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Ku Klux Klan members in United States politics

This is a partial list of notable historical figures in U.S. national politics who were members of the Ku Klux Klan before taking office. Membership of the Klan is secret. Political opponents sometimes allege that a person was a member of the Klan, or was supported at the polls by Klan members.[1][2]

Politicians who were active in the Klan edit

In 2018, The Washington Post reported that, by 1930, the KKK, while its "membership remained semi-secret, claimed 11 governors, 16 senators and as many as 75 congressmen – and Democrats."[3]

Supreme Court justices edit

Hugo Black edit

 
Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black

In 1921, Hugo Black (D) successfully defended E. R. Stephenson in his trial for the murder of a Catholic priest, Fr. James E. Coyle. Stephenson's daughter had converted to Catholicism and married a man of Puerto Rican descent, and Coyle had conducted the wedding. Black got Stephenson acquitted in part by arguing to the jury that Puerto Ricans should be considered black under the South's one drop rule. Black joined the Ku Klux Klan shortly afterwards, in order to gain votes from the anti-Catholic element in Alabama. He built his winning Senate campaign in 1926 around multiple appearances at KKK meetings across Alabama. Late in life, Black told an interviewer:

"At that time, I was joining every organization in sight! ... In my part of Alabama, the Klan was engaged in unlawful activities ... The general feeling in the community was that if responsible citizens didn't join the Klan it would soon become dominated by the less responsible members."[4]

News of his membership was a secret until shortly before he was confirmed as an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court in 1937. Black later said that joining the Klan was a mistake, but he went on to say, "I would have joined any group if it helped get me votes."[5][i]

On the Supreme Court, Black wrote the opinion in Korematsu v. United States, which upheld the exclusion of Japanese Americans from the West Coast. Black also wrote the opinion in Everson v. Board of Education, a key case about the separation of church and state.[6] Some have argued that his views on the separation of church and state were influenced by the Klan's anti-Catholicism.[7][8][9]

Despite his former Klan membership, Black joined the Supreme Court's unanimous decisions in Shelley v. Kraemer (1948), which outlawed judicial enforcement of racially restrictive covenants, and Brown v Board of Education, which outlawed school segregation. Justice William O. Douglas would write years later that at least three (and possibly as many as five) justices were originally planning to rule school segregation constitutional, but Black had actually been one of the four justices planning to strike down school segregation from the beginning of the Brown case.[10]

Members of the Senate edit

Theodore G. Bilbo edit

 
Theodore G. Bilbo, U.S. Senator for Mississippi

Theodore G. Bilbo (D), the U.S. Senator for Mississippi, stated he was a member of the KKK .[11]

Joseph E. Brown edit

Joseph E. Brown (D), the U.S. Senator for Georgia, was a key supporter of the KKK in his home state.[12]

Robert C. Byrd edit

 
Senator Robert Byrd was a Kleagle, a Klan recruiter, in his 20s and 30s.

Robert C. Byrd (D), the U.S. senator for West Virginia, a recruiter for the Klan while in his 20s and 30s, rising to the title of Kleagle and Exalted Cyclops of his local chapter. After leaving the group, Byrd spoke in favor of the Klan during his early political career. Though he later said he officially left the organization in 1943, Byrd wrote a letter in 1946 to the group's Imperial Wizard stating "The Klan is needed today as never before, and I am anxious to see its rebirth here in West Virginia." Byrd attempted to explain or defend his former membership in the Klan in his 1958 U.S. Senate campaign when he was 41 years old.[13] Byrd, a Democrat, eventually became his party leader in the Senate. Byrd later said joining the Klan was his "greatest mistake,"[14] and after his death, the NAACP released a statement praising Byrd, acknowledging his former affiliation with the Klan and saying that he "became a champion for civil rights and liberties" and "came to consistently support the NAACP civil rights agenda".[15] In a 2001 interview, Byrd used the term "white niggers" twice during a national television broadcast. The full quote ran as follows: "My old mom told me, 'Robert, you can't go to heaven if you hate anybody.' We practice that. There are white niggers. I've seen a lot of white niggers in my time. I'm going to use that word. We just need to work together to make our country a better country, and I'd just as soon quit talking about it so much." Byrd later apologized for the phrase and admitted that it "has no place in today's society," and did not clarify the intended meaning of the term in his context.[16][17]

John Brown Gordon edit

John Brown Gordon (D), the U.S. Senator for Georgia, was a founder of the KKK in his home state of Georgia.[12]

James Thomas Heflin edit

James Thomas Heflin (1869–1951) (D), the U.S. Senator for Alabama, was suspected of being a member of the KKK.[18]

Rufus C. Holman edit

Rufus C. Holman (R), the U.S. Senator for Oregon, was an active member of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) in Oregon, serving as an officer in that organization.[19]

Earle Mayfield edit

Earle Mayfield (1881–1964) (D), U.S. Senator (1923–1929) for Texas from 1923 through 1929. Mayfield had been a Texas Senator from 1907 through 1913.[20]

Rice W. Means edit

Rice W. Means (R), the U.S. Senator for Colorado, was the directing head of the Ku Klux Klan in Colorado.[21]

John Tyler Morgan edit

John Tyler Morgan (D) (June 20, 1824 – June 11, 1907, the U.S. Senator for Alabama (March 4, 1877, to June 11, 1907), was the Grand Dragon of the KKK in Alabama.[22][23]

Edmund Pettus edit

Edmund Pettus (July 6, 1821 – 1907) (D), the U.S. Senator for Alabama (1896 to 1907), was also a Grand Dragon of the KKK in Alabama.[24]

William Bliss Pine (Chappel) edit

William Bliss Pine (1877–1942) (R), the U.S. Senator for Oklahoma (March 4, 1925, to March 3, 1931), was a Klansman, according to historian Chalmers[25] and the Eufaula Indian Journal.[26][27]

Non-Klan Senators who received support from the Klan edit

Lawrence C. Phipps edit

The Klan helped elect Lawrence C. Phipps (1862–1958) (R), U.S. Senator for Colorado.[citation needed]

Owen Brewster edit

Republican Owen Brewster (1888-1961) received crucial support from the Klan in his election as Governor of Maine (1925-1929), and went on to become a U.S. Congressman, and then U.S. Senator (1941-1952). In the last position he was a close ally of Joseph McCarthy. Former Maine Republican governor Percival Baxter accused Brewster of having been actually inducted into the Klan.

Daniel F. Steck edit

Daniel F. Steck (1881–1950) (D), of Iowa, in 1925, with the help of the Klan, defeated Senator Smith W. Brookhart (1869–1944) (R), a progressive. Because the vote was close, there was a recount, and Steck was the victor. Brookhart contested it. Steck reportedly had no Klan connections, except that he enlisted the Klan's top lawyer and legislative expert, William Francis Zumbrunn (1877–1930), to secure his seat in the 69th Congress (1925–1926). Earlier, Zumbrunn – with lawyer William Pinkney McLean, Jr. (1872–1937) of Fort Worth – helped seat Klan Senator from Texas, Earle Mayfield.[28]

Frederick Steiwer edit

In the 1926 Oregon election, the Ku Klux Klan, under the auspices of The Oregon Good Government League, helped Frederick Steiwer (1883–1939) win the Republican primary by spreading word that it was supporting the reelection of his opponent, Senator Robert N. Stanfield (1877–1945) (R). The effort was fueled by White Supremacist (anti-immigrant, anti-Catholic) groups in Oregon in support of the state's Compulsory Education Act, enacted in 1922, mandating public education; which would have taken effect in 1926; but the Supreme Court, in 1925, struck it down in Pierce v. Society of Sisters.[29][30]

Arthur Raymond Robinson edit

Arthur Raymond Robinson (1881–1961) (R), of Indiana, was, on November 2, 1925, characterized by Time magazine was follows: "The New Man. Arthur R. Robinson is only 44. He is an Indianapolis attorney, a 'good Republican' but of no particular political importance. He is said to be a good orator. Against him politically is the fact that he supported Governor Jackson in the last election and so, justly or unjustly, he is considered a 'Klan man.'"[31]

Frank Willis edit

According to historian Chalmers, "the Klan supported Frank B. Willis (1871–1928) (R) [of Ohio] not because it liked him, but because it disliked his anti-Klan opponent, Atlee Pomerene (1863–1937) (D), more.[32]

Members of the House of Representatives edit

Clifford Davis edit

Clifford Davis (D), U.S. Representative for Tennessee's 9th and 10th congressional districts was an active member in Tennessee.

George Gordon edit

George Gordon (D), U.S. Representative for Tennessee's 10th congressional district, became one of the Klan's first members. In 1867, Gordon became the Klan's first Grand Dragon for the Realm of Tennessee, and wrote its Precscript, a constitution setting out the organization's purpose, principles, and the like.[33][34][35][36]

William David Upshaw edit

William David Upshaw (D), U.S. Representative for Georgia's 5th congressional district, was an active member in Georgia.[37]

Governors edit

Homer Martin Adkins edit

Homer Martin Adkins (D), (1890 – 1964) the Governor of Arkansas, was a supporter of the Klan in his home state of Arkansas.[38]

Bibb Graves edit

Bibb Graves (D), (1873 – 1942) was the Governor of Alabama. He lost his first campaign for governor in 1922, but four years later, with the secret endorsement of the Ku Klux Klan, he was elected to his first term as governor. Graves was almost certainly the Exalted Cyclops (chapter president) of the Montgomery chapter of the Klan. Graves, like Hugo Black, used the strength of the Klan to further his electoral prospects.[39]

Edward L. Jackson edit

Edward L. Jackson (R), (1873 – 1954) was the Governor of Indiana in 1925 and his administration came under fire for granting undue favor to the Klan's agenda and associates. Jackson was further damaged by the arrest and trial of Grand Dragon D. C. Stephenson for the rape and murder of Madge Oberholtzer. When it was revealed that Jackson had attempted to bribe former Gov. Warren T. McCray with $10,000 to appoint a Klansman to a local office, Jackson was taken to court. His case ended with a hung jury, and Jackson ended his political career in disgrace. There is, however, evidence that Jackson joined the KKK himself.[40]

Clarence Morley edit

Clarence Morley (R),(1869 – 1948) the Governor of Colorado, was a KKK member and a strong supporter of Prohibition. He tried to ban the Catholic Church from using sacramental wine and attempted to have the University of Colorado fire all Jewish and Catholic professors.[41][42][43][44]

Tom Terral edit

Tom Terral (D), ( 1882 – 1946) the Governor of Arkansas, was a member of the KKK in Louisiana.[45][46]

Clifford Walker edit

Clifford Walker (D), (1877 – 1954) the Governor of Georgia, was revealed to be a Klan member by the press in 1924.[47][48]

Federal Judges edit

Elmer David Davies edit

Elmer David Davies (D), a Federal Judge of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee, was a member of the KKK while at university.[49]

