Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Making Sense of the Second Ku Klux Klan
JACOBIN
12.22.2024


Understanding the reemergence of the Ku Klux Klan in the early twentieth century gives insight into the roots of today’s reactionary activists and policymakers.

Ku Kluz Klan imperial wizard Hiram Wesley Evans, pictured c. 1925, wrote a favorable article about Booker T. Washington the same month that the second Klan formed.
 (HUM Images / Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

THE KLAN REVIVAL ALSO OCCURED IN CANADA 
ON THE PRAIRIES BASED ON ANTI CATHOLICISM 
AND ANTI QUEBECOIS/FRENCH LANGUAGE RIGHTS,
AND BEING PRO BRITISH/ANGLO (WASP) DOMINATION 


Nancy MacLean’s newly reissued Behind the Mask of Chivalry, three decades after its original appearance, is guaranteed to interest a new generation of scholars and activists seeking to understand the second iteration of the Ku Klux Klan, the hyperpatriotic white supremacist Protestant organization that counted between two and six million members by the mid-1920s, and the broader history of organized reactionaries in America. Best known in liberal circles for her best-selling 2017 book about post–World War II conservative thinkers and policymakers, Democracy in Chains, MacLean first earned admiration for her exploration of this earlier right-wing organization. Evidence of why her prize-winning book has aged well over the last thirty years and why Oxford University Press decided to republish it is obvious: numerous instructors continue to assign it, countless historians cite it, and the best Klan scholars have given it well-deserved praise. It is, according to another subject expert, historian Thomas R. Pegram, “the best-known and most influential single book on the 1920s Klan.” And its value isn’t only to academics: the book helps us understand some of the roots of today’s reactionary activists and policymakers.

The 2024 edition, identical to the 1994 book except for a new eight-and-half-page preface, offers brilliant insights into the Klan’s activities — how members organized, why they achieved acceptability in many quarters, and why their reprehensible activities still matter today. MacLean paints a vivid picture of the period that triggered the Klan’s rebirth, noting the expansion of big business, the outbreak of class conflicts, resistance to burdensome Jim Crow laws, and women’s push for greater personal freedoms. The Klan responded to these developments with poisonous racism, nativism, antisemitism, and sexism as well as strident calls for working-class subordination to social and economic “betters” and demands for strict moral uprightness.

Formed in the Atlanta area in late 1915 under the leadership of Alabama-born former Methodist preacher William Simmons, the second Klan, inspired by the initial iteration of the post–Civil War Klan that officially went away in the wake of federal prosecutions in the early 1870s, achieved national influence in the post–World War I years. Every state in the union had Klan chapters by 1924. Growth was especially impressive in both Southern states like Alabama, Oklahoma, and Texas and Northern and Western ones like Indiana, Ohio, and Oregon. Members wore regalia, held weekly meetings, won positions in local, state, and national governments, organized marches in numerous downtowns, burned crosses in parks and on hilltops, and, most dreadfully, kidnapped, whipped, and sometimes tarred and feathered a diversity of victims.

For generations, Klan scholars have debated the reasons for its growth, its primary goals, and the organization’s class makeup. Early interpretations suggested that the Klan attracted lowbrow reactionaries from small communities, and that these ignorant men generally joined out of intense feelings of nativism and racism. Members, scholars have pointed out, were backward-looking traditionalists fearful of elites. Yet not all are in agreement. Others have shown that the organization attracted, and was led by, well-networked Protestant elites comfortable in both urban and rural settings. One important study notes that the organization provided important networking opportunities for upwardly mobile men, and that these Klansmen left a lasting legacy of bigotry. Most agree that top Klan leaders were relatively well-to-do.

Numerous community studies have stressed the way local conditions, including corruption in politics, various expressions of vice, and upticks in crime rates attracted members. Some have stressed that the Klan focused on recruiting true believers with its reactionary creed; others, as historian David J. Goldberg illustrates in a review essay, have noted the organization “attracted its share of ordinary, naïve, gullible citizens.” A few have underscored the organization’s racist ideas and violent actions. Others have emphasized that the organization was primarily interested in controlling the behavior of fellow whites, insisting that they embrace proper moral codes by remaining faithful to their spouses and avoiding alcohol. While not denying the organization’s racial and religious intolerance, such scholars have nevertheless claimed that the organization drew on Progressive Era reform traditions, especially prohibition. They were, as one scholar put it, “intolerant reformers.”
The Reactionary Populism of the Petty Bourgeoisie

Building on decades of scholarship and years of research into primary source documents, MacLean focuses chiefly on the Klan’s activities in Athens, Georgia, though her points apply beyond this region. Above all, she maintains that middle-class people in Athens and beyond, anxious about race, gender, and class-related challenges, built a durable movement that espoused what she characterizes as “reactionary populism.” Like the populists of the 1890s, the 1920s Klan, at least in Athens, consisted mostly of small businessmen, yeoman farmers, and downwardly mobile landowners, those who felt squeezed by forces from below and above. They were, she writes, “trapped between capital and labor,” distressed by the growing influence of organizations like the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and appalled by the rebellious spirit shown by young women.

MacLean explores how its membership, consisting mostly of middle-class churchgoing family men, confronted questions related to class, gender, race, and morality. “The Klan’s varied attacks on African Americans, Jews, and immigrants in fact,” she explains, “converged on a common core goal: securing the power of the white petite bourgeoisie in the face of challenges stemming from modern industrial capitalism.” Her reactionary populist interpretation echoes a statement put forward by Sam Darcy in the Daily Worker in 1927. The various Klan messages, he explained, were designed to “appeal to the economic interest and social priggishness of the petty bourgeoisie of the South.”

In MacLean’s telling, significant sections of the respectable middle classes joined and participated in the Klan partially in response to the numerous class conflicts that erupted in the nation immediately after World War I. The more than four million strikers in 1919 — coal miners, longshoremen, steelworkers, sharecroppers, and even some police officers — alarmed growing numbers of small business and property owners. “A middle-class man inclined to fear,” she writes, “could see in the events of 1919 the nightmare of the republic’s founders come true: growing economic inequality had bred concentrated power above and below a great mass with little stake in society.”

