The History of the Original
Ku Klux Klan
When
an American has been born who can write an impartial history of the ten years
of our country immediately succeeding Appomattox, and deal fairly with the
opposing factions in the bitter and frequently bloody after-struggle, he will
find nothing so remarkable and mysterious as the purposes and history of
"The Invisible Empire," more commonly known as the "Ku Klux
Klan." It sprang into being almost in a night; it spread with
inconceivable rapidity, until its "dens" largely dominated the States
of Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Florida, and parts of Arkansas and Louisiana. It defied State and national
authority (as they then existed), and under the very nose of the army of the
United States it sent forth 100,000 armed men to do its bidding, passed laws
without Legislatures, tried men without courts, and inflicted penalties,
sometimes capital ones, without benefit of clergy; it was the most thoroughly organized,
extensive, and effective vigilance committee the world has ever seen; or is
likely to see; its every act was in defiance of the established order and the
spirit and letter of our institutions, and yet I am thoroughly convinced that,
among conditions as they existed in the States referred to between 1866 and
1872, scarcely a man in this assembly would have been other than a Ku Klux or a
Ku Klux sympathizer. I do not mean that anyone present could for an instant
tolerate or excuse many acts of cruelty and oppression committed by "The
Invisible Empire," or the still larger number committed in its name by its
enemies and reckless and malicious individuals, who had no real connection with
the movement; I do not mean that the original design of the organization,
treated as an academic question, could meet with the approval of right-minded
men; but an individual can be properly judged only in the light of surroundings
and the conditions under which he acts; applying this standard, the Ku Klux
movement assumes the dignity of a revolution, the protest of a proud and
despairing race against conditions not to be endured; not a movement of
weaklings or theorists, but of desperate men, challenging fate, and swearing
that life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness should be theirs and their
children's at any cost.
All
authorities have not agreed on what constitutes the right of revolution; it is
stated by one that "The right of revolution is the inherent right of a
people to cast out their rulers, change their polity, or effect radical reforms
in their system of government or institutions, by force or a general uprising,
when the legal and constitutional methods of making such changes have proved
inadequate, or are so obstructed as to be unavailable." (Black's Constitutional
Law, 2nd Ed., p.11.)
Another
says - "The general duty of obedience to the laws results from the
protection they afford to the lives and property of the citizens and subjects;
but when a civil government fails to afford that protection, and obstinately
persists in a course injurious to the people, and when the probable evils
accompanying the change are not greater than the blessings to be obtained by
it, revolution becomes a duty as well as a right." (Sir Sherston Baker,)
Still
a third says - "When a long train of abuses and usurpation's, pursuing
invariably the same object, evinces a design to reduce them under an absolute
despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government,
and to provide new guards for their security."(Halleck on International
Law.)
It
has been contended by some that the right of revolution exists in instances
where there is a reasonable probability of its being successfully asserted, and
it may be said that a revolution is a rebellion which succeeds, while a
rebellion is a revolution which fails; measured by any of these rules, the Ku
Klux movement must be set down as a revolution, in that it accomplished certain
results when all other measurers had failed.
The
author of this paper was born during the war and raised on a plantation in
Monroe County, Mississippi, near the Tombigbee River; it was a section devoted
to cotton raising, the Negroes outnumbered the whites about four or five to
one, and no portion of the South suffered more from the horrors of reconstruction
or responded more militantly to the call of "The Invisible Empire."
As
a child the writer has spent many a winter's evening in the Negro quarter
listening to the weird stories of phantom horses and gigantic riders who
nightly kept the countryside in fear, of ghostly visitors whose grinning skulls
were carried under their arms and whose skeleton hands were offered in
salutation, and of how each night they came from the graves of Shiloh and
Vicksburg to ride again and warn the wandering Negro to stay by his own
fireside and not tempt Providence by nocturnal meetings.
As
the years rolled by the child gradually learned who the riders were, and why
they rode; he came to know that perhaps all the adult male members of his own
family had been Ku Klux, and in writing and by word of mouth received from
survivors a clearer insight into what has never been half understood at the
North and not fully at the South. In his search for the truth the writer has
not hesitated in appropriating from several excellent articles on the subject
important facts and figures; an article written by D.L. Wilson, which appeared
in the July Century for 1884, entitled "The Ku Klux Klan,"
and one published by William Garrott Brown in The Atlantic Monthly of
May, 1901, with the title "The Ku Klux Movement," have been
especially helpful, and quotations from both have been freely indulged in in
several instances.
In
order to understand the remarkable conditions existing when the order sprang
into being, it is necessary to glance at national legislation and policy
between 1865 and 1872.