Statewide Officials edit

Lee Cazort edit

Lee Cazort (D), the Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas, was active in the Klan, and openly endorsed the Klan's platform.[50][51]

John W. Morton edit

John Morton (D), the Tennessee Secretary of State, was the founder of the Nashville chapter of the KKK[52]

William L. Saunders edit

William L. Saunders (D), the North Carolina Secretary of State, was the founder of the North Carolina chapter.[53]

Local Officials edit

A notable number of local officials were also Klansmen, resulting in such as the "reign of terror" inflicted by Louisiana by crony "exalted cyclops":[54] Bastrop mayor, John Killian Skipwith, known as Captain J. K. Skipwith, and Mer Rouge mayor, Bunnie McEwin McKoin, MD, better known as Dr. B. M. McKoin (and whose surname was variously misreported as McCoin, M'Koin and McKoln in media).[55][56]

John Clinton Porter edit

John Clinton Porter (D), was mayor of Los Angeles and an early supporter of the Klan in the 1920s.[57]

Benjamin F. Stapleton edit

Benjamin F. Stapleton (D), was Mayor of Denver in the 1920s–1940s. He was a Klan member in the early 1920s and appointed fellow Klansmen to positions in municipal government. Ultimately, Stapleton broke from the Klan and removed several Klansmen from office.[58]

Kaspar K. Kubli edit

Kap Kubli (R) Speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives from 1923 to 1924[55]

David Duke edit

David Duke (D/R), a politician who ran in both Democrat and Republican presidential primaries, was openly involved in the leadership of the Ku Klux Klan.[59] He was founder and Grand Wizard of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan in the mid-1970s; he re-titled his position as "National Director" and said that the KKK needed to "get out of the cow pasture and into hotel meeting rooms". He left the organization in 1980. He ran for president in the 1988 Democratic presidential primaries. In 1989 Duke switched political parties from Democrat to Republican.[60] In 1989, he became a member of the Louisiana State Legislature from the 81st district, and was Republican Party chairman for St. Tammany Parish.[61]

Allegations of Klan membership edit

Edward Douglass White edit

Edward Douglass White, a Democrat and the Chief Justice of the United States, was alleged to be a Klansman in one unverified source. More complete is legal historian Paul Finkelman in American National Biography (2000) about that single report: "Although the moviemaker D. W. Griffith claimed White endorsed his racist movie, The Birth of a Nation (1915), and asserted that White had been in the Ku Klux Klan, there is no evidence to support either of Griffith's contentions."[62][63]

Warren G. Harding edit

The consensus of modern historians is that Warren Harding was never a member, and instead was an important enemy of the Klan. While one source claims Warren G. Harding, a Republican, was a Ku Klux Klan member while President, that claim is based on a third-hand account of a second-hand recollection in 1985 of a deathbed statement made sometime in the late 1940s concerning an incident in the early 1920s. Independent investigations have turned up many contradictions and no supporting evidence for the claim. Historians reject the claim and note that Harding in fact publicly fought and spoke against the Klan.

The rejected claim was made by Wyn Craig Wade. He stated Harding's membership as fact and gives a detailed account of a secret swearing-in ceremony in the White House, based on a private communication he received in 1985 from journalist Stetson Kennedy. Kennedy, in turn had, along with Elizabeth Gardner, tape recorded some time in the "late 1940s" a deathbed confession of former Imperial Klokard Alton Young. Young claimed to have been a member of the "Presidential Induction Team". Young also said on his deathbed that he had repudiated racism.[64][65] In his book, The Strange Deaths of President Harding, historian Robert Ferrell says he was unable to find any records of any such "ceremony" in which Harding was brought into the Klan in the White House. John Dean, in his 2004 book Warren G. Harding, also could find no proof of Klan membership or activity on the part of Harding.[66] Review of the personal records of Harding's Personal White House Secretary, George Christian Jr., also do not support the contention that Harding received members of the Klan while in office. Appointment books maintained in the White House, detailing President Harding's daily schedules, do not show any such event.[67]

In their 2005 book Freakonomics, University of Chicago economist Steven D. Levitt and journalist Stephen J. Dubner alluded to Warren Harding's possible Klan affiliation. However, in a New York Times Magazine Freakonomics column, entitled "Hoodwinked? Does it matter if an activist who exposes the inner workings of the Ku Klux Klan isn't open about how he got those secrets?", Dubner and Levitt said that they no longer accepted Stetson Kennedy's testimony about Harding and the Klan.[68]

The 1920 Republican Party platform, which essentially expressed Harding's political philosophy, called for Congress to pass laws combating lynching.[69] Harding denounced lynching in a landmark 21 October 1921 speech in Birmingham, Alabama, which was covered in the national press. Harding also vigorously supported an anti-lynching bill in Congress during his term in the White House. His "comments about race and equality were remarkable for 1921."[70]

Payne argues that the Klan was so angry with Harding's attacks on the KKK that it originated and spread the false rumor that he was a member.[71]

Carl S. Anthony, biographer of Harding's wife, found no such proof of Harding's membership in the Klan. He does however discuss the events leading up to the period when the alleged Klan ceremony was held in June 1923:

[K]nowing that some branches of the Shriners were anti-Catholic and in that sense sympathetic to the Ku Klax Klan and that the Klan itself was holding a demonstration less than a half mile from Washington, Harding censured hate groups in his Shriners speech. The press "considered [it] a direct attack" on the Klan, particularly in light of his criticism weeks earlier of "factions of hatred and prejudice and violence [that] challeng[ed] both civil and religious liberty".[72]

In 2005, The Straight Dope presented a summary of many of these arguments against Harding's membership, and noted that, while it might have been politically expedient for him to join the KKK in public, to do it in private would have been of no benefit to him.[73]

It was falsely rumored, in his lifetime, that Harding was partly of African-American descent, so he would have been an unlikely recruit for the Ku Klux Klan.[74]

Calvin Coolidge edit

One common misconception is that President Calvin Coolidge was a Klan member,[ii] a claim that Klan websites have spread.[75] In reality, Coolidge was adamantly opposed to the Klan. According to Jerry L. Wallace at the Coolidge Foundation, "Coolidge expressed his antipathy to the Klan by reaching out in a positive, public way directly to its victims: Blacks, Jews, Catholics, and immigrants, with whom he had good relations—especially so for Irish Catholics—going back long before the rise of the Invisible Empire . . . [and] sought to highlight their positive achievements and contributions to American life."[76] Ironically, many Klan members voted for the Republican Coolidge in the 1924 presidential election because the Democratic presidential nominee John W. Davis denounced the Klan at the party's convention.[3]

Harry S. Truman edit

Harry S. Truman, the Democratic politician who became president in 1945, was accused by opponents of having dabbled with the Klan briefly. In 1922, he was running for eastern judge, this being the position for one of three court judges in Jackson County, Missouri. His friends Edgar Hinde and Spencer Salisbury advised him to join the Klan. The Klan was politically powerful in Jackson County, and two of Truman's opponents in the Democratic primary had Klan support. Truman refused at first, but paid the Klan's $10 membership fee, and a meeting with a Klan officer was arranged.[77]

According to Salisbury's version of the story, Truman was inducted, but afterward "was never active; he was just a member who wouldn't do anything". Salisbury, however, told the story after he became Truman's bitter enemy, so historians are reluctant to believe his claims.[iii]

According to Hinde and Margaret Truman's accounts, the Klan officer demanded that Truman pledge not to hire any Catholics or Jews if he was reelected. Truman refused, and demanded the return of his $10 membership fee; most of the men he had commanded in World War I had been local Irish Catholics.[iv]

Truman had at least one other strong reason to object to the anti-Catholic requirement, which was that the Catholic Pendergast family, which operated a political machine in Jackson County, were his patrons; Pendergast family lore has it that Truman was originally accepted for patronage without even meeting him, on the basis of his family background plus the fact that he was not a member of any anti-Catholic organization such as the Klan.[78] The Pendergast faction of the Democratic Party was known as the "Goats", as opposed to the rival Shannon machine's "Rabbits". The battle lines were drawn when Truman put only Goats on the county payroll,[79] and the Klan began encouraging voters to support Protestant, "100% American" candidates, allying itself against Truman and with the Rabbits, while Shannon instructed his people to vote Republican in the election, which Truman lost.[80][79]

Truman later claimed that the Klan "threatened to kill me,[81] and I went out to one of their meetings and dared them to try",[82] speculating that if Truman's armed friends had shown up earlier, violence might have resulted. However, biographer Alonzo Hamby believes that this story, which is not supported by any recorded facts, was a confabulation based on a meeting with a hostile and menacing group of Democrats that contained many Klansmen, showing Truman's "Walter Mitty-like tendency ... to rewrite his personal history".[83] Sympathetic observers see Truman's flirtation with the Klan as a momentary aberration, point out that his close friend and business partner Eddie Jacobson was Jewish, and say that in later years Truman's presidency marked the first significant improvement in the federal government's record on civil rights since the post-Reconstruction nadir marked by the Wilson administration.[v]

Lyndon B. Johnson edit

An anonymous person told the FBI that Ned O'Neal Touchstone (1926–1988) – newspaper publisher who has been chronicled as influential in radical right politics in Louisiana politics during the 1960s – was a member of a group that called itself "the Original Members of the Ku Klux Klan" and that in 1963 he claimed that the group had documented proof of Lyndon Johnson having been a member of some KKK group in the 1930s.[84]

See also edit

Bibliography edit

Annotations edit

  1. ^ Hugo Black's membership was the subject of Ray Sprigle's 1938 series of articles in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, for which Sprigle won a Pulitzer Prize.
  2. ^ Examples of unsourced (or poorly sourced) media averring that Coolidge was a member of the Klan.
    1. "Letters to the Editor". Naples Daily News. June 18, 2007. Retrieved December 22, 2020.
    2. "Presidents and Others Who Were Members of the KKK". able2know.org. Retrieved December 22, 2020.
    3. "Revealed: 5 US Presidents Members of Racist Cult Ku Klux Klan (photos)". The Trent, Nigeria's Internet Newspaper. Lagos, Nigeria: A publication of Ziza Media, A Division of Ziza Group. July 19, 2014. Retrieved December 22, 2020. (This article originally appeared July 18, 2014, on I Love Black People, then re-posted March 24, 2016, on the same site). → Same article, but archived from the July 18, 2014, post → . iloveblackpeople.net. July 2014. Archived from the original on July 21, 2014. Retrieved May 19, 2021 – via Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ Salisbury was a war buddy and former business partner of Truman's. Salisbury believed that Truman attempted "to give Jim Pendergast control of [their] business." Truman alerted federal officials about Salisbury, leading to Salisbury's conviction for filing a false affidavit. Salisbury contradicts Hinde's statement that the meeting at the Hotel Baltimore was one-on-one, naming at least six individuals who were present. Salisbury states that at the meeting, Truman had to receive a special dispensation to join, because his grandfather Solomon had been a Jew; however, Solomon was not a Jew, and the rumor of Truman's Jewish ancestry was only spread later, by the Klan, once the political lines had been drawn so that Truman was the Klan's enemy. (Steinberg, 1962)
  4. ^ The author, Wade, gives essentially this version of the events, but implies that the meeting was a regular Klan meeting, rather than an individual meeting between Truman and a Klan organizer. An interview with Hinde at the Truman Library's website ("Oral History Interview with Edgar G. Hinde" by James R. Fuchs, 15 March 1962, retrieved June 26, 2005) portrays it as a one-on-one meeting at the Hotel Baltimore with a Klan organizer named Jones. Truman's biography, written by his daughter (Truman, 1973), agrees with Hinde's version, but does not mention the $10 initiation fee; the same biography reproduces a telegram from O.L. Chrisman stating that reporters from the Hearst papers had questioned him about Truman's past with the Klan, and that he had seen Truman at a Klan meeting, but that "if he ever became a member of the Klan I did not know it." (Wade, 1987, p. 196)
  5. ^ McCullough notes this extensively in his biography of Truman. While Truman had been raised in a family with Southern and Confederate leanings, he [Truman] still maintained his belief "in the brotherhood of all men before the law." (McCullough, p. 247) Truman's work on civil rights was politically damaging but extensive nonetheless.