This middling group lashed out at those above and below them. Klan members opposed the rising power of Wall Street and the growth of chain stores as well as labor unrest, an increasingly defiant African American community, and rebellious teenage girls. They recruited lawyers, businessmen, and especially ministers; together these men condemned vice and uncompromisingly disdained Catholicism, Communism, and Judaism. They loathed Catholics because Klansmen believed that they prioritized the Pope over the nation’s republican institutions. Klansmen expressed antisemitic views because they assumed that Jews “had a ‘stranglehold’ on finance and thereby the whole economy.” This was a view, she believes, that was embraced by numerous Populists in the 1890s, though a point that some historians maintain is exaggerated.

MacLean does a fine job prioritizing the Klan’s target list, noting that threats from below, including radical organizing, working-class struggles, and the spread of Marxist ideas represented, in members’ minds, the “foremost threat to the republic.” Such fears naturally frightened many conservatives and elites following the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. Klansmen believed the successful revolution was part of a Jewish conspiracy, another way the organization expressed its antisemitism. Left-leaning Jews, Klan members observed with trepidation, were also active in Marxist organizations at home; these radicals built solidary with African Americans and promoted what Klansmen derisively called “negro equality.”

MacLean draws important connections well beyond Athens and the nation itself. Her final chapter is on the rise of European fascism, which coincided with the Klan’s growth. Any account, she writes, that “fails to consider” the Klan in the context of growing far-right movements in places like Italy, Germany, and Spain “is bound to yield a limited understanding of its place in history.” She explains that the Klan’s spokesperson spoke favorably about the anti-labor actions taken by fascists in Italy and Germany. And we learn that anti-Klan activists, including members of Oklahoma’s Farmer-Labor Union, warned of the parallels between Italian Fascists and domestic Klansmen.

At a time when fascism began to take off in Europe during the second part of the 1920s, the Klan experienced a steep decline in membership. While many historians attribute this to negative publicity and several noteworthy internal scandals — including cases involving high-ranking members’ marital infidelity, alcohol consumption, mismanagement of funds, and a case of rape and murder — MacLean points out that the organization lost members because it had achieved many of its goals. By the mid-1920s, the labor movement was mostly in retreat, and groups like the NAACP had far fewer members nationally and no functioning chapter in Athens. And the 1924 National Origins Act severely restricted immigration. MacLean writes, “On most fronts, Klansmen could feel, if not triumphant, at least relieved by mid-decade.” Of course, this was not the entire end of the story: the 1930s saw a resurgence of right-wing organizing, including renewed mobilizations by the Klan, in the face of a powerful labor movement.

Yet MacLean’s analysis of the nature of the Klan’s racism as well as her interpretation of members’ views of large businesses leaves something to be desired. Indeed, her belief that reactionary populism is the best way to describe the Klan works in many contexts but not all of them. Rather than reacting with discomfort and rage to the dynamics of modern industrial capitalism, many Klansmen were staunch champions of it.

First, one cannot discuss the Klan, especially its activities in the South, without confronting the question of racism, and MacLean offers the necessary context of the virtual omnipresence of white supremacy. No area in society, including housing, schooling, criminal justice, and employment, was untouched by abhorrent Jim Crow laws. None of this was acceptable to African Americans. An emboldened black population, politicized at least in part by the democratic rhetoric surrounding World War I, provoked bigoted responses from whites and triggered widespread Klan growth.

Yet MacLean fails to provide a coherent account of the Klan’s oftentimes inconstant approach to the “negro problem.” In some sections she notes, correctly, that Klansmen embraced a type of racism that served businessmen’s control and exploitation aims. The most persuasive anecdote comes from the horse’s mouth, Imperial Wizard William Simmons. Speaking in front of a boisterous crowd in a Decatur, Georgia, courthouse in 1921, Simmons thundered that the Klan was determined to ensure that “niggers get in their place and stay in their place.” Presumably, second-wave Klansmen, like those during the Reconstruction period, had clear conceptions about “their place”: in workplaces during their waking hours; in segregated communities when not working. MacLean shows a clear grasp of the relationship between capitalism and racism: “The subordination of African Americans, after all, undergirded the entire Southern economy.”

Yet she offers contradictory statements, suggesting that Klansmen “saw themselves as an army in training for a war between races, should that prove necessary to perpetuate the United States as ‘a white man’s nation.’” Simmons’s successor, Hiram Wesley Evans, in MacLean’s description, comes across as a hard-core racial exclusionist. Evans, she maintains, “agreed that different races could never share the earth in peace.” But, of course, there were plenty of peaceful interactions between whites and non-whites in the North and South. So what was it? Did Klansmen believe in removing or eliminating African Americans? Or did they demand the presence of black people, acknowledging their economic value to the white business classes? Needless to say, the Klan’s own statements were often contradictory. These contradictions have to be interrogated carefully.

To her credit, MacLean recognizes that most Klansmen did not see themselves preparing “for an imminent race war with people of color.” At a time when many African Americans in the South sought to escape racist outbursts generated by groups like the Klan for greener pastures in Northern cities, MacLean recognizes that Southern “planters sometimes came to believe things had gone too far.” This is what sociologists call the “repression paradox.” Too much repression in the form of hangings, whippings, or even intimidating marches convinced black laborers to flee, depriving owners and managers of adequate labor. For this reason, not all elites supported the Klan.

Yet readers may nevertheless find themselves confused by MacLean’s unwillingness to explore the meaningful distinctions between the paternalistic and exploitative forms of racism, on the one hand, and the hateful and murderous types, on the other. Klansmen undoubtedly believed in white supremacy, but they nevertheless had many nonhostile interactions with African Americans. MacLean does not investigate, for example, the relationships Klansmen developed with conservative black elites in both religious and secular contexts. After all, Klansmen in numerous parts of the nation donated money to black churches, met with advocates of black businesses like Marcus Garvey, and one chapter in New Jersey employed black musicians to lead a Klan parade in 1926. For his part, Imperial Wizard Evans wrote a very favorable article about Booker T. Washington, the pro-segregation and anti-labor union college head who died in November 1915, the very same month and year that the second Klan formed. Washington, like the Klansmen, demanded that black people accept Jim Crow laws and capitalist norms.