Perhaps
the greatest misfortune which could have befallen the South was the
assassination of Abraham Lincoln; he was not only a great man, but he was a
kind and generous man, who, throughout the war, looked upon the South as an
erring child to be brought back, forcibly in necessary, into its father's
house, and in dealing with the great problems immediately following the war he
would have acted with "charity for all, with malice towards none,"
Perhaps
the second greatest misfortune which could have befallen the South was the
succession of Andrew Johnson to the presidency. With the single exception of
Aaron Burr, no public man of our country has suffered so much at the hands of
his contemporaries as has Andrew Johnson; despised by the South as a renegade,
first distrusted and finally hated by the Republicans with a venom unsurpassed
in public life, he was ground between the upper and nether millstones. As a
matter of fact, honesty and consistency marked his remarkable political career,
but no man was ever more brutal or less diplomatic in dealing with delicate
situations or endowed with such a faculty for doing the right thing in the
wrong way.
It
hardly admits of question but that Johnson adopted, almost in total,
the plan Mr. Lincoln had mapped out for dealing with the Southern States,
involving the immediate organization of the State governments and their
representation in both Houses of Congress.
The
details of the plan included the appointment of a provisional governor by the
President in each State , and the calling of a Constitutional Convention with
delegates selected by those who were qualified voters under the old laws and
would take the oath of allegiance prescribed by the Amnesty proclamation; it was
also Mr. Lincoln's plan to admit as voters such Negroes as could read and write
and had served in the Union army.
When
Congress met in December, 1865, the Southern States had carried out the design
of the President.
It
must be borne in mind that throughout the war and up to this time the North and
the Republican party had uniformly contended that the Southern States had never
been out of the Union, that the Union and the States were indestructible, and
that there was no way by which any of them could get out/ this had been
announced in various resolutions of Congress and proclamations of Mr. Lincoln,
and was in fact the only theory on which the position of the Union in the war
between the States could be sustained.
Immediately
on the collapse of the Confederacy the views of the leaders of the Republican
party underwent a startling change; Thaddeaus Stevens, as leader in the House,
and Wade and Sumner in the Senate began to preach the doctrine that the
Southern States had become conquered provinces, that all Federal laws and
guarantees of the Constitution of the United States were suspended within their
limits, and that Congress alone could restore the laws and rights so suspended.
It the Southern States were still States of the Union, then their citizens were
entitled to all the guarantees of the Federal Constitution; if they were no
longer States, that a successful war waged to preserve the Union had resulted
in its dissolution.
It
is not the purpose of this paper to discuss the motives that inspired these men.
It is to be noted, however, that at the very time the dominant party in
Congress was denying the existence of these States as such, the Supreme Court
of the United States was recognized their existence by trying cases brought by
and against them as States, the justices of the court were sitting on Circuit
in these States, which was permissible only in the event tat they were States,
and their votes as States had just been considered and counted in the adoption
of the Thirteenth Amendment, which otherwise could not have been adopted, as
the Southern States constituted over one-fourth of those in the Union.
The
personal and political strength of Mr. Lincoln, coupled with the fact that he
was one of the original leaders and organizers of the Republican party, might
have enabled him to succeed where Johnson failed. Andrew Johnson was never a
Republican, but a States Rights Union Democrat, and in 1864 was placed on the
Republican ticket as a sop to the War Democrats of the North and to strengthen
the administration in the border States.
The
North had hardly recovered from the first sensation of horror over the
assassination of Mr. Lincoln and corresponding bitterness towards the South,
before President Johnson announced his policy, and the long contest between the
Executive and Legislative Departments of the National Government began.
The
first open rupture occurred in February, 1866, when the President vetoed what
is known as the "Freedmen's Bureau Bill," which was passed in
a slightly different shape over his second veto on July 16th of the same year.
The
bill established a bureau, to be a part of the War Department, which was to
have jurisdiction over all matters pertaining to freedmen; it provided for
agents to be appointed from the army, or civil life, in all counties of the
South, who were to exercise the powers of military judges; among other vague
and indefinite provisions it contained the following:
"The
President shall, through the commissioner and the officers of the bureau, and
under such rules and regulations as the President, through the Secretary of
War, shall prescribe, extend military protection and have military jurisdiction
over all cases and questions concerning the free enjoyment of such immunities
and rights" as are guaranteed to freedmen by the terms of the bill; these
agents likewise exercised jurisdiction over all matters of contract between
Negroes and white men; In trials before them, the ordinary rules of law
governing procedure were abolished, the right of trial by jury was denied, no
presentment or indictment was required, the punishments were not fixed by law,
but were such as the different agents might deem proper and adequate, and from
these remarkable tribunals no appeal lay to any of the courts vested by the
Constitution of the United States with the exclusive judicial powers of the
Nation. Last, but not least, a detail of troops was at the beck and call of
each agent to enable him to enforce his extraordinary jurisdiction. Although
the Constitution of the United States provides that every State shall have at
least on representative in Congress and that no State, without its consent,
shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate, not a single member of
either House of Congress from any of the States affected by this bill was recognized
or allowed to participate in the proceedings of Congress when it was being
passed, although, under proclamation of the President, their State governments
had been duly organized and their elected representatives were at Washington
demanding their seats.