Notes edit

  1. ^ American Experience, May 5, 2002.
  2. ^ McAndrew, January 25, 2017.
  3. ^ a b Washington Post, March 18, 2018.
  4. ^ Newman, 1994.
  5. ^ Ball, 1996.
  6. ^ Economist, March 2, 2019.
  7. ^ Carter, December 19, 2013.
  8. ^ Goff, Spring 2012.
  9. ^ Lindgren, October 20, 2010.
  10. ^ Millhiser, May 15, 2015.
  11. ^ New York Times Magazine, August 14, 1946.
  12. ^ a b Blackmon, 2008.
  13. ^ Washington Post, June 19, 2005.
  14. ^ Noah, December 18, 2002.
  15. ^ NAACP, June 29, 2010.
  16. ^ CNN, March 4, 2001.
  17. ^ Fox News, March 4, 2001.
  18. ^ Chalmers, Fall 1965, p. 237.
  19. ^ Drukman, 1997.
  20. ^ Chalmers.
  21. ^ Daily Sentinel, September 16, 1926.
  22. ^ Davis, 1924.
  23. ^ Herbert, September 14, 2010.
  24. ^ Smithsonian Magazine, March 7, 2015.
  25. ^ Chalmers, Fall 1965, p. 236.
  26. ^ Indian Journal, October 9, 1924.
  27. ^ New York Times, November 6, 1924, p. 1.
  28. ^ Butler & Wolff, 1995.
  29. ^ Chalmers, p. 91.
  30. ^ Roseburg News-Review, August 16, 1926.
  31. ^ Time November 2, 1925.
  32. ^ Chalmers, p. 197.
  33. ^ Dixon, September 1905, p. 665.
  34. ^ Prescript, 1867.
  35. ^ Alexander, September 1949, p. 197.
  36. ^ Horn, 1939, p. 28, 147.
  37. ^ Moseley, Summer 1973.
  38. ^ Fayetteville Democrat, August 9, 1922.
  39. ^ Feldman, 1999, p. 88.
  40. ^ Gugin & St. James, 2006.
  41. ^ Colorado Independent, January 9, 2009.
  42. ^ Colorado Independent, March 4, 2014.
  43. ^ Colorado State Archives.
  44. ^ Denver Post, March 4, 2014.
  45. ^ Old State House Museum.
  46. ^ Alexander, Winter 1963, p. 317.
  47. ^ "Georgia – Gov. Walker.
  48. ^ Sobel & Raimo, 1978.
  49. ^ Kingsport Times, July 13, 1939.
  50. ^ New York Times, August 11, 1924.
  51. ^ New York Times, August 14, 1924.
  52. ^ Nashville Tennessean, November 21, 1914.
  53. ^ News & Observer, March 26, 2014.
  54. ^ Philadelphia Inquirer, January 10, 1923.
  55. ^ a b Newton, 2014.
  56. ^ New York Times, Apr 19, 1923.
  57. ^ Starr, 1990.
  58. ^ Goldberg, 1981.
  59. ^ ADL Report, January 13, 2013, p. 3.
  60. ^ Zatarain, 1990, p. 21.
  61. ^ ADL Report, January 13, 2013, pp. 1–2.
  62. ^ Finkelman, 1999.
  63. ^ Finkelman, February 2000.
  64. ^ Stetson, 2000.
  65. ^ Wade, 1988, pp. 165, 477.
  66. ^ Dean, 2004.
  67. ^ Ferrell, 1996.
  68. ^ New York Times Magazine, January 8, 2006.
  69. ^ Woolley, 1920.
  70. ^ Washington Post, June 21, 2020.
  71. ^ Payne, 2009.
  72. ^ Anthony, 1998, pp. 412–413.
  73. ^ Straight Dope, November 8, 2005.
  74. ^ New York Times, August 18, 2015.
  75. ^ Cheathem, June 6, 2014.
  76. ^ Wallace, July 14, 2014.
  77. ^ McCullough, 1992, pp. 159–164.
  78. ^ McCullough, 1992.
  79. ^ a b Truman, 1973.
  80. ^ McCullough, 1992, p. 170.
  81. ^ Truman, 1973, p. 67.
  82. ^ Steinberg, 1962, p. 75.
  83. ^ Hamby, 1995.
  84. ^ Washington Post, October 27, 2017.

News media edit

  • "Top Senate Democrat Apologizes for Slur". CNN, Inside Politics. March 4, 2001. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
  • Colorado Independent, The; Cara Degette (January 9, 2009). "When Colorado Was Klan Country". Denver. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  • Littwin, Mike (January 9, 2009). "The Gov's Race: There's Extreme, and Then There's Extreme". Denver: The Colorado Independent. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  • Daily Sentinel, The (September 16, 1926). "Defeat Becomes Overwhelming As Belated Returns Come In; Anti-Klan Majorities Mount". The Daily Sentinel (AP). Vol. 33, no. 296. Grand Junction, Colorado. p. 8. Retrieved June 6, 2020 – via Newspapers.com. LCCN sn86-66870; OCLC 11217358 (all editions).
  • Bartels, Lynn (March 4, 2014). . Denver Post. Archived from the original on March 6, 2014. Retrieved November 9, 2016. The Spot → political blog of the Denver Post.
  • Fayetteville Daily Democrat (August 9, 1922). "M'Crae Leads Two to One; Cubage and Herbert Wilson Races Close; Toney Has Carried Seven Counties" (Parke-Harper News Service of Little Rock → founded in 1911 by Augustus Winfield Parke; 1878–1961 & Clio Armitage Harper; 1872–1932). Vol. 28, no. 223. Fayetteville, Arkansas: Fayetteville Democrat Company. p. 1. Retrieved December 3, 2020 – via NewspaperArchive. LCCN sn88051010, OCLC 18126013 (all editions).
  • Senator Robert Byrd Says White Niggers. rcmtrox. Event occurs at 1 minute, 13 seconds. Retrieved September 4, 2019 – via YouTube. (taped March 2, 2001; posted to YouTube January 17, 2009).
  • "Walton Addresses 2000 Voters". Vol. 48, no. 46. Eufaula, Oklahoma: Indian Journal, The (weekly). October 9, 1924. p. 1. Retrieved November 1, 2017 – via Newspapers.com. (Alexander Posey; 1873–1908; was founder of the Indian Journal) }} {{nowrap|LCCN sn96087901; OCLC 34998711 (all editions).
  • Kingsport Times, The (July 13, 1939). "Davies Opposition Grows in Senate – Confirmation of Tennessean for U.S. Judge Recalled by Committee". Vol. 24, no. 168 (Home ed.). Kingsport, Tennessee. pp. 1 & 16. Retrieved September 7, 2017 – via Newspapers.com. (Davies joined the KKK while in Louisiana and attended a meeting while at Vanderbilt University). |author1-link=The Kingsport Times
  • NAACP (June 29, 2010). . NAACP Press Room. Archived from the original on July 7, 2010. Retrieved August 27, 2016.
  • Nashville Tennessean (November 21, 1914). "John W. Morton Passes Away in Shelby" (obituary). Vol. 8, no. 194 (Home ed.). pp. 1–2. Retrieved September 25, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. To Captain Morton came the peculiar distinction of having organized that branch of the Ku Klux Klan which operated in Nashville and the adjacent territory, but a more signal honor was his when he performed the ceremonies which initiated Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest into the mysterious ranks of the Ku Klux Klan
  • Stancill, [Margaret] Jane (March 26, 2014). "Crowd Pushes UNC to Rename Hall". The News & Observer. Vol. 2015, no. 85. Raleigh, North Carolina. pp. 1 & 6 (section A). Retrieved February 20, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  • New York Times, The (April 19, 1923). "Warrants Out for Klan in Morehouse – Captain Skipwith, Exalted Cyclops, Charged with Conspiring to Murder – Nearly a Score Accused – Jeff Burnett and Dr. Mckoln Among Alleged Men Rouge Hooded Kidnappers Sought". The New York Times. Vol. 73, no. 23826. p. 21 (column 3). Retrieved January 25, 2021 – via TimesMachine..
  • New York Times, The (August 11, 1924). "Klan in Southwest Faces Another Test – Hopes to Nominate Its Candidate for Governor in Arkansas Primary Tomorrow". The New York Times. Vol. 73, no. 24306. p. 2 (column 3 of 8). Retrieved May 19, 2021 – via TimesMachine..
  • New York Times, The (August 14, 1924). "Klan Loses in Arkansas – Terral Leads Cazort in Race for Nomination for Governor". The New York Times. Vol. 73, no. 24309. p. 2 (column 3 of 8). Retrieved May 19, 2021 – via TimesMachine..
  • New York Times, The (November 6, 1924). "Victories by Klan Feature Election – Order Elects Senators in Oklahoma and Colorado, Governors in Kansas, Indiana, Colorado – All on Republican Ticket – Only Setback for Ku Klux Was Triumph of Mrs. Ferguson as Democratic Governor of Texas". The New York Times. Vol. 74, no. 24388. p. 1 (column 7) & p. 3. Retrieved August 13, 2021 – via TimesMachine.
  • Hinton, Harold B (August 14, 1946). "Bilbo KKK Avowal Stumps Mississippi – Between 'Why Not?' of Friends and 'He's Clowning' of Foes Is a Fear He Calls Turn". New York Times, The. Vol. 95, no. 32344. p. 14. Retrieved May 19, 2021 – via TimesMachine..
  • New York Times Magazine; Dubner, Stephen Joseph; Levitt, Steven D. Levitt (January 8, 2006). "The Way We Live Now: 01-08-06: Freakonomics – Hoodwinked?". The New York Times (Sunday supplement of The New York Times) (National ed.). pp. 26–28 (section 6). Retrieved January 17, 2006. → Dubner and Levitt, co-authors of Freakonomics – A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything (2005), review their own book.
  • New York Times, The; Baker, Peter (August 18, 2015). "White House Memo – DNA Shows Warren Harding Wasn't America's First Black President". New York Times, The. Retrieved December 22, 2020. ProQuest 1714233466 (U.S. Newsstream database).
  • Philadelphia Inquirer (January 10, 1923). "Ku Klux Unmasked at Torture Probe by Defiant Victims". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Vol. 188, no. 10. pp. 1 & 2. Retrieved January 25, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Roseburg New-Review (August 16, 1926). "U'Ren Charges Corruption in Steiwer Ranks" (AP). Vol. 27, no. 214. Roseburg, Oregon. p. 1. Retrieved May 25, 2021 – via Newspapers.com. OCLC 52498570 (all editions).
  • The Straight Dope; Corrado, John (November 8, 2005). "Was Warren Harding Inducted Into the KKK While President?" (A Staff Report From the Straight Dope Science Advisory Board). Chicago: Creative Loafing Media, Inc. Retrieved February 8, 2009.
  • Washington Post, The; Pianin, Eric [Stuart] (June 19, 2005). "A Senator's Shame – Byrd, in His New Book, Again Confronts Early Ties to KKK" (review of Byrd's 2005 autobiography: Robert C. Byrd: Child of the Appalachian Coalfields) (Final ed.). p. 1A. Retrieved July 11, 2006. During his [1958] Senate campaign, he [Byrd] told a newspaper reporter that he personally felt the Klan had been incorrectly blamed for many acts committed by others. ProQuest 409811201 (U.S. Newsstream database).
  • Washington Post, The; Miller, Michael E. (October 27, 2017). "Strippers, Surveillance and Assassination Plots: The Wildest JFK Files" (blog). In an internal FBI report from May 1964, an informant told the FBI that the Ku Klux Klan said it 'had documented proof that President Johnson was formerly a member of the Klan in Texas during the early days of his political career'. The 'documented proof' was not provided ProQuest 1956383360 (U.S. Newsstream database).
  • Washington Post, The; Mendelsohn, Jennifer; Shulman, Peter A. (March 18, 2018). "How Social Media Spread a Historical Lie" (blog). Retrieved January 26, 2021. ProQuest 2014080716 (U.S. Newsstream database).
  • Washington Post, The; Robenalt, James D. (June 21, 2020). "The Republican President Who Called for Racial Justice in America After Tulsa Massacre – Warren G. Harding's Comments About Race and Equality Were Remarkable For 1921". Retrieved June 26, 2020.