Indeed, we must not lose sight of racism’s economic foundations as well as the Klan leadership’s determination to ensure that African Americans remained a reliable source of labor. To achieve this basic goal, the leadership cultivated cross-class feelings of racial superiority, collaborated with conservative black leaders, and ensured that African Americans lived in fear — but not too much fear. Very simply, Klansmen with business interests, like landowners, wanted a stable labor force, not one eager to leave. MacLean helps us make sense of the dimensions of racism but, like other scholars and civil rights organization spokespersons, does an inadequate job distinguishing between behavioral and structural forms of it.
Elite Organizing and the Long History of Vigilantism

While MacLean’s analysis of the Klan’s class makeup seems mostly correct, she overstates the organization’s hostility to big business. The most important robber barons did not join the group, but plenty of privileged members in communities around the nation, including influential economic and political elites, did. Some Klan leaders bragged about appealing to the most prominent citizens. For example, a few months after William Simmons made a major recruitment push in late 1920, he was “swamped with letters from all sections of the county, many of them from men who stand high in the affairs of the nation, and some of them from leaders in both the Democratic and the Republican parties, expressing their belief in the true aims and purposes of the Ku Klux Klan.” Klansmen, for example, spoke highly of Henry Ford, the wealthy and powerful antisemitic auto manufacturer.

Klansmen generally sided with businessmen during industrial disputes, and they showed gratitude for their stances on several moral questions. Philadelphia Klansman Paul Winter, for instance, honored “the largest industrial groups in the country” for their work in pushing for prohibition laws. And Klan intellectuals saw wealth accumulation as an unmistakable sign of white supremacy. Lothrop Stoddard, a Klansman and prolific author of books popular with racists, made this point explicitly in 1922: “The amount of wealth amassed by the white world in general and by Europe in particular since the beginning of the nineteenth century is simply incalculable.” Presumably, Stoddard did not believe that his Klan comrades had to settle for small business ownership and petty bourgeois status.

Most importantly, traveling organizers known as Kleagles first targeted the wealthiest residents of the various communities during recruitment visits. These were typically not the Fords or the Rockefellers but were nevertheless part of local ruling classes. According to the words of a Klan critic from 1924, organizers sought out the “best citizens”: “the banker and merchant of the Chamber of Commerce.” That Kleagles organized from the top down challenges the idea that the Klan was a truly populist organization. Did fat cat bankers see themselves as “reactionary populists?”

Maybe they did. Or maybe they just wanted others to perceive them in this light. Whatever the case, the Klan was hardly the first anti–labor union organization to use populist language to hide its class interests. Two decades earlier, the Citizens’ Industrial Association of America (CIAA), consisting of employers, bankers, lawyers, religious leaders, politicians, and anti-union workers, emerged to battle the “labor problem” and promote the open-shop system of industrial relations. They conducted their political, extralegal, and public relations work under the motto “For the Protection of the Common People.” Decades later, Imperial Wizard Evans, echoing the language employed by this earlier generation of cross-class anti-labor activists, promised to help the “common people” reestablish “control of their country.” The CIAA’s use of populist rhetoric, its oath of secrecy, occasional vigilante attacks on labor unionists and leftist activists, and successes in building branches in regions throughout the country call into question MacLean’s statement that the Klan “was the first national, sustained, and self-consciously ideological vigilante movement in American history.” It simply was not.

In fact, many Klansmen were also Citizens’ Committee members. Recently, historian Kenneth Barnes has shown the ways coalitions of Citizens’ Committee and Klansmen (many held membership in both) employed vigilante techniques to destroy a two-year-long strike staged by employees of the Missouri and Northern Arkansas Railroad between 1921 and 1923. Their hideous vigilante activities involved drive-out campaigns, beatings, and the kidnapping and hanging of striker Ed C. Gregor over a bridge in 1923. Northwestern Arkansas Klansmen–Citizens Committee men did not draw tidy distinctions between different-sized businesses; they were united by their hatred of labor militancy and essentially served as the vigilante wing of a railroad corporation.

It is difficult to imagine a scenario in which northwestern Arkansas Klansmen — or Klansmen based practically anywhere else for that matter — harbored a similar desire to launch sustained campaigns to crush Wall Street investors or corporate heads. Their violent anti-labor impulses were visibly much stronger. Indeed, from the woods of Maine to the waterfronts of California, Klansmen used various forms of political coercion and vigilante brutality, including establishing coalitions with elected leaders, staging big marches, launching kidnapping raids, and engaging in group beatings. The purpose was to intimidate, defeat, and ultimately silence working-class activists and political radicals across ethnic and racial lines.

Like the employer-activists in the open-shop movement, the 1920s Klan served capitalist interests through words and deeds. In both cases, these cross-class organizations boasted about attracting the “best citizens.” Disproportionate numbers of middle-class people, including owners of modestly sized workplaces, joined these organizations mainly because they outnumbered members of the extremely rich. White Protestant middle- and upper-class men participated and led reactionary organizations because they wanted law and order in their communities and authority and stability in their workplaces.
Revisiting the Second Klan in 2024

If Maclean could go back in time, she admits she would have dug “more deeply into elite support for the Klan.” This would require acknowledging that Klan policymakers were considerably closer to the ruling class than to the working classes, even though the organization recruited across class lines. Today she understands that numerous “wealthy and powerful white Protestant men saw then (and see now) advantages in supporting such a movement — even if they don’t subscribe to all its ideas.”

This is not the only area she would revisit. Aware of the recent popularity of scholarship concerned with settler colonialism, MacLean would have taken “the analysis of Klan racism further” by examining the displacement and genocide of indigenous peoples. Furthermore, MacLean, identifying the power of today’s reactionary influencers, “would home in more on the mechanics of” the colorful Klan organizers, people who shared similarities with modern-day right-wing media personalities like the Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson, and the late Rush Limbaugh. Finally, MacLean would have linked the Klan’s seemingly antiquarian rituals to gender politics. These rituals, she writes, “had a purpose: to reassure men who were uneasy about their standing in a changing society and culture.”

MacLean identifies many troubling signs in the years following the release of her book. Since its publication, far-right populist outbursts have periodically punctuated society: the rise of the militia movement and the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, the emergence and popularity of the Tea Party movement, and today’s Donald Trump–inspired MAGA movement. MacLean wrote her new preface just before Trump’s second electoral triumph, a sign that right-wing populist ideas continue to appeal to large numbers of mostly middle-class — and growing numbers of working-class — Americans. “The men in white robes and hoods are few and far between,” she writes, “but the beliefs, allegations, and impulses associated with their cause are back.”

But MacLean is an optimist, encouraging readers to come to terms with earlier right-wing formations like the Klan “to better understand and contain its descendants in our own day.” She is correct: to prepare to fight, and ultimately crush, today’s reactionary populists and class enemies, we must consult books like Behind the Mask of Chivalry.

Contributors
Chad Pearson teaches history at the University of North Texas. He is the author of Capital's Terrorists: Klansmen, Lawmen, and Employers in the Long Nineteenth Century.