At
this day it will not be seriously contended that this legislation was warranted
as a war measure, for the war had been over for more than a year, and the
authority of the United States was not being questioned in any portion of the
South.
In
the spring and summer of 1867 Congress passed, over the President's veto, three
bills providing for "the more efficient government of the rebel
States."
These
bills divided ten of the Southern States into five military districts, each to
be ruled over by an army officer not below the rank of brigadier general; his
duties and authority were "to protect all persons in their rights of
person and property; to suppress insurrection, disorder, and violence, and to
punish, or cause to be punished, all disturbers of the public peace and
criminals"; one provision declared all interference by State authority
void; another provided that the military commander might "allow local
civil tribunals to try offenders," but left it to his discretion whether
he should do so or not; another gave the commander the power to suspend or
remove from office, or from the performance of official duties, all civil or
military officers of any State or municipality, and fill their places with such
soldiers or civilians as he saw fit; the effect of this legislation was to
abolish the trial by jury in all criminal and civil cases, to proclaim martial
law and thereby suspend the writ of habeas corpus to authorize arrests without
warrant, abolish indictment and presentment for crime, discard process of law,
and make the citizen and his property answerable to the will or caprice of a
military officer from whose decision there was no appeal, except in case of a
death sentence, when the approval of the President was required; the power was
also given to the military commander to delegate most of these powers to
whatever subordinates he saw fit. Not only did this legislation violate almost
every guarantee of the State and Federal Constitutions, but it gave to a
subordinate military officer powers which the combined legislative, executive,
and judicial branches of the National Government could not exercise.
In
one of his veto measures Andrew Johnson truthfully said, "Such a
power has not been wielded by any monarch in England for more than five hundred
years. In all that time no people who speak the English language have borne
such servitude."
In
this legislation it was also proved that the prescribed military rule was to
continue until the ten States held constitutional conventions in a manner set
out, elected delegates thereto under domination of the military, adopted
constitutions satisfactory to Congress, had their Legislatures adopt the
Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and until said
amendment had been adopted by three-fourths of the States of the entire Union.
When
it is added that up to 1872 all white men were disfranchised and forbidden to
hold any State or Federal office who had been engaged in insurrection forgiven
aid or comfort to the enemies of the United States and had previously held any
State or Federal office, it will be seen how complete was the scheme of
reconstruction.
The
only possible excuse for the plan was that the condition of the country
demanded martial law and the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, and this
is fully met by calling attention to the fact that the suspension of this great
writ is prohibited by the Constitution except in cases of "rebellion or
invasion"; no one will seriously contend that either of these conditions
existed.
The
Civil Rights Bill, passed several years later through the influence of Charles
Summer, completed what are usually considered the reconstruction acts. Sumner
is said to have been a believer in the social equality of the Negro, and for
the purpose of forcing this on the South a bill was put through Congress
authorizing the United States courts, by heavy penalties, to compel admission
of Negroes to hotels, theaters, schools, etc., and upon juries. This last act
was held unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1883. A
bill was also introduced by Thaddeus Stevens to confiscate the property of all
persons who participated in the rebellion, but his never became a law.
The
writer of this paper is willing to let these acts speak for themselves without
further comment, except to quote the recent public denunciation of them by
Chas. Francis Adams as "impossible and indefensible."
But,
if the reconstruction laws were unconstitutional, and wrong and vicious in
theory, their practical application to the situation was infinitely worse;
substantially all of the intelligent class of the South were disfranchised; the
Negroes, not one of whom out of every hundred could either read or write,
constituted almost the entire voting population carpetbaggers from the North
and scalawags from the South, composed almost exclusively of the very scum of
creation, organized and controlled the Negro vote, held the more lucrative
offices and began an era of corruption and plunder unheard of before in the
history of America. Even Republican papers admitted the conditions.
An
editorial of The Nation, issued March 23, 1871 says, "We owe it
to human nature to say that worse governments have seldom been seen in a
civilized country. They have been largely composed of trashy whites and
ignorant blacks. The great majority of the officers and legislators have been
either wanting in knowledge or in principle, or in both."
In
another leader, issued March 30th of the same year, the same paper says. "Nothing
would satisfy the hot-headed majority in Congress but to drive these men (the
Southern leaders) into private life, and hand over the government to ignorant
Negroes and worthless Northern adventurers."