––––––––––––––––––––

  • Selected archival access to The New York TimesLCCN sn78-4456
  • ISSN 0362-4331 (via ProQuest), OCLC 1645522 (all editions), 858655519 → via ProQuest, 7764137 (microfilm), 69647843 (microfilm, International ed.)
  • TimesMachine (every issue published before December 31, 2002)
  • Newspapers.com (1851–1922).

Books, journals, magazines, papers, websites edit

Government and genealogical archives edit

  • Colorado State Archives (n.d.). (PDF). Territorial and Statehood Governors of Colorado from 1862–2012 (PDF). Denver. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 21, 2016. Retrieved November 9, 2016. OCLC 53960098.

Sources by the Klan or known exponents of the Klan edit

  • Davis, Susan Lawrence (1924). Authentic History – Ku Klux Klan, 1865–1877. Susan Lawrence Davis. p. 45. Retrieved September 21, 2017 – via Internet Archive.
         Note → Susan Lawrence Davis' father, Lawrence Ripley Davis (1831–1892), had been a Confederate Colonel and founding member of the Klan (the old Klan) in Alabama. Margaret Mitchell, drew heavily from book as a source for Gone With the Wind. Davis sued Mitchell, unsuccessfully, for plagiarism.
      LCCN 24-4514 (microfilm & digital); OCLC 1072104132 (all editions).
  • Dixon, Thomas Jr. (September 1905). "The Story of the Ku Klux Klan – Some of Its Leaders, Living and Dead". Metropolitan Magazine. New York. 22 (6): 657–669. Retrieved May 20, 2021 – via Google Books. → "Illustrated with photographs, prints and drawings by A[rthur] I. Keller".
  • Gordon, George W. (1867). Prescript of the * * [order of the Ku-Klux klan]. Pulaski, Tennessee: Lapsley D. McCord. LCCN 17005242. OCLC 1050761652. Retrieved May 22, 2021 – via Internet Archive. → Printed secretly in the office of the Pulaski Citizen by its publisher, Lapsley D. McCord (1847–1920) (Horn). → This copy of the Prescript was formerly the property of Col. Martin Luther Stansel (1822–1902), a lawyer from Pickens County, Alabama, and one of the organizers of the original Ku Klux Klan → reprinted 1903 → revised 1904.