In the following article are presented some unusual features of the Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s, the only period in which the KKK was a mass movement. In no way should this essay be interpreted as an endorsement of any aspect of this version of the Klan or of any other parts of Klan activity. Nonetheless, the loathsome nature of the KKK of today should not blind us to what took place within the Klan 70 years ago, in various places and against the wishes and ideology of the Klan itself.

In the U.S. at least, racism is certainly one of the most crudely reified phenomena. The Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s is one of the two or three most important — and most ignored — social movements of 20th century America. These two data are the essential preface to this essay.

Writing at the beginning of 1924, Stanley Frost accurately surveyed the Klan at the crest of its power: “The Ku Klux Klan has become the most vigorous, active and effective organization in American life outside business.”[1] Depending on one’s choice of sources, KKK membership in 1924 can be estimated at anywhere between two and eight million.[2]

And yet, the nature of this movement has been largely unexplored or misunderstood. In the fairly thin literature on the subject, the Klan phenomenon is usually described simply as ‘nativism’. A favorite in the lexicon of orthodox historians, the term refers to an irrationality, racism, and backwardness supposedly endemic to the poorer and less-educated classes, and tending to break out in episodic bouts of violently-expressed prejudice. Emerson Loucks’ The Ku Klux Klan in Pennsylvania: A Study of Nativism is a typical example. Its preface begins with, “The revived KKK and its stormy career is but one chapter in the history of American nativism,” the first chapter is entitled, “Some Beginnings of Nativism,” and in the book’s concluding paragraph we learn that “Nativism has shown itself to be a perennial.”[3]

Kenneth Jackson, with his The Ku Klux Klan in the City, has been one of a very few commentators to go beyond the amorphous ‘nativism’ thesis and also challenge several of the prevailing ste- reotypes of the Klan. He argues forcefully that “the Invisible Empire of the 1920s was neither predominantly southern, nor rural, nor white supremacist, nor violent.”[4] Carl Degler’s succinct comments corroborate the non-southern characterization quite ably: “Significantly, the single piece of indisputable Klan legislation enacted anywhere was the school law in Oregon; the state most thoroughly controlled by the Klan was Indiana; and the largest Klan membership in any state was that in Ohio. On the other hand, several southern states like Mississippi, Virginia, and South Carolina hardly saw the Klan or felt its influence.”[5] Jackson’s statistics show clearly the Klan’s northern base, with only one southern state, Texas, among the eight states with the largest membership.[6] It would be difficult to even begin to cite Jackson’s evidence in favor of terming the Klan an urban phenomenon, inasmuch as his whole book testifies to this characterization. It may be interesting to note, however, the ten urban areas with the most Klansmen. Principally industrial and all but one of them outside the South, they are, in descending order: Chicago, Indianapolis, Philadelphia-Camden, Detroit, Denver, Portland, Atlanta, Los Angeles-Long Beach, Youngstown-Warren, and Pittsburgh-Carnegie.[7]

The notion of the KKK as an essentially racist organization is similarly challenged by Jackson. As Robert Moats Miller put it, “in great areas of the country where the Klan was powerful the Negro population was insignificant, and in fact, it is probable that had not a single Negro lived in the United States, a Klan-type order would have emerged.”[8] And Robert Duffus, writing for the June 1923 World’s Week, conceded: “while the racial situation contributed to a state of mind favorable to Ku Kluxism, curiously it did not figure prominently in the Klan’s career.”[9] The Klan in fact tried to organize “colored divisions” in Indiana and other states, to the amazement of historian Kathleen Blee.[10] Deg- ler, who wrongly considered vigilantism to be the core trait of the Klan, admitted that such violence as there was “was directed against white, Anglo-Saxon Protestants rather than against the minorities.”[11]

Which brings us to the fourth and last point of Jackson’s thesis, that the KKK was not predominantly violent. Again, his conclusions seem valid despite the widespread image of a lynch-mad, terroristic Klan. The post-war race riots of 1919 in Washington, Chicago, and East St. Louis, for example, occurred before there were any Klansmen in those cities,[12] and in the 1920s, when the Klan grew to its great strength, the number of lynchings in the U.S. dropped to less than half the annual average of pre-war years[13] and a far smaller fraction than that by comparison with the immediately post-war years. In the words of Preston Slosson, “By a curious anomaly, in spite of...the revival of the Ku Klux Klan, the old American custom of lynch law fell into almost complete disuse.”[14]

A survey of Literary Digest (conservative) and The Nation (liberal) for 1922–1923 reveals several reported instances in which the Klan was blamed for violence it did not perpetrate and unfairly deprived of its rights.[15] Its enemies frequently included local or state establishments, and were generally far from being meek and powerless victims.

If the Ku Klux Klan, then, was not predominantly southern, rural, racist, or violent, just what was the nature of this strange force which grew to such power so rapidly and spontaneously in the early-middle ’20s — and declined at least as quickly by 1925? The orthodox ‘nativism’ answer asserts that it was just another of the periodic, unthinking and reactionary efforts of the ignorant to turn back the clock, and therefore futile and short-lived. A post-Jackson, ‘neo-nativist’ position might even concede the points about racism and violence not being determinant, and still essentially maintain this point of view, of recurrent, blind efforts to restore an inchoate but rightist version of the past.

But a very strong pattern regarding the Klan introduces doubts about this outlook, namely, that militantly progressive or radical activities have often closely preceded, coincided with, or closely followed strong KKK efforts, and have involved the same participants. Oklahoma, for example, experienced in a mere ten years the growth and decline of the largest state branch of the Socialist Party, and the rise of one of the strongest Klan movements.[16] In Williamson County, Illinois, an interracial crowd of union coal miners stormed a mine being worked by strike-breakers and killed twenty of them. The community supported the miners’ action and refused to convict any of the participants in this so-called Herrin Massacre of 1922, which had captured the nation’s attention. Within two years, Herrin and the rest of Williamson County backed one of the very strongest local Klan organizations in the country.[17] The violently suppressed strikes of the southern Appalachian Piedmont textile workers in 1929, among the most bitterly fought in twentieth century labor history,[18] took place at the time of or immediately following great Klan strength in many of the same mill towns. The rubber workers of the huge tire-building plants of Akron, the first to widely employ the effective sit-down strike weapon in the early 1930s, formed a large part of that city’s very sizeable Klan membership,[19] or had come from Appalachian regions where the KKK was also strong. In 1934, the very militant and interracial Southern Tenant Farmers Union was formed, and would face the flight of its leaders, the indifference of organized labor, and the machine-guns of the large landholders. Many of its active members were former Klansmen.[20] And observers of the United Auto Workers have claimed that some of the most militant activists in auto were former Klansmen.[21]

The key to all these examples of apparently disparate loyalties is a simple one. As I will show, not only did some Klansmen hold relatively radical opinions while members of the Invisible Order, but in fact used the Klan, on occasion, as a vehicle for radical social change. The record in this area, though not inaccessible, has remained completely undeveloped.

