 28, 54, 56, 103

      cross-burning, 147, 168

      decline in power, 150

      favorable publicity for, 50

      ghost scare tactics, 30–32, 42

      glorified history of, 146–47, 147

      inception and naming of, 25

      induction of new members, 29, 53, 73–74

      as Invisible Empire, 46

      leader of, 47

      leadership positions and titles, 2526, 46–47

      membership, 49, 51, 56–58, 138

      obedience of members, 55–56

      as paramilitary organization, 43, 43–44

      party crashing, 27–28

      Prescript (outline of principles), 44, 44–45, 45, 47, 72–73

      racism in inception of, 34, 45–46

      raids, 54–55

      rebirth of, 147–50, 148, 168

      rites and rituals, 25–26, 26, 45, 45, 53

      secrecy and mysteriousness, 28, 55

      testimony against, 131–36, 136

      warning notices to victims, 50–51, 84, 85, 110

      women’s support of, 51–52

      Ku Klux Klan Act (Civil Rights Act of 1871), 129, 129–30, 132

      L

      Lee, Robert E., 6, 6

      Lester, John C., 13

      on bad Klansmen, 47

      denial of political agenda, 34

      on Forrest’s order to disband Klan, 74

      job and title in Klan, 26

      justification for formation of Klan, 26

      on Klan’s den, 27

      on Klan’s initiation rites, 29

      on Klan’s mysteriousness, 28

      on Ku Klux Klan name, 25

      return from war, 13, 16

      suggestion to form Klan, 25

      Liberia, 134, 135

      Lincoln, Abraham, 3, 4, 11, 11

      Lipscomb, Daniel, 134

      Lipscomb, Henry, 69, 133

      Little, Green, 98

      Liuzzo, Viola, 149

      Long, Burton, 65

      Luke, William, 97–100, 100

      lynchings

      of black militia leader, 126–27, 127

      during twentieth century, 144, 148

      of whites, 99–100, 100, 127

      M

      McBride, Cornelius, 91, 103–5, 134–36

      McCord, Frank, 13, 25, 41

      McCord, Luther, 28

      McCrea, George, 87–88

      Meacham, Robert, 71, 80

      Merrill, Lewis M., 128

      Merritt, Susan, 120

      militia company, black. See black militia company

      N

      Northerners. See also Republicans

      carpetbaggers, 18

      disbelief in stories of Klan violence, 89, 89

      establishment of schools in South, 89–91, 93

      opposition to education of blacks, 93, 96–97

      O

      Obama, Barack, 156

      Owens, William, 56–57

      P

      Pearce, Charles H., 63, 109–10

      Pelham, Charles, 100

      Phillips, Wendell, 91

      Pickens, William, 106

      public schools. See education

      R

      racism. See white supremacy

      Rainey, Julia, 125

      Randolph, Ryland, 50, 51, 53, 101

      Reconstruction

      corruption by Republican officials, 137

      disputes between president and

      Congress over, 21, 21, 35, 59–60

      end of, 143

      ideals of, 7

      Lincoln’s call for, 11

      military districts, 36–37, 37

      Reconstruction Acts, 35–37, 37, 59–60

      Southern whites’ concerns about, 16–17

      start of, 17–18, 21

      Reed, Richard, 13, 25, 26

      religion. See churches

      Republicans. See also United States Congress

      blame of South for war, 17

      corruption among, 137

      disputes with president over Reconstruction, 21, 21, 35, 59–60

      establishment of Freedmen’s Bureau, 34–35

      freedmen affiliation with, 63, 65–66, 67, 115

      Klan terrorism against, 66, 67, 127

      Roundtree, Doc, 85

      S

      Savery, William, 100

      Sayre, P. T., 80

      Schofield, John, 80

      schools. See education

      Schurz, Carl, 95

      Scott, Robert K., 116, 121, 124

      Self, William, 139

      Seymour, Horatio, 62, 66, 70

      sharecropping, 78, 78–82, 85–88

      Shaw, Sarah Frances, 92

      slaves

      abolition of slavery (Thirteenth Amendment), 3, 21–22

      control and intimidation of, 31

      liberation of, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12

      life under Confederacy, 87

      ownership and value of, 7–8

      plantation work, 1–2

      religious services, 107–8, 108, 111

      South. See also Confederacy; Reconstruction

      agricultural economy, 3, 9

      Black Codes, 20, 20–21, 22

      elected black officials, 71

      idealized history of, 146, 146–47

      Jim Crow laws, 144

      lack of legal justice for blacks, 83–84, 84

      military rule, 36–37, 37, 39–40, 101–2, 145

      poverty, 9–10, 94, 95

      racial etiquette, 10–11, 22

      racial tension, 23–24

      readmission to Union, 37, 61–62

      wartime destruction of, 3, 8, 8, 15, 15, 95

      Southern Poverty Law Center, 150, 168

      Southern whites

      cheating of sharecroppers, 79, 79–80

      despair and sense of loss, 13–14, 14

      economic classes, 1, 48

      fear of freedmen, 24, 49, 111–13

      financial losses, 8, 8–9

      poverty, 9–10, 93, 94, 95

      scalawags, 66

      school attendance, 106

      voting rights, 18, 24, 38–39

      white supremacy beliefs, 7, 10, 10, 22, 45, 83, 93

      Stanton, Edwin, 60

      Stevens, Thaddeus, 61

      Sullivan, Moses, 114

      Summer, Charles, 35

      T

      Tait, Christenberry, 56

     


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