klux, klan, members, united, states, politics, this, partial, list, notable, historical, figures, national, politics, were, members, klux, klan, before, taking, office, membership, klan, secret, political, opponents, sometimes, allege, that, person, member, kl. This is a partial list of notable historical figures in U S national politics who were members of the Ku Klux Klan before taking office Membership of the Klan is secret Political opponents sometimes allege that a person was a member of the Klan or was supported at the polls by Klan members 1 2 Contents 1 Politicians who were active in the Klan 2 Supreme Court justices 2 1 Hugo Black 3 Members of the Senate 3 1 Theodore G Bilbo 3 2 Joseph E Brown 3 3 Robert C Byrd 3 4 John Brown Gordon 3 5 James Thomas Heflin 3 6 Rufus C Holman 3 7 Earle Mayfield 3 8 Rice W Means 3 9 John Tyler Morgan 3 10 Edmund Pettus 3 11 William Bliss Pine Chappel 4 Non Klan Senators who received support from the Klan 4 1 Lawrence C Phipps 4 2 Owen Brewster 4 3 Daniel F Steck 4 4 Frederick Steiwer 4 5 Arthur Raymond Robinson 4 6 Frank Willis 5 Members of the House of Representatives 5 1 Clifford Davis 5 2 George Gordon 5 3 William David Upshaw 6 Governors 6 1 Homer Martin Adkins 6 2 Bibb Graves 6 3 Edward L Jackson 6 4 Clarence Morley 6 5 Tom Terral 6 6 Clifford Walker 7 Federal Judges 7 1 Elmer David Davies 8 Statewide Officials 8 1 Lee Cazort 8 2 John W Morton 8 3 William L Saunders 9 Local Officials 9 1 John Clinton Porter 9 2 Benjamin F Stapleton 9 3 Kaspar K Kubli 9 4 David Duke 10 Allegations of Klan membership 10 1 Edward Douglass White 10 2 Warren G Harding 10 3 Calvin Coolidge 10 4 Harry S Truman 10 5 Lyndon B Johnson 11 See also 12 Bibliography 12 1 Annotations 12 2 Notes 12 3 News media 12 4 Books journals magazines papers websites 12 5 Government and genealogical archives 12 6 Sources by the Klan or known exponents of the KlanPoliticians who were active in the Klan editIn 2018 The Washington Post reported that by 1930 the KKK while its membership remained semi secret claimed 11 governors 16 senators and as many as 75 congressmen and Democrats 3 Supreme Court justices editHugo Black edit nbsp Supreme Court Justice Hugo BlackIn 1921 Hugo Black D successfully defended E R Stephenson in his trial for the murder of a Catholic priest Fr James E Coyle Stephenson s daughter had converted to Catholicism and married a man of Puerto Rican descent and Coyle had conducted the wedding Black got Stephenson acquitted in part by arguing to the jury that Puerto Ricans should be considered black under the South s one drop rule Black joined the Ku Klux Klan shortly afterwards in order to gain votes from the anti Catholic element in Alabama He built his winning Senate campaign in 1926 around multiple appearances at KKK meetings across Alabama Late in life Black told an interviewer At that time I was joining every organization in sight In my part of Alabama the Klan was engaged in unlawful activities The general feeling in the community was that if responsible citizens didn t join the Klan it would soon become dominated by the less responsible members 4 News of his membership was a secret until shortly before he was confirmed as an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court in 1937 Black later said that joining the Klan was a mistake but he went on to say I would have joined any group if it helped get me votes 5 i On the Supreme Court Black wrote the opinion in Korematsu v United States which upheld the exclusion of Japanese Americans from the West Coast Black also wrote the opinion in Everson v Board of Education a key case about the separation of church and state 6 Some have argued that his views on the separation of church and state were influenced by the Klan s anti Catholicism 7 8 9 Despite his former Klan membership Black joined the Supreme Court s unanimous decisions in Shelley v Kraemer 1948 which outlawed judicial enforcement of racially restrictive covenants and Brown v Board of Education which outlawed school segregation Justice William O Douglas would write years later that at least three and possibly as many as five justices were originally planning to rule school segregation constitutional but Black had actually been one of the four justices planning to strike down school segregation from the beginning of the Brown case 10 Members of the Senate editTheodore G Bilbo edit nbsp Theodore G Bilbo U S Senator for MississippiTheodore G Bilbo D the U S Senator for Mississippi stated he was a member of the KKK 11 Joseph E Brown edit Joseph E Brown D the U S Senator for Georgia was a key supporter of the KKK in his home state 12 Robert C Byrd edit Main article Robert Byrd Race nbsp Senator Robert Byrd was a Kleagle a Klan recruiter in his 20s and 30s Robert C Byrd D the U S senator for West Virginia a recruiter for the Klan while in his 20s and 30s rising to the title of Kleagle and Exalted Cyclops of his local chapter After leaving the group Byrd spoke in favor of the Klan during his early political career Though he later said he officially left the organization in 1943 Byrd wrote a letter in 1946 to the group s Imperial Wizard stating The Klan is needed today as never before and I am anxious to see its rebirth here in West Virginia Byrd attempted to explain or defend his former membership in the Klan in his 1958 U S Senate campaign when he was 41 years old 13 Byrd a Democrat eventually became his party leader in the Senate Byrd later said joining the Klan was his greatest mistake 14 and after his death the NAACP released a statement praising Byrd acknowledging his former affiliation with the Klan and saying that he became a champion for civil rights and liberties and came to consistently support the NAACP civil rights agenda 15 In a 2001 interview Byrd used the term white niggers twice during a national television broadcast The full quote ran as follows My old mom told me Robert you can t go to heaven if you hate anybody We practice that There are white niggers I ve seen a lot of white niggers in my time I m going to use that word We just need to work together to make our country a better country and I d just as soon quit talking about it so much Byrd later apologized for the phrase and admitted that it has no place in today s society and did not clarify the intended meaning of the term in his context 16 17 John Brown Gordon edit John Brown Gordon D the U S Senator for Georgia was a founder of the KKK in his home state of Georgia 12 James Thomas Heflin edit James Thomas Heflin 1869 1951 D the U S Senator for Alabama was suspected of being a member of the KKK 18 Rufus C Holman edit Rufus C Holman R the U S Senator for Oregon was an active member of the Ku Klux Klan KKK in Oregon serving as an officer in that organization 19 Earle Mayfield edit Earle Mayfield 1881 1964 D U S Senator 1923 1929 for Texas from 1923 through 1929 Mayfield had been a Texas Senator from 1907 through 1913 20 Rice W Means edit Rice W Means R the U S Senator for Colorado was the directing head of the Ku Klux Klan in Colorado 21 John Tyler Morgan edit John Tyler Morgan D June 20 1824 June 11 1907 the U S Senator for Alabama March 4 1877 to June 11 1907 was the Grand Dragon of the KKK in Alabama 22 23 Edmund Pettus edit Edmund Pettus July 6 1821 1907 D the U S Senator for Alabama 1896 to 1907 was also a Grand Dragon of the KKK in Alabama 24 William Bliss Pine Chappel edit William Bliss Pine 1877 1942 R the U S Senator for Oklahoma March 4 1925 to March 3 1931 was a Klansman according to historian Chalmers 25 and the Eufaula Indian Journal 26 27 Non Klan Senators who received support from the Klan editLawrence C Phipps edit The Klan helped elect Lawrence C Phipps 1862 1958 R U S Senator for Colorado citation needed Owen Brewster edit Republican Owen Brewster 1888 1961 received crucial support from the Klan in his election as Governor of Maine 1925 1929 and went on to become a U S Congressman and then U S Senator 1941 1952 In the last position he was a close ally of Joseph McCarthy Former Maine Republican governor Percival Baxter accused Brewster of having been actually inducted into the Klan Daniel F Steck edit Daniel F Steck 1881 1950 D of Iowa in 1925 with the help of the Klan defeated Senator Smith W Brookhart 1869 1944 R a progressive Because the vote was close there was a recount and Steck was the victor Brookhart contested it Steck reportedly had no Klan connections except that he enlisted the Klan s top lawyer and legislative expert William Francis Zumbrunn 1877 1930 to secure his seat in the 69th Congress 1925 1926 Earlier Zumbrunn with lawyer William Pinkney McLean Jr 1872 1937 of Fort Worth helped seat Klan Senator from Texas Earle Mayfield 28 Frederick Steiwer edit In the 1926 Oregon election the Ku Klux Klan under the auspices of The Oregon Good Government League helped Frederick Steiwer 1883 1939 win the Republican primary by spreading word that it was supporting the reelection of his opponent Senator Robert N Stanfield 1877 1945 R The effort was fueled by White Supremacist anti immigrant anti Catholic groups in Oregon in support of the state s Compulsory Education Act enacted in 1922 mandating public education which would have taken effect in 1926 but the Supreme Court in 1925 struck it down in Pierce v Society of Sisters 29 30 Arthur Raymond Robinson edit Arthur Raymond Robinson 1881 1961 R of Indiana was on November 2 1925 characterized by Time magazine was follows The New Man Arthur R Robinson is only 44 He is an Indianapolis attorney a good Republican but of no particular political importance He is said to be a good orator Against him politically is the fact that he supported Governor Jackson in the last election and so justly or unjustly he is considered a Klan man 31 Frank Willis edit According to historian Chalmers the Klan supported Frank B Willis 1871 1928 R of Ohio not because it liked him but because it disliked his anti Klan opponent Atlee Pomerene 1863 1937 D more 32 Members of the House of Representatives editClifford Davis edit Clifford Davis D U S Representative for Tennessee s 9th and 10th congressional districts was an active member in Tennessee George Gordon edit George Gordon D U S Representative for Tennessee s 10th congressional district became one of the Klan s first members In 1867 Gordon became the Klan s first Grand Dragon for the Realm of Tennessee and wrote its Precscript a constitution setting out the organization s purpose principles and the like 33 34 35 36 William David Upshaw edit William David Upshaw D U S Representative for Georgia s 5th congressional district was an active member in Georgia 37 Governors editHomer Martin Adkins edit Homer Martin Adkins D 1890 1964 the Governor of Arkansas was a supporter of the Klan in his home state of Arkansas 38 Bibb Graves edit Bibb Graves D 1873 1942 was the Governor of Alabama He lost his first campaign for governor in 1922 but four years later with the secret endorsement of the Ku Klux Klan he was elected to his first term as governor Graves was almost certainly the Exalted Cyclops chapter president of the Montgomery chapter of the Klan Graves like Hugo Black used the strength of the Klan to further his electoral prospects 39 Edward L Jackson edit Edward L Jackson R 1873 1954 was the Governor of Indiana in 1925 and his administration came under fire for granting undue favor to the Klan s agenda and associates Jackson was further damaged by the arrest and trial of Grand Dragon D C Stephenson for the rape and murder of Madge Oberholtzer When it was revealed that Jackson had attempted to bribe former Gov Warren T McCray with 10 000 to appoint a Klansman to a local office Jackson was taken to court His case ended with a hung jury and Jackson ended his political career in disgrace There is however evidence that Jackson joined the KKK himself 40 Clarence Morley edit Clarence Morley R 1869 1948 the Governor of Colorado was a KKK member and a strong supporter of Prohibition He tried to ban the Catholic Church from using sacramental wine and attempted to have the University of Colorado fire all Jewish and Catholic professors 41 42 43 44 Tom Terral edit Tom Terral D 1882 1946 the Governor of Arkansas was a member of the KKK in Louisiana 45 46 Clifford Walker edit Clifford Walker D 1877 1954 the Governor of Georgia was revealed to be a Klan member by the press in 1924 47 48 Federal Judges editElmer David Davies edit Elmer David Davies D a Federal Judge of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee was a member of the KKK while at university 49 Statewide Officials editLee Cazort edit Lee Cazort D the Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas was active in the Klan and openly endorsed the Klan s platform 50 51 John W Morton edit John Morton D the Tennessee