The rise of the Klan began with the sharp economic depression that struck in the fall of 1920. In the South, desperate farmers organized under the Klan banner in an effort to force up the price of cotton by restricting its sale. “All throughout the fall and winter of 1920–22 masked bands roamed the countryside warning ginneries and warehouses to close until prices advanced. Sometimes they set fire to establishments that defied their edict.”[22] It was from this start that the Klan really began to grow and to spread to the North, crossing the Mason-Dixon line in the winter of 1920–21.[23]

The KKK leadership “disavowed and apparently disapproved of”[24] this aggressive economic activism, and it is important to note that more often than not there was tension or opposition between officials and members, a point I will return to later. In a southern union hall in 1933, Sherwood Anderson queried a local reporter about the use of the Klan for economic struggles: “This particular hall had formerly been used by a Ku Klux Klan organization and I asked the newspaper man, ‘How many of these people [textile workers] were in on that?’ ‘A good many,’ he said. He thought the Ku Klux Klan had been rather an outlet for the workers when America was outwardly so prosperous. ‘The boom market never got down to these,’ he said, making a sweeping movement with his arm.”[25] Klan officials never spoke in favor of such uses of the Klan, but it was the economic and social needs that often drew people to the Klan, rather than religious, patriotic, or strictly fraternal ones.[26]

This is not to say that there wasn’t a multiplicity of contributing factors usually present as the new Klan rose to prominence. There was a widespread feeling that the “Glorious Crusade” of World War I had been a swindle. There was the desperate boredom and monotony of regimented work-lives. To this latter frustration, a KKK newspaper appealed for new members with the banner, “JUST TO PEP UP THE GAME. THIS SLOW LIFE IS KILLING ME.”[27] And with these feelings, too, it is quite easy to imagine a form of progressive social or political activism being the result. As Stanley Frost commented in 1924, “the Klan movement seems to be another expression of the general unrest and dissatisfaction with both local and national conditions — the high cost of living, social injustice, inequality....”[28] Or, as Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. offhandedly revealed in a comment about Huey Long, “despite his poor white sympathies, he did not, like Hugo Black in Alabama, join the Klan.”[29]

The activities of the Klan have very commonly been referred to as “moral reform,” and certainly this kind of effort was common. Articles such as, “Behind the White Hoods: The Regeneration of Oklahoma,” and “Night-Riding Reformers,” from Fall 1923 issues of The Outlook bespeak this side of Klan motivation.[30] They tell how the Klan cleaned up gangs of organized crime and combated vice and political corruption in Oklahoma and Indiana, apparently with a minimum of violence or vigilantism. Also widespread were Klan attempts to put bootleggers out of business, though we might recall here that prohibition has frequently been endorsed by labor partisans, from the opinion that the often high alcohol consumption rates among workers weakened the labor movement. In fact, the Klan not infrequently attacked liquor and saloon interests explicitly as forces that kept working people down.

It is on the plane of ‘moral’ issues, furthermore, that another stereotype regarding the KKK — that of its total moral intolerance — dissolves at least somewhat under scrutiny. Charles Bowles, the almost successful write-in Klan candidate in the 1924 Detroit may- oralty race, was a divorce lawyer (as well as being pro-public works).It cannot be denied that anti-Catholicism was a major plank of Klan appeal in many places, such as Oregon. But at least part of this attitude stemmed from a “belief that the Catholic Church was a major obstacle in the struggle for women’s suffrage and equality.”[31]

Margaret Sanger, the birth control pioneer, gave a lecture to Klanswomen in Silver Lake, New Jersey, a speaking engagement she accepted with no little trepidation. She feared that if she “ut- tered one word, such as abortion, outside the usual vocabulary of these women they would go off into hysteria.” Actually, a real rapport was established and the evening was a great success. “A dozen invitations to speak to similar groups were profferred. The conversation went on and on, and when we were finally through it was too late to return to New York.”[32]

At any rate, a connection can be argued between ‘moral’ reform and more fundamental reform attempts. “I wonder if anybody could ever find any connection between this town’s evident immoralities and some of the plant’s evident dissatisfaction?”[33] pondered Whiting Williams in 1921. He decided in the affirmative, that vice in the community is the result of anger in the mill or factory. And Klan members often showed an interest in also combating what they saw as the causes of ‘immoralities’ rather than simply their manifestations.

Hiram Evans, a head of the Klan, admitted in a rare interview in 1923 that “There has been a widespread feeling among Klansmen that in the last few years the operation of the National Government has shown weakness indicating a possible need of rather fundamental reform.”[34] A 1923 letter to the editor of The New Republic details this awareness of the need for deep-seated changes. Written by an opponent of the Klan, the passage expresses “The Why of the Klan”:

“First: Throughout all classes there is a growing skepticism of democracy, especially of the current American brand. Many Americans believe there is little even-handed justice administered in the courts; that a poor man has little chance against a rich one; that many judges practically buy their places on the bench or are put there by powerful interests. The strong, able young man comes out of college ready to do his part in politics, but with the settled conviction that unless he can give full time there is no use ‘bucking up against the machine.’ Furthermore he believes the machines to be equally corrupt. The miner in West Virginia sees the power of the state enlisted on the side of the mine owner.”[35]

Throughout the literature there is a strongly prevailing tendency to deal with the social composition of Klan membership by ignoring it altogether, or, more commonly, by referring to it in passing as “middle class.” This approach enabled John Mecklin, whose The Ku Klux Klan: A Study of the American Mind (1924) is regarded as a classic, to say that “The average Klansman is far more in sympathy with capital than with labor.”[36]In large part this stems from looking at the top Klan officials, rather than at the rank and file members. William Simmons, D.C. Stephenson, and Hiram Evans, the men who presided over the Klan in the ’20s had been, respectively, a minister, a coal dealer, and a dentist. But the membership defi- nitely did not share this wholly “middle class” makeup.

