Ku Klux Klan: Its Origin, Growth and DisbandmentNeale Publishing Company, 1905 - 198 páginas The KKK's early history from its formation to its first disbandment is revealed with astonishing detail - writing in 1905, the author includes eyewitness accounts from those alive at the time. Following the American Civil War, the emancipation of black Americans occurred - the peoples formerly owned by plantation owners and farmers were accorded freedom, citizenship and rights as citizens of the United States. However, a segment of the population were unhappy with the emancipation of the enslaved - a desire for white domination led many, particularly in the Deep South, to perpetrate violence, mischief and murder. In the southern states, six former officers of the Confederate States of America formed the Ku Klux Klan. Intentionally shrouding the initiation ceremonies, doctrines and customs in mystery, the group was formed to amuse its members and attract public curiosity. Only later, as the group gained in membership and perpetrated violent and murderous acts, did their white hoods and rituals acquire notoriety and become synonymous with white supremacy and menace against the black minority. This book details the formation and progress of the 1st Klan, which operated between the years 1865 and 1871. Authored in 1905, it benefits from eyewitness accounts; at the time, the KKK's first appearance was within living memory, thought a curious event firmly confined to the past. However, a decade after Fleming published this book the KKK was revived, becoming far larger than before. Although overshadowed by later events, histories such as Fleming's shed light on an era of upheaval. Backlash against emancipation was anticipated, and the KKK was not the only extra-judicial group of its kind; although such organizations successfully intimidated many blacks into departing politics, laws and crackdowns by the government contained the organization, albeit temporarily. |
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... testimony from the Ku Klux Report , it shows a very clear conception of the real meaning of the movement and a correct appreciation of its results . The best later inter- pretation is that of Mr. William Garrott Brown in " The Lower ...
... testimony he gave before the Ku Klux Committee of Congress in 1871.1 Though evading questions aimed to elicit definite information , yet he was willing to speak of the general conditions that caused the development of the organ- 1 Ku ...
... [ to the negroes ] in Georgia had been carried out to its logical results the negroes would 1 See Ku Klux Report , Georgia Testimony , p . 304 . There have slaughtered whole neighborhoods . " That they did INTRODUCTION 31.
... measures , which amounted to punishment of individuals for alleged crime without trial by law . See Ku Klux Report , Alabama Testimony , pp . 224 , 377 , 383 . real meaning . Well , they had this much meaning INTRODUCTION 33.
... obnoxious to the Klan . It is taken from the Ku Klux Report , Alabama Testimony . The costumes represented opposite p . 58 were captured in Mississippi and were The whites believed that the " under- standing of Appomattox INTRODUCTION 43.
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Ku Klux Klan: Its Origin, Growth and Disbandment John C. Lester,Daniel Love Wilson Vista completa - 1905 |
Ku Klux Klan: Its Origin, Growth and Disbandment John C. Lester,Daniel Love Wilson Vista completa - 1905 |