Secretary of State was the founder of the Nashville chapter of the KKK 52 William L Saunders edit William L Saunders D the North Carolina Secretary of State was the founder of the North Carolina chapter 53 Local Officials editA notable number of local officials were also Klansmen resulting in such as the reign of terror inflicted by Louisiana by crony exalted cyclops 54 Bastrop mayor John Killian Skipwith known as Captain J K Skipwith and Mer Rouge mayor Bunnie McEwin McKoin MD better known as Dr B M McKoin and whose surname was variously misreported as McCoin M Koin and McKoln in media 55 56 John Clinton Porter edit John Clinton Porter D was mayor of Los Angeles and an early supporter of the Klan in the 1920s 57 Benjamin F Stapleton edit Benjamin F Stapleton D was Mayor of Denver in the 1920s 1940s He was a Klan member in the early 1920s and appointed fellow Klansmen to positions in municipal government Ultimately Stapleton broke from the Klan and removed several Klansmen from office 58 Kaspar K Kubli edit Kap Kubli R Speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives from 1923 to 1924 55 David Duke edit David Duke D R a politician who ran in both Democrat and Republican presidential primaries was openly involved in the leadership of the Ku Klux Klan 59 He was founder and Grand Wizard of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan in the mid 1970s he re titled his position as National Director and said that the KKK needed to get out of the cow pasture and into hotel meeting rooms He left the organization in 1980 He ran for president in the 1988 Democratic presidential primaries In 1989 Duke switched political parties from Democrat to Republican 60 In 1989 he became a member of the Louisiana State Legislature from the 81st district and was Republican Party chairman for St Tammany Parish 61 Allegations of Klan membership editEdward Douglass White edit Edward Douglass White a Democrat and the Chief Justice of the United States was alleged to be a Klansman in one unverified source More complete is legal historian Paul Finkelman in American National Biography 2000 about that single report Although the moviemaker D W Griffith claimed White endorsed his racist movie The Birth of a Nation 1915 and asserted that White had been in the Ku Klux Klan there is no evidence to support either of Griffith s contentions 62 63 Warren G Harding edit The consensus of modern historians is that Warren Harding was never a member and instead was an important enemy of the Klan While one source claims Warren G Harding a Republican was a Ku Klux Klan member while President that claim is based on a third hand account of a second hand recollection in 1985 of a deathbed statement made sometime in the late 1940s concerning an incident in the early 1920s Independent investigations have turned up many contradictions and no supporting evidence for the claim Historians reject the claim and note that Harding in fact publicly fought and spoke against the Klan The rejected claim was made by Wyn Craig Wade He stated Harding s membership as fact and gives a detailed account of a secret swearing in ceremony in the White House based on a private communication he received in 1985 from journalist Stetson Kennedy Kennedy in turn had along with Elizabeth Gardner tape recorded some time in the late 1940s a deathbed confession of former Imperial Klokard Alton Young Young claimed to have been a member of the Presidential Induction Team Young also said on his deathbed that he had repudiated racism 64 65 In his book The Strange Deaths of President Harding historian Robert Ferrell says he was unable to find any records of any such ceremony in which Harding was brought into the Klan in the White House John Dean in his 2004 book Warren G Harding also could find no proof of Klan membership or activity on the part of Harding 66 Review of the personal records of Harding s Personal White House Secretary George Christian Jr also do not support the contention that Harding received members of the Klan while in office Appointment books maintained in the White House detailing President Harding s daily schedules do not show any such event 67 In their 2005 book Freakonomics University of Chicago economist Steven D Levitt and journalist Stephen J Dubner alluded to Warren Harding s possible Klan affiliation However in a New York Times Magazine Freakonomics column entitled Hoodwinked Does it matter if an activist who exposes the inner workings of the Ku Klux Klan isn t open about how he got those secrets Dubner and Levitt said that they no longer accepted Stetson Kennedy s testimony about Harding and the Klan 68 The 1920 Republican Party platform which essentially expressed Harding s political philosophy called for Congress to pass laws combating lynching 69 Harding denounced lynching in a landmark 21 October 1921 speech in Birmingham Alabama which was covered in the national press Harding also vigorously supported an anti lynching bill in Congress during his term in the White House His comments about race and equality were remarkable for 1921 70 Payne argues that the Klan was so angry with Harding s attacks on the KKK that it originated and spread the false rumor that he was a member 71 Carl S Anthony biographer of Harding s wife found no such proof of Harding s membership in the Klan He does however discuss the events leading up to the period when the alleged Klan ceremony was held in June 1923 K nowing that some branches of the Shriners were anti Catholic and in that sense sympathetic to the Ku Klax Klan and that the Klan itself was holding a demonstration less than a half mile from Washington Harding censured hate groups in his Shriners speech The press considered it a direct attack on the Klan particularly in light of his criticism weeks earlier of factions of hatred and prejudice and violence that challeng ed both civil and religious liberty 72 In 2005 The Straight Dope presented a summary of many of these arguments against Harding s membership and noted that while it might have been politically expedient for him to join the KKK in public to do it in private would have been of no benefit to him 73 It was falsely rumored in his lifetime that Harding was partly of African American descent so he would have been an unlikely recruit for the Ku Klux Klan 74 Calvin Coolidge edit One common misconception is that President Calvin Coolidge was a Klan member ii a claim that Klan websites have spread 75 In reality Coolidge was adamantly opposed to the Klan According to Jerry L Wallace at the Coolidge Foundation Coolidge expressed his antipathy to the Klan by reaching out in a positive public way directly to its victims Blacks Jews Catholics and immigrants with whom he had good relations especially so for Irish Catholics going back long before the rise of the Invisible Empire and sought to highlight their positive achievements and contributions to American life 76 Ironically many Klan members voted for the Republican Coolidge in the 1924 presidential election because the Democratic presidential nominee John W Davis denounced the Klan at the party s convention 3 Harry S Truman edit Harry S Truman the Democratic politician who became president in 1945 was accused by opponents of having dabbled with the Klan briefly In 1922 he was running for eastern judge this being the position for one of three court judges in Jackson County Missouri His friends Edgar Hinde and Spencer Salisbury advised him to join the Klan The Klan was politically powerful in Jackson County and two of Truman s opponents in the Democratic primary had Klan support Truman refused at first but paid the Klan s 10 membership fee and a meeting with a Klan officer was arranged 77 According to Salisbury s version of the story Truman was inducted but afterward was never active he was just a member who wouldn t do anything Salisbury however told the story after he became Truman s bitter enemy so historians are reluctant to believe his claims iii According to Hinde and Margaret Truman s accounts the Klan officer demanded that Truman pledge not to hire any Catholics or Jews if he was reelected Truman refused and demanded the return of his 10 membership fee most of the men he had commanded in World War I had been local Irish Catholics iv Truman had at least one other strong reason to object to the anti Catholic requirement which was that the Catholic Pendergast family which operated a political machine in Jackson County were his patrons Pendergast family lore has it that Truman was originally accepted for patronage without even meeting him on the basis of his family background plus the fact that he was not a member of any anti Catholic organization such as the Klan 78 The Pendergast faction of the Democratic Party was known as the Goats as opposed to the rival Shannon machine s Rabbits The battle lines were drawn when Truman put only Goats on the county payroll 79 and the Klan began encouraging voters to support Protestant 100 American candidates allying itself against Truman and with the Rabbits while Shannon instructed his people to vote Republican in the election which Truman lost 80 79 Truman later claimed that the Klan threatened to kill me 81 and I went out to one of their meetings and dared them to try 82 speculating that if Truman s armed friends had shown up earlier violence might have resulted However biographer Alonzo Hamby believes that this story which is not supported by any recorded facts was a confabulation based on a meeting with a hostile and menacing group of Democrats that contained many Klansmen showing Truman s Walter Mitty like tendency to rewrite his personal history 83 Sympathetic observers see Truman s flirtation with the Klan as a momentary aberration point out that his close friend and business partner Eddie Jacobson was Jewish and say that in later years Truman s presidency marked the first significant improvement in the federal government s record on civil rights since the post Reconstruction nadir marked by the Wilson administration v Lyndon B Johnson edit An anonymous person told the FBI that Ned O Neal Touchstone 1926 1988 newspaper publisher who has been chronicled as influential in radical right politics in Louisiana politics during the 1960s was a member of a group that called itself the Original Members of the Ku Klux Klan and that in 1963 he claimed that the group had documented proof of Lyndon Johnson having been a member of some KKK group in the 1930s 84 See also editHistory of the Ku Klux Klan in New Jersey Ku Klux Klan in Canada Ku Klux Klan in Inglewood California Ku Klux Klan in Maine Ku Klux Klan in OregonBibliography editAnnotations edit Hugo Black s membership was the subject of Ray Sprigle s 1938 series of articles in the Pittsburgh Post Gazette for which Sprigle won a Pulitzer Prize Examples of unsourced or poorly sourced media averring that Coolidge was a member of the Klan Letters to the Editor Naples Daily News June 18 2007 Retrieved December 22 2020 Presidents and Others Who Were Members of the KKK able2know org Retrieved December 22 2020 Revealed 5 US Presidents Members of Racist Cult Ku Klux Klan photos The Trent Nigeria s Internet Newspaper Lagos Nigeria A publication of Ziza Media A Division of Ziza Group July 19 2014 Retrieved December 22 2020 This article originally appeared July 18 2014 on I Love Black People then re posted March 24 2016 on the same site Same article but archived from the July 18 2014 post Five US Presidents Were Members of the Ku Klux Klan iloveblackpeople net July 2014 Archived from the original on July 21 2014 Retrieved May 19 2021 via Wayback Machine Salisbury was a war buddy and former business partner of Truman s Salisbury believed that Truman attempted to give Jim Pendergast control of their business Truman alerted federal officials about Salisbury leading to Salisbury s conviction for filing a false affidavit Salisbury contradicts Hinde s statement that the meeting at the Hotel Baltimore was one on one naming at least six individuals who were present Salisbury states that at the meeting Truman had to receive a special dispensation to join because his grandfather Solomon had been a Jew however Solomon was not a Jew and the rumor of Truman s Jewish ancestry was only spread later by the Klan once the political lines had been drawn so that Truman was the Klan s enemy Steinberg 1962 The author Wade gives essentially this version of the events but implies that the meeting was a regular Klan meeting rather than an individual meeting between Truman and a Klan organizer An interview with Hinde at the Truman Library s website Oral History Interview with Edgar G Hinde by James R Fuchs 15 March 1962 retrieved June 26 2005 portrays it as a one on one meeting at the Hotel Baltimore with a