Kenneth Jackson only partially avoids the error by terming the Klan a “lower middle-class movement,”[37] a vague appellation which he corrects shortly thereafter: “The greatest source of Klan support came from rank and file non-union, blue-collar employees of large businesses and factories.”[38]

Returning to the subject of socio-political attitudes of Klan members, available evidence strikingly confirms my contention of a sometimes quite radical frame of mind. In the spring of 1924, The Outlook magazine conducted a “Platform of the People” poll by mail. When it was found that an organizational request for ten thousand ballots came from the New Jersey and Pennsylvania Ku Klux Klan, pink ballots were supplied so that they could be separately tabulated. To quote the article, “Pink Ballots for the Ku Klux Klan”: “The ballots returned all came from towns and small cities in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Of the total of 1,139 voters, 490 listed themselves as Republicans, only 97 as Democrats, and 552 as Independents. Among them are 243 women.”[39] Approximately two-thirds (over 700) responded regarding their occupations. “The largest single group (209) is that of skilled workmen; the next (115) is of laborers.” The rest includes workers (e.g. “railway men”) and farmers, plus a scattering of professionals and merchants. The women who listed their occupations were mainly housewives.

Despite the generally high percentages of abstention on most of the issues, the results on the following selected topics show clearly radical leanings:[40]

PercentApproved:Ignored:Condemned:
“Compulsory freight reduction”30773
“Nationalization of the railroads with cooperative administration by workers, shippers, and public”24724
“Federal Aid for Farmers” Co-operatives”30682
“Federal purchase of wheat”20682
“Price fixing of staple farm products”23755
“Further extension of farm credit”32671
“Equal social, legal, and industrial rights for women”41563
“Amendment enabling Congress to prevent exploitation of children in industry”45541
“Federal Anti-Lynching Law”38602
“Establish Federal Employment Bureau”37603
“Extension of principle of Federal aid for education”9190
“Abolition of injunctions in labor disputes”20737
“Nationalization, and democratic administration by technicians, workers, and consumers, of coal mines”23725
“Government control and distribution of high-power transmission”33643

Also favored were immigration restriction and prohibition. The Outlook, obviously displeased with the response, categorized the Klan participants as “more inclined to accept panaceas at face value, willing to go farther. In general,” they concluded, “this leads to greater radicalism, or ‘progressivism.’”[41] The Klan movement declined rapidly within a year of the poll, and research substantiates the enduring validity of The Outlook editors’ claim that “The present table provides the only analysis that has ever been made of the political views of members of the Ku Klux Klan.”[42]

With this kind of data, it is less surprising to find, for example, that the Socialist Party and the Klan formed a 1924 electoral alliance in Milwaukee to elect John Kleist, a Socialist and a Klansman, to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.[43] Robert O. Nesbitt perceived, in Wisconsin, a “tendency for German Socialists, whose most conspicuous opponents were Catholic clergy, to join the Klan.”[44] The economic populist Walter Pierce was elected governor in Oregon in 1922 by a strong agricultural protest vote, including the endorsement of the Klan and the Socialist Party. Klan candidates promised to cut taxes in half, reduce phone rates, and give aid to distressed farmers.[45] A recent study of the Klan in LaGrande, Oregon revealed that it “played a substantial role in supporting the strikers” during the nationwide railworkers’ strike of 1922.[46]

In fact, the KKK appealed not infrequently to militant workers, despite the persistent stereotype of the Klan’s anti-labor bent. An August 1923 World’s Work article described strong worker support for the Klan in Kansas; during the state-wide railroad strike there in 1922, the strikers “actually did flock into the Klan in what seems to have been large numbers.”[47]

Charles Alexander, who wrote the highly regarded The Ku Klux Klan in the Southwest, though generally subscribing to the anti-labor Klan reputation, confessed his own inability to confirm this image. Referring to himself, he said, “the writer has come across only two instances of direct conflict between southwestern Klansmen and union organizers, one in Arkansas and one in Louisiana.”[48] Writing of Oklahoma, Carter Blue Clark judged that “violence against the International (sic) Workers of the World and radical farm and labor groups was rare...”[49] He found sixty-eight incidents of Klan-related violence between 1921 and 1925, only two of which belonged to the “Unionization/Radicalism” category.[50]

Goldberg’s study of the KKK in Colorado found that “despite coal strikes in 1921, 1922, and 1927, which primarily involved foreign — born miners, the Klan never resorted to the language of the Red Scare.” During the Wobbly-led strike of 1927, in fact, the Canon City Klan formed an alliance with the IWW against their common enemy, the ruling elite.[51]

Virginia Durr, who was Henry Wallace’s Progressive Party running mate in 1948, gives us a picture of the Klan of the ’20s and labor in the Birmingham area:

“The unions were broken...So, the Ku Klux Klan was formed at that point as a kind of underground union and unless you were there and knew it, nobody will believe it. They will say, ‘Oh, but the Klan was against the unions.’ Well, it wasn’t.”[52]

Gerald Dunne found that “ninety percent of Birmingham’s union members were also involved with the Klan,”[53] and that the Klan in the state at large attacked the Alabama Power Company and the influence of the ruling Bankhead family while campaigning for pub- lic control of the Muscle Shoals dam project and government medical insurance.[54]

In the ’20s the corrupt and inert officialdom of the United Mine Workers was presided over by the autocratic John L. Lewis. Ku Kluxers in the union, though they had been officially barred from membership in 1921, formed a coalition with leftists at the 1924 convention in a fight for union democracy: “Then the radical- s...combined with the sympathizers of the hooded order to strip Mr. Lewis of the power to appoint organizers.”[55] Though this combination was narrowly defeated, “Lewis was outvoted in a first test of the question as to whether local executives and organizers should be appointed by the national officials or by the rank and file. The insurgents, headed by the deposed Alexander Howat and spurred on by the members of the Ku Klux Klan, who exerted a lobbying influence from the convention doorways, combined to carry the first vote.”[56] Though officially denied membership, strongly pro-UMW sources have admitted that, in fact, a great many union members were Klansmen. McDonald and Lynch, for example, estimated that in 1924 eighty percent of UMW District 11 (Indiana) members were enrolled in the KKK[57]. An examination of the Proceedings of the 1924 union convention supports this point; areas of Klan strength, such as Indiana, Illinois and Pennsylvania voted very decisively against Lewis, in favor of the election of organizers by the rank and file.[58]

New Republic article in March, 1924 told of the strength of the Klan in Williamson County, Illinois, scene of the “Herrin Massacre” referred to above. The anti-Klan piece sadly shook its head at this turn of events in an area of “one hundred percent unionism.”[59] Buried in the middle of the account is the key to the situation, an accurate if grudging concession that “the inaction of their local labor leaders gave to the Ku Klux Klan a following among the miners.”[60]

The following oral history account by Aaron Barkham, a West Virginia miner, is a perfect illustration of the Klan as a vehicle of class struggle — and of the reason for its official denunciation by the UMW. It is worth quoting at length:

“About that time 1929, in Logan County, West Virginia, a bunch of strike-breakers come in with shotguns and axe handles. Tried to break up union meetings. The UMW deteriorated and went back to almost no existence. It didn’t particularly get full strength till about 1949. And it don’t much today in West Virginia. So most people ganged up and formed the Ku Kluck Klan.”