The
Charleston Daily Republican, speaking of the appointed officers in
South Carolina, says: Some of them had better hammer stone in the penitentiary
than hold office," and speaking of the elected Negro officers, it says, "many
are ignorant and degraded and altogether sold to the devil."
Undoubtedly
a few good men came South at the close of the war, but it can be truthfully
said of the great mass that no Goth who followed the banner of Alaric to the
sack of Rome was a more ruthless destroyer of property, or held in greater
contempt the rights of a prostrate people than did the carpetbaggers who
followed in the wake of the Federal armies.
A
few figures will give some faint idea of the results of this saturnalia of
ignorance and corruption. In Mississippi 6,4000,000 acres of land, being 20
percent of the total acreage of the State, was forfeited for taxes, the State
tax for 1871 being four times as great as for 1869, that of 1873 eight times as
great, and that of 1874 fourteen times as great; State, county and municipal
taxes aggregated an amount equivalent to confiscation, and values for taxation
were frequently placed by Negro boards of supervisors at from two to four times
the actual values.
In
South Carolina the taxes in 1860 amounted to $400,000, while in 1871 they
amounted to $2,000,000, though the taxable values had shrunk from $490,000,000
to $184,000,000, thus making the rate of taxation almost fifteen times greater.
The result was that a large part of the land was forfeited and lay waste or was
parceled out among Negroes. Notwithstanding this enormous tax, the debt of the
State increased from $1,000,000 in 1867 to $5,000,000 in 1868 and to
$30,000,000 in 1872.
During
the Same period the debt of Louisiana increased from $6,500,000 to $50,000,000.
The
affairs of counties, towns and villages were in even worse condition, most of
their officers being Negroes, who could neither read nor write, and "who
knew none of the uses of authority except its insolence."
The
utter bankruptcy of States, counties and cities and their citizens was the
least of the evils which prevailed.
Thousands of Negroes left the farms and crowded into the towns and
villages to live on the bounty of the government and exercise the rights of
suffrage and office holding denied to their late masters; many of them were
armed and organized into militia companies, Southern white men being excluded
from these bodies; the agents of the Freedmen's' Bureau and the judges of the
courts were largely prejudiced against the native whites, and frequently
profoundly ignorant, and many members of the constabulary were unable to write
a return upon a writ; drunken and insolent Negroes thronged the streets, and
white women were frequently subjected to the vilest insults; Federal troops
were quartered in the towns and often used to enforce the malice or caprice of
agents of the Freedmen's Bureau and Negroes and Northern adventurers; men and
women were frequently arrested without warrant or specific charge and carried
forty or fifty miles from their homes and imprisoned for indefinite periods
without a hearing and finally discharged without even appearing before a judge;
Woodrow
Wilson in his History of the American People, says:"The white men
of the South were aroused by the very instinct of self-preservation to rid
themselves, by fair means or foul, of the intolerable burden of government
sustained by the votes of ignorant Negroes and conducted in the interest of
adventure; governments whose incredible debts were incurred that thieves might
be enriched, whose increasing loans and taxes went to no public use, but into
the pockets of party managers and corrupt contractors. There was no place of
open action or of Constitutional agitation, under the terms of reconstruction,
for the men who were the real leaders of the Southern communities. Its
restrictions shut white men of the older order out from the suffrage even. They
could act only by private combination, by private means, as a force outside of
the government, hostile to it, proscribed by it, of whom opposition and bitter
resistance was expected, and expected with defiance."
The
men of the South had seen the last hope from constituted authority dissipated;
there remained "nothing less than the corruption and destruction of their
society, a reign of ignorance, a regime of power basely used, " under
which they and their wives and children could hope for no protection of life,
liberty or property, and at this point they gathered for resistance.
Curiously enough, fate had prepared a potent weapon, and at the critical
moment thrust it into the hands of these desperate and despairing men.