Klan organizer named Jones Truman s biography written by his daughter Truman 1973 agrees with Hinde s version but does not mention the 10 initiation fee the same biography reproduces a telegram from O L Chrisman stating that reporters from the Hearst papers had questioned him about Truman s past with the Klan and that he had seen Truman at a Klan meeting but that if he ever became a member of the Klan I did not know it Wade 1987 p 196 McCullough notes this extensively in his biography of Truman While Truman had been raised in a family with Southern and Confederate leanings he Truman still maintained his belief in the brotherhood of all men before the law McCullough p 247 Truman s work on civil rights was politically damaging but extensive nonetheless Notes edit American Experience May 5 2002 McAndrew January 25 2017 a b Washington Post March 18 2018 Newman 1994 Ball 1996 Economist March 2 2019 Carter December 19 2013 Goff Spring 2012 Lindgren October 20 2010 Millhiser May 15 2015 New York Times Magazine August 14 1946 a b Blackmon 2008 Washington Post June 19 2005 Noah December 18 2002 NAACP June 29 2010 CNN March 4 2001 Fox News March 4 2001 Chalmers Fall 1965 p 237 Drukman 1997 Chalmers Daily Sentinel September 16 1926 Davis 1924 Herbert September 14 2010 Smithsonian Magazine March 7 2015 Chalmers Fall 1965 p 236 Indian Journal October 9 1924 New York Times November 6 1924 p 1 Butler amp Wolff 1995 Chalmers p 91 Roseburg News Review August 16 1926 Time November 2 1925 Chalmers p 197 Dixon September 1905 p 665 Prescript 1867 Alexander September 1949 p 197 Horn 1939 p 28 147 Moseley Summer 1973 Fayetteville Democrat August 9 1922 Feldman 1999 p 88 Gugin amp St James 2006 Colorado Independent January 9 2009 Colorado Independent March 4 2014 Colorado State Archives Denver Post March 4 2014 Old State House Museum Alexander Winter 1963 p 317 Georgia Gov Walker Sobel amp Raimo 1978 Kingsport Times July 13 1939 New York Times August 11 1924 New York Times August 14 1924 Nashville Tennessean November 21 1914 News amp Observer March 26 2014 Philadelphia Inquirer January 10 1923 a b Newton 2014 New York Times Apr 19 1923 Starr 1990 Goldberg 1981 ADL Report January 13 2013 p 3 Zatarain 1990 p 21 ADL Report January 13 2013 pp 1 2 Finkelman 1999 Finkelman February 2000 Stetson 2000 Wade 1988 pp 165 477 Dean 2004 Ferrell 1996 New York Times Magazine January 8 2006 Woolley 1920 Washington Post June 21 2020 Payne 2009 Anthony 1998 pp 412 413 Straight Dope November 8 2005 New York Times August 18 2015 Cheathem June 6 2014 Wallace July 14 2014 McCullough 1992 pp 159 164 McCullough 1992 a b Truman 1973 McCullough 1992 p 170 Truman 1973 p 67 Steinberg 1962 p 75 Hamby 1995 Washington Post October 27 2017 News media edit Top Senate Democrat Apologizes for Slur CNN Inside Politics March 4 2001 Retrieved September 4 2019 Colorado Independent The Cara Degette January 9 2009 When Colorado Was Klan Country Denver Retrieved November 9 2016 Littwin Mike January 9 2009 The Gov s Race There s Extreme and Then There s Extreme Denver The Colorado Independent Retrieved November 9 2016 Daily Sentinel The September 16 1926 Defeat Becomes Overwhelming As Belated Returns Come In Anti Klan Majorities Mount The Daily Sentinel AP Vol 33 no 296 Grand Junction Colorado p 8 Retrieved June 6 2020 via Newspapers com LCCN sn86 66870 OCLC 11217358 all editions Bartels Lynn March 4 2014 Bob Beauprez Bypasses KKK Member Attacks Hickenlooper as Most Extreme Governor Denver Post Archived from the original on March 6 2014 Retrieved November 9 2016 The Spot political blog of the Denver Post Fayetteville Daily Democrat August 9 1922 M Crae Leads Two to One Cubage and Herbert Wilson Races Close Toney Has Carried Seven Counties Parke Harper News Service of Little Rock founded in 1911 by Augustus Winfield Parke 1878 1961 amp Clio Armitage Harper 1872 1932 Vol 28 no 223 Fayetteville Arkansas Fayetteville Democrat Company p 1 Retrieved December 3 2020 via NewspaperArchive LCCN sn88051010 OCLC 18126013 all editions Senator Robert Byrd Says White Niggers rcmtrox Event occurs at 1 minute 13 seconds Retrieved September 4 2019 via YouTube taped March 2 2001 posted to YouTube January 17 2009 Walton Addresses 2000 Voters Vol 48 no 46 Eufaula Oklahoma Indian Journal The weekly October 9 1924 p 1 Retrieved November 1 2017 via Newspapers com Alexander Posey 1873 1908 was founder of the Indian Journal nowrap LCCN sn96087901 OCLC 34998711 all editions Kingsport Times The July 13 1939 Davies Opposition Grows in Senate Confirmation of Tennessean for U S Judge Recalled by Committee Vol 24 no 168 Home ed Kingsport Tennessee pp 1 amp 16 Retrieved September 7 2017 via Newspapers com Davies joined the KKK while in Louisiana and attended a meeting while at Vanderbilt University author1 link The Kingsport Times NAACP June 29 2010 NAACP Mourns the Passing of U S Senator Robert Byrd NAACP Press Room Archived from the original on July 7 2010 Retrieved August 27 2016 Nashville Tennessean November 21 1914 John W Morton Passes Away in Shelby obituary Vol 8 no 194 Home ed pp 1 2 Retrieved September 25 2016 via Newspapers com To Captain Morton came the peculiar distinction of having organized that branch of the Ku Klux Klan which operated in Nashville and the adjacent territory but a more signal honor was his when he performed the ceremonies which initiated Gen Nathan Bedford Forrest into the mysterious ranks of the Ku Klux Klan Stancill Margaret Jane March 26 2014 Crowd Pushes UNC to Rename Hall The News amp Observer Vol 2015 no 85 Raleigh North Carolina pp 1 amp 6 section A Retrieved February 20 2020 via Newspapers com New York Times The April 19 1923 Warrants Out for Klan in Morehouse Captain Skipwith Exalted Cyclops Charged with Conspiring to Murder Nearly a Score Accused Jeff Burnett and Dr Mckoln Among Alleged Men Rouge Hooded Kidnappers Sought The New York Times Vol 73 no 23826 p 21 column 3 Retrieved January 25 2021 via TimesMachine New York Times The August 11 1924 Klan in Southwest Faces Another Test Hopes to Nominate Its Candidate for Governor in Arkansas Primary Tomorrow The New York Times Vol 73 no 24306 p 2 column 3 of 8 Retrieved May 19 2021 via TimesMachine New York Times The August 14 1924 Klan Loses in Arkansas Terral Leads Cazort in Race for Nomination for Governor The New York Times Vol 73 no 24309 p 2 column 3 of 8 Retrieved May 19 2021 via TimesMachine New York Times The November 6 1924 Victories by Klan Feature Election Order Elects Senators in Oklahoma and Colorado Governors in Kansas Indiana Colorado All on Republican Ticket Only Setback for Ku Klux Was Triumph of Mrs Ferguson as Democratic Governor of Texas The New York Times Vol 74 no 24388 p 1 column 7 amp p 3 Retrieved August 13 2021 via TimesMachine Hinton Harold B August 14 1946 Bilbo KKK Avowal Stumps Mississippi Between Why Not of Friends and He s Clowning of Foes Is a Fear He Calls Turn New York Times The Vol 95 no 32344 p 14 Retrieved May 19 2021 via TimesMachine New York Times Magazine Dubner Stephen Joseph Levitt Steven D Levitt January 8 2006 The Way We Live Now 01 08 06 Freakonomics Hoodwinked The New York Times Sunday supplement of The New York Times National ed pp 26 28 section 6 Retrieved January 17 2006 Dubner and Levitt co authors of Freakonomics A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything 2005 review their own book New York Times The Baker Peter August 18 2015 White House Memo DNA Shows Warren Harding Wasn t America s First Black President New York Times The Retrieved December 22 2020 ProQuest 1714233466 U S Newsstream database Philadelphia Inquirer January 10 1923 Ku Klux Unmasked at Torture Probe by Defiant Victims The Philadelphia Inquirer Vol 188 no 10 pp 1 amp 2 Retrieved January 25 2021 via Newspapers com Roseburg New Review August 16 1926 U Ren Charges Corruption in Steiwer Ranks AP Vol 27 no 214 Roseburg Oregon p 1 Retrieved May 25 2021 via Newspapers com OCLC 52498570 all editions The Straight Dope Corrado John November 8 2005 Was Warren Harding Inducted Into the KKK While President A Staff Report From the Straight Dope Science Advisory Board Chicago Creative Loafing Media Inc Retrieved February 8 2009 Washington Post The Pianin Eric Stuart June 19 2005 A Senator s Shame Byrd in His New Book Again Confronts Early Ties to KKK review of Byrd s 2005 autobiography Robert C Byrd Child of the Appalachian Coalfields Final ed p 1A Retrieved July 11 2006 During his 1958 Senate campaign he Byrd told a newspaper reporter that he personally felt the Klan had been incorrectly blamed for many acts committed by others ProQuest 409811201 U S Newsstream database Washington Post The Miller Michael E October 27 2017 Strippers Surveillance and Assassination Plots The Wildest JFK Files blog In an internal FBI report from May 1964 an informant told the FBI that the Ku Klux Klan said it had documented proof that President Johnson was formerly a member of the Klan in Texas during the early days of his political career The documented proof was not provided ProQuest 1956383360 U S Newsstream database Washington Post The Mendelsohn Jennifer Shulman Peter A March 18 2018 How Social Media Spread a Historical Lie blog Retrieved January 26 2021 ProQuest 2014080716 U S Newsstream database Washington Post The Robenalt James D June 21 2020 The Republican President Who Called for Racial Justice in America After Tulsa Massacre Warren G Harding s Comments About Race and Equality Were Remarkable For 1921 Retrieved June 26 2020 Selected archival access to The New York Times LCCN sn78 4456 ISSN 0362 4331 via ProQuest OCLC 1645522 all editions 858655519 via ProQuest 7764137 microfilm 69647843 microfilm International ed TimesMachine every issue published before December 31 2002 Newspapers com 1851 1922 Books journals magazines papers websites edit ADL Report January 3 2013 Introduction and On the KKK David Duke In His Own Words PDF New York Anti Defamation League pp 1 2 amp 3 of 8 Retrieved November 3 2015 On the KKK Transcript of a letter announcing Duke s resignation from the Klan which accompanied the first issue of NAAWP News National Association for the Advancement of White People August 1980 Alexander Charles C omer 1935 2011 9 publications The Ku Klux Klan in Texas 1920 1927 M A thesis University of Texas at Austin September 1959 OCLC 27257144 all editions The Ku Klux Klan in Texas 1920 1930 The Historian of the University of Texas Austin Beta Alpha Chapter of Phi Alpha Theta University of Texas at Austin 1 1 21 43 September 1962 publication was renamed Paisano ISSN 0078 7841 OCLC 259708495 all editions OCLC 4913350 all editions publication Crusade for Conformity The Ku Klux Klan in Texas 1920 1930 Publication Series Vol 6 Houston Texas Gulf Coast Historical Association 1962 the publication ceased in 1985 and is archived at the Houston Metropolitan Research Center Invisible Empire in the Southwest The Ku Klux Klan in Texas Louisiana Oklahoma and Arkansas 1920 1930 PhD dissertation University of Texas at Austin June 1962 OCLC 962864221 all editions Alexander Charles C Spring 1963 White Robed Reformers The Ku Klux Klan Comes to Arkansas 1921 1922 The Arkansas Historical Quarterly Arkansas Historical Association 22 1 8 23 doi 10 2307 40018939 ISSN 0004 1823 JSTOR 40018939 OCLC 5543625678 Alexander Charles C Autumn 1963 White Robes in Politics The Ku Klux Klan in Arkansas 1922 1924 The Arkansas Historical Quarterly Arkansas Historical Association 22 3 195 214 doi 10 2307 40007660 ISSN 0004 1823 JSTOR 40007660 OCLC 5543623062 Alexander Charles C Winter 1963 Defeat Decline Disintegration The Ku Klux Klan in Arkansas 1924 and After The Arkansas Historical Quarterly Arkansas Historical Association 22 4 311 331 doi 10 2307 40018633 ISSN 0004 1823 JSTOR 40018633 OCLC 5543626524 The Ku Klux Klan in the Southwest Lexington Kentucky University of Kentucky Press May 1965 Retrieved May 20 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 65 11831 ISBN 978 0 8131 6197 6 0 8131 6197 5 OCLC 1105446036 all editions and 490915485 Alexander Charles C Autumn 1965 Kleagles and Cash The Ku Klux Klan as a Business Organization 1915 1930 Business History Review Arkansas Historical Association 39 3 348 367 doi 10 2307 3112145 ISSN 0007 6805 JSTOR 3112145 OCLC 38467191 S2CID 155831290 Alexander Thomas B 1949 Kukluxism in Tennessee 1865 1869 Tennessee Historical Quarterly 8 3 195 219 ISSN 0040 3261 JSTOR 42621013 OCLC 55483757 Footnote 3 p 197 The only list of members known to be extant is in the possession of Stanley F Horn of Nashville Tennessee It is from Marshall County Middle Tennessee One preserved prescript from another Tennessee den has penciled upon it the names of Grand Wizard of the Empire Forrest the Grand Dragon of the Realm of Tennessee General George W Gordon the Grand