The Ku Klux was the real controllin’ factor in the community. It was the law. It was in power to about 1932. My dad was one of the leaders til he died. The company called in the army to get the Ku Klux out, but it didn’t work. The union and the Ku Klux was about the same thing.”

The superintendent of the mine got the big idea of makin’ it rougher than it was. They hauled him off in a meat wagon, and about ten more of the company officials. Had the mine shut down. They didn’t kill ‘em, but they didn’t come back. They whipped one of the foremen and got him out of the county. They gave him twelve hours to get out, get his family out.”

The UMW had a field representative, he was a lawyer. They tarred and feathered ‘im for tryin’ to edge in with the company. He come around, got mad, tryin’ to tell us we were wrong, when we called a wildcat. He was takin’ the side of the company. I used a stick to help tar ‘im. And it wasn’t the first time.”

The Ku Klux was formed on behalf of people that wanted a decent living, both black and white. Half the coal camp was colored. It wasn’t anti-colored. The black people had the same responsibilities as the white. Their lawn was just as green as the white man’s. They got the same rate of pay. There was two colored who belonged to it. I remember those two niggers comin’ around my father and askin’ questions about it. They joined. The pastor of our community church was a colored man. He was Ku Klux. It was the only protection the workin’ man had.”

Sure, the company tried to play one agin’ the other. But it didn’t work. The colored and the whites lived side by side. It was somethin’ like a checkerboard. There’d be a white family and a colored family. No sir, there was no racial problem. Yeah, they had a certain feelin’ about the colored. They sure did. And they had a certain feelin’ about the white, too. Anyone come into the com- munity had unsatisfactory dealin’s, if it was colored or white, he didn’t stay.”[61]

Why have the few, standard accounts of the Klan been seemingly so far off? Principally because they have failed to look at the Klan phenomenon “from the bottom up,” to see KKK participants as historical subjects. One result of this is to have overlooked much material altogether. As most labor attention focuses on the unions at the expense of the individual workers, so has the Klan been ig- nored as a movement relevant to the history of working people. The Lean Years: A History of the American Worker, 1920–1933, by Irving Bernstein, is widely regarded as the best treatment of labor in the 1920s. It does not mention the Ku Klux Klan. Similarly, the Lynds’ Middletown, that premier sociological study of Muncie, Indiana in the ’20s, barely mentions the Klan[62] and then only in terms of a most marginal area, religious preference.[63]

Certainly no one would seriously maintain that the KKK of the ’20s was free from bigotry or injustice. There is truth in the charac- terization of the Klan as a moment of soured populism, fermented of post-war disillusion. But it is also true that when large numbers of people, feeling “a sense of defeat”[64] in an increasingly urban South, or their northern counterparts, “conscious of their growing inferiority,”[65] turned to the Klan, they did not necessarily enact some kind of sick, racist savagery. On occasion, they even turned, as we have seen, to a fairly radical activism — to the chagrin of their corrupt and conservative leadership.

In fact, it was internal dissension — plus, to a lesser extent, the return of relative prosperity in 1925[66] — that brought about the precipitous decline of the Klan. Donald Crownover’s study of the KKK in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania discussed some of the abortive efforts to form state and even national organizations alternative to the vice and autocracy prevailing at the top of the Invisible Empire.[67] “Revolt from within, not criticism from without, broke the Klan.”[68] More fundamentally, the mid-1920s, against the background of a decisive deformation provided by World War I,[69] saw the real arrival of the consumer society and the cultural displacement of militancy it represented.[70]

The above research, limited and unsystematic as it is, would seem to raise more questions than it answers. Nonetheless, it may be possible to discern here something of relevance concerning racism, spontaneity and popular values in the context of a very important social movement.[71]

 

[1] Stanley Frost, The Challenge of the Klan (New York, 1969), p.1.

[2] Between five and six million is probably the soundest figure. Morrison and Commager found “garnered in the Northeast and Midwest an all-time peak of six million members.” The Growth of the American Republic (New York, 1950), vol. II, p.556. Jonathon Daniels estimated that “the supposedly Southern organization had sprawled continentally from beginnings in Atlanta in 1915, up from 100,000 members in 1921 to 5,000,000 in 1924.” The Time Between the Wars (Garden City, New York, 1966), p. 108.

[3] Emerson Loucks, The Ku Klux Klan in Pennsylvania: A Study of Nativism (New York, 1936), pp. vi, 1, 198.

[4] Kenneth Jackson, The Ku Klux Klan in the City, 1915–1930 (New York, 1967), p. xi.

[5] Carl Degler, “A Century of the Klans: A Review Article,” Journal of Southern History (November 1965), pp. 442–443.

[6] Jackson, op.cit., p. 237.

[7] Ibid., p. 239.

[8] Robert Moats Miller, “The Ku Klux Klan,” from The Twenties: Change and Continuity, John Braeman, Robert H. Bremner and David Brody, eds. (Columbus, 1968), p. 218.

[9] Robert L. Duffus, “How the Ku Klux Klan Sells Hate,” World’s Week (June, 1923), p. 179.

[10] Kathleen M. Blee, Women of the Klan (Berkeley, 1991), p. 169.

[11] Degler, op.cit., p. 437.

[12] William Simmons, head of the Klan in 1921, testified — without challenge — that the post-war race riots in Washington, East St. Louis and Chicago took place before there were any Klan members in those cities. See Hearings Before the Committee on Rules: House of Representatives, Sixty-Seventh Congress (Washington, 1921), p. 75.

[13] Daniel Snowman, USA: The Twenties to Viet Nam (London, 1968), p.37.