On
Christmas eve in 1865 in the law office of Judge Thomas Jones, in the little
town of Pulaski, in Southern Tennessee, near the Alabama line, six young men,
all confederate veterans, concluded to organize a society of some kind; some
one suggested that they call it "Kuklid," from the Greek word Kuklos,
meaning a circle, and some other person present said, "Call it Ku
Klux"; the word "Klan" was then added to complete the
alliteration. In order to arouse public curiosity and surround the organization
with an atmosphere of mystery, various devices were resorted to; the oath bound
the member to absolute secrecy in regard to everything pertaining to the order,
and he was prohibited from disclosing the fact that he was a Ku Klux, or giving
the name of any other member, or soliciting membership; each member was
required to appear at the meetings arrayed in a long robe with a white mask and
very tall hat made of white pasteboard; the meetings were held at night in the
cellar of a deserted brick house standing on a hill near the town. The officers
were a "Grand Cyclops," who presided at the meetings; a "Grand
Maji, " who was a kind of vice-president; a "Grand Turk," or
marshal, a "Grand Exchequer," who acted as treasurer, and two
"Lictors, who were the outer and inner guards of the "Den." One
of these "Licotrs: was stationed in front of the old ruin and another
between it and town, both dressed in the hideous regalia of the order and
bearing enormous spears. The only business transacted at the meetings was the
initiation of new members with the most fantastic of ceremonies, and the only
purpose of the order was to mystify outsiders and have fun. During the summer
the membership rapidly increased, the local papers contained many references to
it, and the probable objects of the movement were being generally discussed;
young men from the country and neighboring counties were initiated and
organized "dens" in their neighborhoods, the same mystery and secrecy
being maintained. The red lights and uproar of initiations seen and heard at
midnight from graveyards and haunted houses were duly reported and repeated in
the Negro quarter and among whites of the lower classes with every exaggeration
which ignorance and suppression could suggest. Acting on mysterious statements
from gigantic shrouded figures who frequented lonely country roads a midnight,
it began to be bruited abroad the the Ku Klux were the spirits of dead
Confederate soldiers. Travel along the roads on which the ghostly
"Lictors" stood sentinel was almost discontinued at night, and even
the wisest and least imaginative persons began to wonder what it all meant.
The
most remarkable characteristics of the Negro race at the present day are their
vivid imagination and universal superstition; during slavery and the years
following the war, for obvious reasons these characteristics were much more
pronounced than now.
The
Ku Klux Klan readily appealed to these people as an incation of powers of
darkness, and it was soon noticed that in neighborhoods where "dens"
were actively operating no Negro could be induced to budge beyond his doorsill
after dark.
The
rapidity with which the order spread during the winter of 1865-1866 was
marvelous, and yet there was still no serious purpose behind the movement and
nothing to support it beyond the enjoyment of the initiations and the baffled
curiosity of the mystified public. As time went by, however, and the members
began to realize the amazing influence of the unknown over the minds and
actions of men, and what a power was in there hands, and saw the unexampled
rapidity with which the order crossed mountains and rivers and states, they
themselves began to be imbued with that the idea that some great mission
awaited the movement. The discovery of such a mission was not difficult; the
need of some drastic remedy for existing conditions was recognized by all, and
the terror inspired by the Ku Klux Klan suggested that it might be utilized to
protect property and suppress crime and disorder.
At
this time there were probably several hundred "dens" in Middle and
West Tennessee, and a number in Mississippi and Alabama, but they had no
general organization, no means of communication, no supreme authority, and in
fact, they had no need of such things; the idea of using the order as patrols,
or "patter rollers," and regulators seemed to spontaneously spring up
over the entire region dominated by the "dens," without an
consultation, or chance for consultation among the scattered local leaders, and
was promptly acted on. As soon as this developed, it was deemed best to perfect
a more regular organization, and in the spring of 1867 the "Grand
Cyclops" of the Pulaski "den" sent out a request to all dens of
which he had knowledge to send delegates to a convention to be held in
Nashville; these delegates met secretly without attracting public attention,
and adopted a plan of organization. The region in which the Klan operated was
to be known as the "The Invisible Empire," divided into Realms,"
corresponding with states; each "Realm" was divided into
"Dominions," corresponding with congressional districts; each
"Dominion" into "provinces," corresponding with counties,
and each "Province" into "Dens."
The
supreme head of the order was the "Grand Wizard, " the ruler of a
"Realm" was a "Grand Dragon," that of a
"Dominion" a "Grand Titan," That of a "Province"
a "Grand Giant," and that of a "Den" a "Grand Cyclops."
A
statement of the principles of the order, not for publication, contained the
following words:
"We
recognize our relation to the United States Government, the supremacy of the
Constitution, the Constitutional laws thereof, and the Union of the States
there under."
The
special objects of the order were set out as follows:
"(1)
To protect the weak, the innocent, and the defenseless from the indignities,
wrongs, and outrages of the lawless, the violent, and the brutal; to relieve
the injured and the oppressed; to secure the suffering and unfortunate, and
especially the widows and orphans of Confederate soldiers.
(2)
To protect and defend the Constitution of the United States, and all laws
passed in conformity thereto, and to protect the States and people thereof from
all invasion from any source whatever.
(3)
To aid and assist in the execution of all Constitutional laws, and to protect
the people from unlawful seizure, and from trial, except by their peers, in
conformity with the laws of the land."