Titan of the district Joe Fussell and the Grand Giant of the county E D Thompson Horn 1939 p 113 General Nathan Bedford Forrest was made head of the organization with the title of Grand Wizard of the Empire southern states Each state was set up as a Realm headed by a Grand Dragon each congressional district a Dominion under a Grand Titan and each county a Province under a Grand Giant The unit was the Den with a Grand Cyclops as its chief officer A constitution called a Prescript was adopted and printed for circulation Horn 1939 American Experience May 5 2002 Ulysses S Grant Grant Reconstruction and the KKK online article PBS Retrieved August 8 2021 From the Collection The Presidents The televised portion of the series Ulysses S Grant was first aired May 5 2002 OCLC 1057434054 all editions Anthony Carl Sferrazza 1998 Florence Harding The First Lady The Jazz Age and the Death of America s Most Scandalous President William Morrow and Company ISBN 978 0 688 07794 5 Retrieved May 19 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 97 49955 ISBN 0 6880 7794 3 OCLC 37993669 all editions Ball Howard 1996 Hugo L Black Cold Steel Warrior Oxford University Press pp 16 amp 50 ISBN 978 0 19 507814 5 Retrieved May 19 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 95 14107 ISBN 0 1950 7814 4 Blackmon Douglass A 2008 Slavery by Another Name The Re Enslavement of Black Americans From the Civil War to World War II Doubleday pp 107 371 372 Brown 180 Gordon ISBN 978 0 385 50625 0 via Internet Archive LCCN 2007 34500 ISBN 978 0 3855 0625 0 OCLC 253596175 all editions Butler Anne M Wolff Wendy 1995 Daniel F Steck v Smith W Brookhart United States Senate Election Expulsion and Censure Cases 1793 1990 Washington D C U S Senate Historical Office U S Government Printing Office pp 312 315 Case 105 Retrieved May 25 2021 via Google Books prepared under the direction of Sheila P atricia Burke burn 1951 LCCN 95 35521 OCLC 32970375 all editions Carter Joe December 19 2013 How the KKK Got Its Way on Separation of Church and State Acton Institute Powerblog Retrieved June 13 2019 Chalmers David Mark Fall 1965 The Ku Klux Klan In Politics In The 1920s Mississippi Quarterly Johns Hopkins University Press 18 4 234 247 JSTOR 26473702 ISSN 0026 637X publication OCLC 7973910754 article Chalmers David Mark 1987 1965 1968 1981 Hooded Americanism History of the Ku Klux Klan 3rd ed Duke University Press pp 39 43 48 155 200 201 202 205 283 ISBN 978 0 8223 0772 3 Retrieved May 10 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 86 29133 ISBN 0 8223 0730 8 0 8223 0772 3 OCLC 885415020 all editions Cheathem Mark Renfred June 6 2014 Was Calvin Coolidge a Klansman Jacksonian America Society Personality and Politics Retrieved December 22 2020 jacksonianamerica com is a website maintained by the author Dean John W 2004 Schlesinger Arthur M Jr ed Warren G Harding The American President Series 1st ed Times Books ISBN 978 0 8050 6956 3 Retrieved September 4 2005 via Internet Archive LCCN 2003 49368 ISBN 0 8050 6956 9 978 0 8050 6956 3 OCLC 815616977 all editions Drukman Mason 1997 Wayne Morse A Political Biography Portland Oregon Historical Society Press pp 122 123 LCCN 97 3380 ISBN 0 8759 5263 1 978 0 8759 5263 5 OCLC 654614139 all editions Squeezing Lemon America s Porous Wall Between Church and State A Supreme Court Case Could Make the Holes Bigger The Economist Vol 430 no 9132 March 2 8 2019 Retrieved June 13 2019 Justice Hugo Black explained in a 5 4 decision why this wall did not stand in the way of a New Jersey law covering the bus fares of Catholic school students This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline Cross Roads Feldman Glenn Alan 1999 Politics Society and the Klan in Alabama 1915 1949 Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press p 88 amp 138 via Internet Archive LCCN 99 6123 ISBN 0 8173 0983 7 0 8173 0984 5 OCLC 956973941 all editions Ferrell Robert Hugh 1996 The Strange Deaths of President Harding University of Missouri Press Retrieved May 19 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 96 31838 ISBN 0 8262 1202 6 OCLC 40110954 all editions Finkelman Paul 1999 White Edward Douglass 3 Nov 1845 19 May 1921 American National Biography Vol 23 Oxford University Press pp 195 199 Retrieved May 20 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 98 20826 ISBN 0 1952 0635 5 0 1951 2802 8 full set Vol 23 OCLC 1003045645 all editions Vol 23 Finkelman Paul February 2000 White Edward Douglass 3 Nov 1845 19 May 1921 American National Biography Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 1100912 Retrieved May 20 2021 OCLC 4825703858 article Georgia Governor Clifford Mitchell Walker www nga org National Governors Association n d Archived from the original on January 28 2013 Retrieved November 9 2016 via Wayback Machine Goff Garland L Jr Spring 2012 Hugo Black s Wall of Separation of Church and State Senior Honors Theses undergraduate thesis Liberty University OCLC 812676154 Retrieved June 13 2019 Goldberg Robert Alan 1981 Hooded Empire The Ku Klux Klan in Colorado Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press LCCN 81 7625 ISBN 0 2520 0848 0 978 0 2520 0848 1 OCLC 492343566 all editions Gugin Linda Ann St Clair James E lige eds 2006 The Governors of Indiana Indiana Historical Society Press in cooperation with the Indiana Historical Bureau pp 276 amp 278 ISBN 978 0 87195 196 0 via Internet Archive LCCN 2005 56796 ISBN 0 8719 5196 7 978 0 8719 5196 0 OCLC 62697186 all editions Hamby Alonzo Lee 1995 A Man of the People A Life of Harry S Truman Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 504546 8 Retrieved May 19 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 94 43806 ISBN 0 1950 4546 7 OCLC 901371772 all editions Herbert Keith Scott September 14 2010 updated April 1 2019 Ku Klux Klan in Alabama During the Reconstruction Era Encyclopedia of Alabama online Alabama Humanities Foundation Auburn University University of Alabama Press Retrieved September 21 2017 OCLC 251464874 1141449731 850948989 Horn Stanley Fitzgerald 1939 Invisible Empire The Story of the Ku Klux Klan 1866 1871 Cambridge Massachusetts Houghton Mifflin Company The Riverside Press Retrieved May 22 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 39 8103 OCLC 423914 all editions Lindgren Jim October 20 2010 How Separation of Church and State Was Read Into the Constitution Hint The KKK Got Its Way The Volokh Conspiracy Retrieved May 19 2021 reprint from an earlier post link McAndrew Tara McClellan January 25 2017 The History of the KKK in American Politics Politics amp History JSTOR Daily online New York JSTOR Retrieved August 8 2021 OCLC 892644710 all editions Subtitle In the 1920s during what historians call the KKK s second wave Klan members served in all levels of American government McCullough David 1992 Truman Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 45654 2 Retrieved May 19 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 82 5245 ISBN 0 6714 5654 7 OCLC 779284792 all editions see Truman Millhiser Ian May 15 2015 Brown v Board of Education Came Very Close To Being A Dark Day In American History ThinkProgress Center for American Progress Action Fund Retrieved February 26 2020 Moseley Clement Charlton Summer 1973 The Political Influence of the Ku Klux Klan in Georgia 1915 1925 Georgia Historical Quarterly Georgia Historical Society 57 2 235 255 ISSN 0016 8297 JSTOR 40579519 OCLC 5543005771 Newman Roger Kenneth 1994 Hugo Black A Biography Pantheon Books p 97 ISBN 978 0 679 43180 0 Retrieved May 19 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 94 10233 ISBN 0 6794 3180 2 OCLC 493921265 all editions Newton Michael 2014 White Robes and Burning Crosses A History of the Ku Klux Klan from 1866 Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company pp 60 63 Retrieved May 19 2021 via Google Books see Truman LCCN 2013 23632 ISBN 978 0 7864 7774 6 OCLC 896740025 all editions Noah Timothy December 18 2002 What About Byrd Unlike Thurmond He Renounced His Racist Past Slate Archived from the original on October 1 2007 Retrieved September 17 2007 Thomas Jefferson Terral 1925 1927 www arkansasheritage com Little Rock Old State House Museum Archived from the original on November 14 2012 Retrieved April 14 2012 Payne Phillip Gene 2009 Dead Last The Public Memory of Warren G Harding s Scandalous Legacy 1st ed Ohio University Press pp 118 120 ISBN 978 0 8214 1818 5 Retrieved June 9 2013 via Google Books LCCN 2008 43916 ISBN 978 0 8214 1818 5 OCLC 928896720 all editions Whack Errin March 7 2015 Who Was Edmund Pettus a man bent on preserving slavery and segregation Smithsonian Magazine online Retrieved September 22 2017 Sobel Robert Raimo John William eds 1978 Walker Clifford Mitchell 1923 1927 Biographical Directory of Governors of the United States 1789 1978 Vol 1 Alabama Indiana Westport Connecticut Meckler Books pp 315 316 Retrieved May 20 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 77 10435 ISBN 0 9304 6600 4 full set ISBN 0 9304 6601 2 Vol 1 OCLC 561312187 all editions Starr Kevin 1990 Material Dreams Southern California Through the 1920s Oxford University Press pp 138 139 ISBN 978 0 19 504487 4 Retrieved May 20 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 89 16122 ISBN 0 19 504487 8 OCLC 861983456 all editions Steinberg Alfred 1962 Man From Missouri the Life and Times of Harry S Truman G P Putnam s Sons amp Van Rees Press LCCN 73 170238 ISBN 0 6880 0005 3 OCLC 1043023982 all editions Kennedy William Stetson March 2000 Woody Guthrie Natural Born Anti Fascist International Searchlight magazine Ilford England 297 Archived from the original on November 20 2004 Retrieved September 9 2005 Alternate transcript ISSN 0262 4591 publication Time November 2 1925 In Indiana Time Vol 6 no 18 US ed Retrieved May 25 2021 Truman Margaret 1973 Harry S Truman William Morrow and Company ISBN 978 0 688 00005 9 Retrieved May 19 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 73 170238 ISBN 0 6880 0005 3 OCLC 987451 all editions Wade Wyn Craig 1988 1987 The Fiery Cross The Ku Klux Klan in America Touchstone Books an imprint of Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 65723 9 Retrieved May 19 2021 via Internet Archive LCCN 86 26002 ISBN 0 6714 1476 3 OCLC 438379075 769475167 438379075 Wallace Jerry L July 14 2014 The Ku Klux Klan in Calvin Coolidge s America Coolidge Blog Plymouth Vermont The Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation Retrieved December 22 2020 Woolley John Turner Peters Gerhard David eds June 8 1920 Republican Party Platform of 1920 The American Presidency Project online database University of California at Santa Barbara Retrieved July 11 2006 LCCN 2005 616760 OCLC 57407623 Political Party Platforms Zatarain Michael P Mick 1990 David Duke Evolution of a Klansman Gretna Louisiana Pelican Publishing Company p 21 ISBN 978 0 88289 817 9 Retrieved November 11 2009 via Internet Archive LCCN 90 7339 ISBN 0 8828 9817 5 OCLC 243443592 all editions Government and genealogical archives edit Colorado State Archives n d Statehood Governors 1907 1927 Clarence Morley PDF Territorial and Statehood Governors of Colorado from 1862 2012 PDF Denver Archived from the original PDF on December 21 2016 Retrieved November 9 2016 OCLC 53960098 Sources by the Klan or known exponents of the Klan edit Davis Susan Lawrence 1924 Authentic History Ku Klux Klan 1865 1877 Susan Lawrence Davis p 45 Retrieved September 21 2017 via Internet Archive Note Susan Lawrence Davis father Lawrence Ripley Davis 1831 1892 had been a Confederate Colonel and founding member of the Klan the old Klan in Alabama Margaret Mitchell drew heavily from book as a source for Gone With the Wind Davis sued Mitchell unsuccessfully for plagiarism LCCN 24 4514 microfilm amp digital OCLC 1072104132 all editions Dixon Thomas Jr September 1905 The Story of the Ku Klux Klan Some of Its Leaders Living and Dead Metropolitan Magazine New York 22 6 657 669 Retrieved May 20 2021 via Google Books Illustrated with photographs prints and drawings by A rthur I Keller Gordon George W 1867 Prescript of the order of the Ku Klux klan Pulaski Tennessee Lapsley D McCord LCCN 17005242 OCLC 1050761652 Retrieved May 22 2021 via Internet Archive Printed secretly in the office of the Pulaski Citizen by its publisher Lapsley D McCord 1847 1920 Horn This copy of the Prescript was formerly the property of Col Martin Luther Stansel 1822 1902 a lawyer from Pickens County Alabama and one of the organizers of the original Ku Klux Klan reprinted 1903 revised 1904 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ku Klux Klan members in United States politics amp oldid 1205947394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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