[14] Preston W. Slosson, The Great Crusade and After (New York, 1930), p. 258.

[15] See Literary Digest: “Quaint Customs and Methods of the KKK,” (August 5, 1922) A Defense of the Ku Klux Klan,” (January 20, 1923), esp. pp. 18–19; “The Klan as the Victim of Mob Violence,” (September 8, 1923), p. 12; The Nation: “Even the Klan Has Rights,” (December 13, 1922), p. 654.

[16] See Garin Burban’s “Agrarian Radicals and Their Opponents: Political Conflicts in Southern Oklahoma, 1910–1924,” Journal of American History (June 1971). Burbank argues that the Socialist Party and the Klan had different constituencies in Oklahoma, but much of his own data contradicts this conclusion. Esp. pp. 20–21.

[17] See Paul M. Angle’s Bloody Williamson(New York, 1952), esp. pp. 4, 210 28–29, 137–138.

[18] See Irving Bernstein’s The Lean Years: A History of the American Worker, 1920–1933 (Baltimore, 1966), pp. 1–43.

[19] Jackson, op.cit, p. 239. Akron had the eighth largest member- ship of U.S. cities.

[20] See Thomas R. Brooks’ Toil and Trouble (New York, 1971), p. 368, and Jerold S. Auerbach’s Labor and Liberty: The LaFollette Committee and the New Deal (Indianapolis, 1966), p. 38.

[21] Irving Howe and B.J. Widick, The UAW and Walter Reuther (New York, 1949), p. 9.

[22] John Higham, Strangers in the Land (New York, 1968), pp. 289- 290.

[23] Donald A. Crownover, “The Ku Klux Klan in Lancaster County, 1923–1924,” Journal of the Lancaster County Historical Society (1964, No.2), p. 64.

[24] Higham, op.cit, p. 290.

[25] Sherwood Anderson, Puzzled America (New York, 1935), p. 114.

[26] Neill Herring, a veteran progressive and scholar from Atlanta, has testified to this kind of utilization of Klan organization as enabled by a structure that “left a fair measure of local indepen- dence of action.” Letter to author, March 25, 1975.

[27] Miller, op.cit., p. 224.

[28] Frost, op.cit., p. 270.

[29] Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., The Politics of Upheaval (Boston, 1960), p. 45.

[30] Stanley Frost, “Night-Riding Reformers,” The Outlook (November 14, 1923); Frost “Behind the White Hoods; The Regeneration of Oklahoma,” The Outlook (November 21, 1923).

[31] Robert Klan Goldberg, Hooded Empire: the Ku Klux Klan in Colorado (Urbana, 1981), p. 23.

[32] Margaret Sanger, An Autobiography (New York, 1938), pp. 366- 367.

[33] Frost, op.cit., p. 86.

[34] Frost, op.cit., p. 86.

[35] Mary H. Herring, “the Why of the Klan,” (Correspondence) The New Republic (February 23, 1923), p. 289.

[36] John Moffat Mecklin, The Ku Klux Klan: A Study of the American Mind (New York, 1924), p. 98.

[37] Jackson, op.cit., p. 240.

[38] Ibid., p. 241.

[39] “Pink Ballots for the Ku Klux Klan,” The Outlook (June 25, 1924), pp. 306–307.

[40] Ibid., p. 307–308. My percentages involve slight approxima- tions; they are based on averaging the percentages given for Republicans, Democrats, and Independents proportionally.

[41] Ibid., p. 306.

[42] Ibid., p. 308.

[43] Jackson, op.cit., p. 162.

[44] Robert O. Nesbitt, Wisconsin: A History (Madison, 1973), p. 467.

[45] George S. Turnbull, An Oregon Crusader (Portland, 1955), p. 150. “Promises and Lies,” (editorial) Capital Journal (Salem, October 31, 1922).

[46] David A. Horowitz, “The Ku Klux Klan in LaGrande, Oregon,” The Invisible Empire in the West, ed. Shawn Lay (Urbana, 1992), p. 195.

[47] Robert L. Duffus, “The Ku Klux Klan in the Middle West,” World’s Work (August, 1923), p. 365.

[48] Charles Alexander, The Ku Klux Klan in the Southwest (Louis- ville, 1965), p. 25.

[49] Carter Blue Clark, A History of the Ku Klux Klan in Oklahoma. Ph.D. Dissertation (University of Oklahoma, 1976), p. 115.

[50] Ibid., p. 147.

[51] Goldberg, op.cit., pp. 122, 146.

[52] Virginia Durr, Interview (conducted by Susan Thrasher and Jacque Hall, May 13–15, 1975), University of North Carolina Oral History project.

[53] Gerald T. Dunne, Hugo Black and the Judicial Revolution (New York, 1977), p. 114.

[54] Ibid., pp. 116, 118, 121.

[55] Cecil Carnes, John L. Lewis (New York, 1936), p. 116.

[56] Ibid., p. 114.

[57] David J. McDonald and Edward A. Lynch, Coal and Unionism (Silver Spring, Md, 1939), p. 161.

[58] United Mine Workers of America, Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Consecutive and Sixth Biennial Convention (Indianapolis, 1924), p. 686.

[59] “Ku Kluxing in the Miners’ Country,” The New Republic (March 26, 1924), p. 123.

[60] Ibid., p. 124.

[61] Studs Terkel, Hard Times (New York, 1970), pp. 229–230.

[62] Robert and Helen Lynd, Middletown (New York, 1929). pp. 333, 364–366, 479.

[63] George Brown Tindall, The Emergence of the New South (Baton Rouge, 1967), p. 196: “careful historians have found that neither the major church bodies and periodicals nor fundamentalist leaders ever worked closely with the Klan.” There seems to have been even less of a connection between the churches and the Klan in the North.

[64] Ibid, p. 191.

[65] George E. Mowry, The Urban Nation (New York, 1965), p. 34.

[66] Degler, op.cit., p. 441.

[67] Crownover, op. cit., pp. 69–70.

[68] Loucks, op.cit., p. 165.

[69] Zerzan, “Origins and Meaning of World War I,” Telos 49, esp. pp. 107–108.

[70] Stewart Ewen, Captains of Consciousness: Advertising and the Roots of the Consumer Society (New York, 1977). For example, pp. 189–190, 201.

[71] Special thanks to Neill Herring of Atlanta, Susan Thrasher of New Market, Tennessee, and Bob Hall of chapel Hill, North Carolina.

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