The
secret Nashville convention gave a still greater impetus to the movement, for
the same unbearable conditions existed in almost every Southern community, and
the belief that nothing could be hoped for from national or local authorities
was prevalent and well founded. In order to more effectively carry out their
plans, and deceive the public as to their members, the "Grand Dragon"
of the "Realm" of Tennessee issued an order for a general parade in
each county seat on the night of July 4, 1867. A faint idea of the impression
created can be gathered from the account of an eye-witness of what occurred in
Pulaski. "On the morning of that day the citizens found the sidewalks
thickly strews with slips of paper bearing the printed words: "The Ku Klux
will parade the streets tonight.' This announcement created great excitement.
The people supposed that their curiosity, so long baffled, would now be
gratified. They were confident that this parade would at least afford them the
opportunity of learning who belonged to the Ku Klux Klan.
Many
came from the surrounding country. The members of the Klan in the county left
their homes in the afternoon, and traveled alone or in squads of two or three,
with their parapher"Soon after nightfall the streets were lined with an
expectant and excited throng of people. nalia carefully concealed. If
questioned, they answered that they were going to Pulaski to see the Ku Klux
parade. After nightfall they assembled at designated points near the four main
roads leading into the town. Here they donned their robes and disguises, and
put covers of gaudy materials on their horses. A skyrocket sent up from a point
in the town was the signal to mount and move. The different companies met and
joined each other on the public square in perfect silence; the discipline
appeared to be admirable. Not a word was spoken. Necessary orders were given by
means of whistles. In single file, in deathlike stillness, with funeral
slowness, they marched and countermarched throughout the town. While the column
was headed north on one street it was going south on another. By crossing over
in opposite directions the lines were kept up in almost unbroken continuity.
The effect was to create the impression of vast numbers. This marching and
countermarching was kept up for about 2 hours, and the Klan departed as
noiselessly as they came The public was more than ever mystified. The efforts
of the most curious to find out who were Ku Klux failed. One gentleman from the
country was confident that he could identify the riders by the horses, but, as
we have said the horses were disguised as well as the riders. Determined not to
be baffled, during a halt of the column he lifted the cover of a horse that was
near him and recognized his own steed and saddle, on which he had ridden into
town. The town people were on the alert to see who of the young men of the town
would be Ku Klux. All of them, almost without exception, were marked mingling
freely and conspicuously with the spectators.
"Perhaps
the greatest illusion produced was in regard to the numbers taking part in the
parade. Reputable citizens were confident that the number was not less than
three thousand. Others, whose imaginations were more easily wrought upon, were
quite certain there were ten thousand. The truth is that the number of Ku Klux
in the parade did not exceed four hundred."
It
is safe to say that 90 percent of the work of the Klan involved no personal
violence. In most instances mere knowledge of the fact that the Ku Klux were
organized in the community and patrolled it by night accomplished most that was
desired; in case the nocturnal political meetings of the Negroes, organized by
the scalawags and carpetbaggers, proved disorderly and offensive, sheeted
horsemen would be found drawn up across every road leading from the meting
place, and, though not a word was spoken, and no violence whatever offered,
that meeting usually adjourned; sometimes the entire Klan was divided into
smaller bodies, which rode all night , appearing in Negro quarters distributed
over a large section of country, and usually maintain absolute silence and
troubling no one. In case a Negro became insolent or dangerous, he was likely
to be visited by a mounted specter some twelve feet high, who asked for water,
drank a bucket full with the remark that it was the first he had tasted since
he was killed at the battle of Shiloh, extended a skeleton hand, or what
appeared to be his skull, to his unwilling host, and departed with the
suggestion that he would call again in case the owner of the cabin did not
improve his manners. No one who was not raised among Negroes can form the
slightest conception of the potency of these methods.
In
dealing with objectionable characters among the whites, mysterious
communications, sealed with skull and crossbones, were usually pinned upon
their doors at night, warning them to mend their ways or leave the country. In
many instances all the officers of a county were notified that it was time for
them to depart, and they did so with no unnecessary delay.
There
lives in the capital City of Texas an honorable member of our profession, who
has held for many years one of the highest positions within the gift of the
state, who organized every "Den" in the state of Florida. I have his
word for it that not one single act of personal violence was committed by any
one of these "Dens." Their most noteworthy achievement was the
destruction of the entire shipment of guns sent from the North to arm the Negro
militia of the State. Every telegraph operator, brakeman, engineer and
conductor on the road over which these arms entered the State was a Ku Klux;
the shipment was watched at every point, and between Lake City and Madison,
Florida, the entire two carloads of guns were thrown from the moving train by
night by a select band of Ku Klux under the personal command of this gentleman,
who had quietly boarded the train at the last stop. The Ku Klux left the train
at the next station and destroyed the shipment before it was missed, and this
notwithstanding the fact that two coaches filled with United States soldiers,
sent to guard the arms, were attached to the same train. I am informed by one
who participated in the movement that when the 1500 stand of arms intended for
the Negro militia of Arkansas left Memphis on the steamer "Hsper," it
was overtaken by a tug and the entire shipment broken and thrown into the
river.
