Description
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Ku Klux Klan,
1865-1877
Preface
I: Introduction
II: Tennessee, Pulaski
III: Alabama, Athens
IV: The First Convention
V: Fourth of July Parades
VI: Tennessee anti-Ku Klux Law
VII: President Johnson’s Policy
VIII: The Federal Ku Klux Acts
IX: The Union League of America
X: Conditions from 1870 to 1877
XI: The District of Columbia
XII: Virginia
XIII: Mississippi
XIV: Georgia
XV: North Carolina
XVI: Texas
XVII: Missouri
XVIII: Arkansas
XIX: Florida
XX: South Carolina
XXI: Louisiana
XXII: Close of the Ku Klux Klan
Index
By Susan Lawrence Davis The only officially authorized history of the original Ku Klux Klan, written by the daughter of the founder of that organization in Alabama. Written to counteract the misrepresentations made about the original KKK and its activities, this now-suppressed book contains many astonishing “insider” insights, such as:
• The KKK was financed from England by the Jewish former Secretary of State for the Confederacy Benjamin P. Judah (who fled the South at the end of the Civil War); • The KKK’s chief chaplain was a Roman Catholic; • The KKK’s chief justice was an influential North American 33rd Degree Masonic leader; • The hood—for which the KKK became famous—was in fact outlawed by the original organization because so many people were using its disguise to commit crimes in the name of the KKK; • The original KKK’s primary activity was political in nature, and their officers in various legislative bodies—reaching as high as the U.S. Senate—were focused on restoring White rule to the Southern states; • When official KKK posses were formed, they were under strict orders never to dispense mob justice or engage in whippings, lynchings or other abuses; • When rogue elements and non-KKK members started performing atrocities in the KKK’s name, the leadership ordered the organization permanently disbanded, citing such abuse of its name as the primary reason for its closure.
Written in a racially paternalistic style, this work also clearly reveals the mindset that lay behind the slave-owning era: a false belief that the Blacks were content and loyal under White rule—and that only a few Southerners understood and supported the view of President Abraham Lincoln. He believed, namely, that the Black presence posed a long-term demographic threat, and that they needed to be repatriated to Africa, rather than stay under White rule in America. It’s a sensational historical document, vital for anyone wishing to gain a proper understanding of the Southern resistance to Reconstruction. This edition has been completely reset, contains all the original images (digitally restored and improved) and is fully indexed. Authentic History: Ku Klux Klan, 1865-1877 (softcover, 229 pages, #1020.