preview

The Ku Klux Klan And The Klan

Decent Essays

The Ku Klux Klan Supreme Justice Thurgood Marshall once stated that “the Ku Klux Klan never dies. They just stop wearing sheets because sheets cost too much” (Biography Staff, 2017). With the birth of America in 1776 and the Klan emerging in 1866, the not-so-invisible empire has claimed a place in America’s history. During the centuries, three summits have risen and declined, each wave becoming more open about their appearance than the last, proving to a point, that Thurgood Marshall’s quote is correct. The Ku Klux Klan, also known as the ‘KKK’ or the ‘Klan’, is a native-born hate group and according to the FBI’s definition of domestic terrorism, stating “the unlawful use, or threatened use, of force or violence…within the United …show more content…

Thus, the official name was born and would quickly spread like a plague across the South (Lester, 1905, p. 21). A year into the Klan, leaders wanted to create a hierarchical organization. As a result, in 1867, Klan’s from all over the South gathered in Tennessee and gave former Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest full control of the Klan (The History Channel, 2005). Later interviewed by a Charleston newspaper, Forrest boasted that the member count exceeded 40,000 men in Tennessee alone and over 550,000 in all the Southern states (The Charleston, 1868). Never achieving organization, local chapters continued to go about their business, settling things in a way they deemed fit, this, in turn, would be one of the reasons for the decline of the Klan. Although the Klan served as a social club, all public appearances were to be in disguise (The History Channel, 2005) to avoid identification and to scare superstitious blacks (Parsons, 2005. 812). With that, the infamous night rides became popular, where Klansmen and their horses dressed in robes and masks, portraying themselves as ghosts of Confederate soldiers. Soon, leaders decided that these rides could serve a bigger purpose – a purpose of leading a sort of war against the newly

Get Access