The
men who committed these acts may be condemned by some as lawless, but the
destruction of tea in Boston Harbor by comparison becomes rank piracy.
But
masked riders and mystery were not the only Ku Klux devices; carpetbaggers and scalawags
and their families were ostracized in all walks of life; in the church, in the
school, in business wherever men or women, or even children gathered together,
no matter what the purpose or the place, the alien and the renegade, and all
that belonged or pertained to them, were refused recognition and consigned to
outer darkness and the companionship of Negroes.
In
addition to these methods there were some of a much more drastic nature; the
sheeted horsemen did not merely warn and intimidate, especially when the
warnings were not heeded. In many instances Negroes and carpetbaggers were
whipped, and in rare instances shot or hung. Notice to leave the country was
frequently extended and rarely declined, and , if declined, the results were
likely to be serious. Hanging was promptly administered to the house burner,
and sometimes to the murderer; the defamer of women of good character was
usually whipped, and sometimes executed if the offense was repeated; threats of
violence and oppression of the weak and defenseless, if persisted in after due
warning, met with drastic and sometimes cruel remedies; mere corruption in
public office was too universal for punishment, or even comment, but he who
prostituted officilial power to oppress the individual, a crime prevalent from
one end of the country to the other, especially in cases where it affected the
widow and the orphan, was likely to be dealt with in no gently way, in case a
warning was not promptly observed; those who advocated and practiced social
equality of the races and incited hostility of the blacks against the whites
were given a single notice to depart in haste, and they rarely took time to
reply.
I
have in my possession a letter recently received from one who in his young
manhood was one of the advisers and leaders of the Klan in East Mississippi,
and who subsequently for years served his State with distinction in the
National Congress. I quote this language of his, worthy of all acceptation:
"No
Victim of their displeasure never suffered without first a full and ample
investigation of his case, ex pâté, 'tis true, but all the facts were first
found out and thoughtfully weighed, for and against him, and the sentence
carefully considered and made commensurate with the justice and necessity of
the case. They made the punishment suit the crime." Where good men
controlled little real injustice was done, but in many instances
"Dens" were dominated by the reckless and the cruel. These men
committed crimes equal to, or worse than those the movement was intended to
suppress, and ultimately brought the greatest reproach upon the order. The
writer, after going over a very large amount of data, include a hurried perusal
of some thirteen volumes devoted by the committees of Congress to the subject,
has become fully convinced that in a vast majority of cases the victims of the
Ku Klux Klan received just about what they were entitled to.
On
account of the secret character of the Klan, it was impossible for it to defend
itself against many false accusations. Violence and crimes with which it had no
connection were constantly charged to it, and it is well known that many
arrests were made of lawless persons clothed in the Ku Klux disguise, who did
have, and could have had no connection whatever with the order.
"
But the Invisible Empire, however its sway was exercised, was a real empire.
Wisely and humanely, or roughly and cruelly, the work was done. the State
governments, under carpetbag control, made little headway with their
freedmen's/ militia against the silent representatives of the white man's
will." Acts of Congress and proclamations of President Grant, backed by
the army of the Nation, were not sufficient to meet the desperate onset of men
who, armed with crude weapons, were making what seemed to them the last stand
for all they held sacred. Time is not allowed to review the history of the
order in the different States; in some it lasted much longer than in others,
because the conditions it was intended to remedy lasted longer.
In
September, 1868, Cover nor Brlownlow called the Legislature of Tennessee
together and had an at passed comparable only to the reconstruction acts of
Congress. By its terms association or connection with the Klan was punished by
a fine of $500 and imprisonment in the penitentiary for not less than five
years; every inhabitant of the state was constituted an officer with power to
arrest without process anyone known to be, or suspected of being, a Ku Klux; to
feed, lodge, entertain or conceal a ku Klux subjected the offender to a fine of
k$500 and imprisonment for five years, and informers were offered one-half of
the fine.
Notwithstanding
these drastic provisions, the Ku Klux continued to actively operate in
Tennessee for about six months thereafter. In the latter part of February,
1869, the "Grand Wizard," a citizen of Tennessee, issue a
proclamation to his subjects, reciting the legislation against the Klan,
stating that the order had now largely accomplished the purposes for which it
had been organized; that the civil law now afforded adequate protection to life
and property; that robbery and lawlessness were longer unrebuked; that the
better elements of society were no longer in dread for the safety of their
property, persons and families; that the "Grand Wizard" had been
invested with power to determine questions of paramount importance, and , in
the exercise of the power so conferred, he declared the Klan dissolved and
disbanded. It is believed that "Grand Wizard" was no less a personage
than Nathan Bedford Forrest. As the possessor of dauntless and sustained
courage, resourcefulness and a grim disregard of all consequences, no more
ideal leader of such a movement ever appeared upon the American Stage. This
proclamation was addressed to all "Realms," "Dominions," "Provinces"
and "Dens" of the "Empire," but it had little effect beyond
the borders of one State. Tennessee was the first Southern State in which
constitutional government was restored and the scheme of reconstruction
abounded. the writer is satisfied that as late as 1872 the Klan was a potent
factor in other States.
As
a general rule, this grim protest against unbearable conditions disappeared
with the worst of the conditions, and not sooner.
In
1870, 1871, and 1872 the Ku Klux Klan consumed a large part of the attention of
Congress, the President, and the army of the United States; investigating
committees visited every section of the South, many volumes of testimony were
compiled, hundreds of speeches were made, martial law was declared in some
instances, and proclamations issued in others, still more drastic laws were
passed; but in the face of all this, the movement relentlessly moved on to the
accomplishment of its purposes.
The
Senate investigating committee and the joint committee of the Houses of
Congress each presented majority and minority reports; the first to the effect
that a conspiracy existed in the South, of a political nature, against law and
the Negro; the second, that misgovernment and criminal exploiting of the
country by the reconstruction leaders had provoked natural resistance.
The
great debates in Congress and the press of the country began to educate the
people as to the awful conditions which had prevailed, and the revolution
resorted to as a remedy.
In
1872 Congress passed an act restoring the right vote and hold office to the
real leaders and capable men of the South, the worst conditions had
disappeared, he troops had been withdrawn, and what was known in the North as
"The Great Ku Klux Conspiracy" was at an end.
Just
how much the acts of Congress and of the President had to do with the
disappearance of the order it is hard to say, but the scalawag and the
carpetbagger disappeared about the same time, and it might be said that the
purposes of the Klan had been substantially accomplished. The belief of most people
in the North that the movement was organized and controlled by roughs and
criminals associated together for the commission of crime and bent on
re-enslaving the Negro and driving has Northern protectors from the South, is
not sustained by the facts. The men who engaged in this movement were largely
of the very best.
The
leading editorial in The Nation of March 30, 1871, speaking of the
ignorance and corruption of the carpetbag regime, says:
"We
might be told that phenomena like these may be witnessed in New York, which is
true. But in New York no one is disfranchised, and we may add that, were decent
people in new York hot-blooded, like the same class in South Carolina, and did
they believe, as the South Carolinians do, that Ku Kluxing would work reform,
they would be busy at it day and night, andy many a hardened ruffian would be
yelling for Federal troops to save him from the consequences of his villiany.
We say deliberately, too, that we believe a community which sits down, as we
do, under some of the evils from which we here suffer and of which we hear
every day is doubtless wiser than the South Carolinians, but it is very
doubtful whether it is healthier in spirit. We seek neither to defend nor
palliate Ku Kluxs, but we can not allow the persons who sow the seeds from
which Ku Kluxery naturally springs to throw the whole blame on the men who
engage in it."
Speaking
of the typical Southern man of that day, Daniel H. Chamberlain, the
reconstruction ruler of South Carolina, said: "I consider him a distinct
and really noble growth of our American soil. For, if fortitude under good and
under evil fortune, if endurance without complaint of what comes in the tide of
human affairs, if a grim clinging to ideals once charming, if vigor and
resiliency of character and spirit under defeat and poverty and distress, if a
steady love of learning and letters when libraries were lost in flames and the
wreckage of war, if self-restraint when the long -delayed relief at last came; if,
I say, all these qualities are parts of real heroism, if these qualities can
vivify and ennoble a man or a people, then our own South may lay claim to an
honored place among the differing types of our great common race."
Such
was the matured judgment of the Massachusetts Governor of South Carolina during
the reconstruction period in regard to the class of men who organized and
chiefly dominated the Ku Klux Klan, and there is nothing I would wish to add to
it.
Did
the end aimed at and accomplished by the Ku Klux Klan justify the movement? The
opinion of the writer is that the movement was fully justified, though he, of
course, does not approve of crimes and excesses incident to it.
The
abuses under which the American colonies of England revolted in 1776 were mere
child's play compared to those borne by the south during the period of
reconstruction, and the success of the later movement as a justification of a
resort to revolutionary methods was as pronounced as that of the former.
Whatever
may be your views, I leave the question with you, repeating the proposition
with which I began, that, amid conditions as they existed in the South from
1866 to 1872, scarcely a man in this audience would have been other than a Ku
Klux or a Ku Klux sympathizer.