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The Clansman: A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan

The Clansman: A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan is a novel published in 1905, the second work in the Ku Klux Klan trilogy by Thomas Dixon Jr. (the others are The Leopard's Spots and The Traitor). Chronicling the American Civil War and Reconstruction era from a pro-Confederate perspective, it presents the Ku Klux Klan heroically. The novel was adapted first by the author as a highly successful play entitled The Clansman (1905), and a decade later by D. W. Griffith in the 1915 movie The Birth of a Nation.[1]

The Clansman
AuthorsThomas Dixon Jr.
LanguageEnglish
GenreLost Cause myth, pseudohistory
Publication date
1905

Dixon wrote The Clansman in support of racial segregation, as it showed free blacks turning savage and violent, committing crimes such as murder, rape, and robbery far out of proportion to their percentage of the population. He claimed that 18,000,000 Southerners supported his beliefs.[2] Dixon portrays the Radical Republican speaker of the house, Austin Stoneman (based on Thaddeus Stevens, from Pennsylvania), as a rapacious, vindictive, race traitor, mad with power and eaten up with hate. His goal is to punish the Southern whites for their revolution against an "oppressive" government (the Union) by turning the former slaves against the white Southerners and using the iron fist of the Union occupation troops to make them the new masters. In Dixon's characterization, the Klan's job is to protect white Southerners from the carpetbaggers and their allies, black and white.

The book and its stage and film adaptations were highly controversial in their time, and continue to receive criticism for their espousal of racist and Neo-Confederate sentiments. In addition to concerns that The Clansman would stir up political and racial tensions in the South, Dixon's portrayal of the Klan as chivalrous freedom fighters was ridiculed as absurd.[3]

Characters edit

  • Austin Stoneman – Northern political leader who advocates and implements Reconstruction in the conquered Southern States; introduces bill to impeach President Andrew Johnson
  • Elsie Stoneman – daughter of the above; defies father's wishes by falling in love with young Southern patriot Ben Cameron
  • Phil Stoneman – son and brother of the above; falls in love with Southerner Margaret Cameron
  • Lydia Brown – Austin Stoneman's mulatto housekeeper
  • Silas Lynch – mulatto assistant to Austin Stoneman; aids him in forcing Reconstruction on the defiant Southerners
  • Marion Lenoir – Fifteen-year-old white girl who was Ben Cameron's childhood sweetheart; after being brutally raped by Gus, she commits suicide by jumping off a cliff
  • Jeannie Lenoir – mother of the above; joins her daughter in fatal cliff leap
  • Gus – a former slave of the Camerons; rapes Marion and is then captured and executed by the Ku Klux Klan, under the supervision of the "Grand Dragon" Ben Cameron
  • Dr. Richard Cameron – a Southern doctor, falsely charged with complicity in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln
  • Mrs. Gloria Cameron – wife of Dr. Richard Cameron
  • Benjamin ("Ben") Cameron – son of the above and the hero of the novel; falls in love with Northerner Elsie Stoneman; fought for the South in the Civil War and later joins the Ku Klux Klan in order to resist Northern occupation forces
  • Margaret Cameron – sister of the above
  • Mammy
  • Jake
  • President Abraham Lincoln – portrayed as a sympathetic character who sought to restore normalcy by shipping former slaves back to Africa
  • President Andrew Johnson – Lincoln's successor, who was impeached (but not convicted) in Congress for opposing Reconstruction

Plot edit

 
Frontispiece to the first edition of
Dixon's The Clansman,
by Arthur I. Keller.
 
"The Fiery Cross of old Scotland's hills!"
Illustration from the first edition of The Clansman,
by Arthur I. Keller.

Note figures in background.

In The Clansman, Reconstruction was an attempt by Augustus Stoneman, a thinly-veiled reference to Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania, to ensure that the Republican Party would stay in power by securing the Southern black vote. Stoneman's hatred for President Johnson stems from Johnson's refusal to disenfranchise Southern whites. His anger towards former slaveholders is intensified after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, when he vows revenge on the South. His programs strip away the land owned by whites, giving it to former slaves. (See Forty acres and a mule.) Men claiming to represent the government confiscate the material wealth of the South, destroying plantation-owning families. Finally, the former slaves are taught that they are superior to their former owners and should rise up against them. These injustices are the impetuses for the creation of the Klan.

Similar to his statements about The Leopard's Spots, Dixon insists in a "To the reader" prologue that the novel is historical:

I have sought to preserve in this romance both the letter and the spirit of this remarkable period. The men who enact the drama of fierce revenge into which I have woven a double love-story are historical figures. I have merely changed their names without taking a liberty with any essential historic fact.[4]

Reception edit

The publication of The Clansman caused significant uproar not only in the North, but throughout the South. Thomas Dixon was denounced for renewing old conflicts and glorifying what many thought was an unfortunate part of American history.

When offered membership in the KKK, Dixon reportedly turned it down because, he claimed, he did not agree with the Klan's methods.[5] The Klokard of the Klan, Oscar Haywood, at one point challenged Dixon to a debate over the nature of the Ku Klux Klan.[6]

Despite Dixon's reported claims that he rejected violence except in self-defense, in the book previous to The Clansman in Dixon's trilogy, The Leopard's Spots, the Klan dealt thusly with a black man who had asked a white woman to kiss him:[7]

When the sun rose next morning the lifeless body of Tim Shelby was dangling from a rope tied to the iron rail of the balcony of the court house. His neck was broken and his body was hanging low--scarcely three feet from the ground. His thick lips had been split with a sharp knife and from his teeth hung this placard: "The answer of the Anglo-Saxon race to Negro lips that dare pollute with words the womanhood of the South. K. K. K."

— Thomas Dixon, The Leopard's Spots, Chapter XIX, "The Rally of the Clansmen", p. 150

Dixon's novel is often contraposed with Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin;[8] Dixon himself described it as a sequel.[9] The character of Gus in The Clansman, who is shown as the worst kind of former slave, going as far as to rape a white woman, is the opposite of the benevolent Uncle Tom, who is portrayed as angelic. The books are also similar for the reactions they stirred up among their readers. Uncle Tom's Cabin was detested and banned throughout the South, while The Clansman was ranted against in Northern papers. Also like Uncle Tom's Cabin, The Clansman reached its greatest audience not through its book form, which sold over 100,000 copies, but through the subsequent play, that had an audience of millions.[10]

In the introduction to a university press edition of the book in 1970, an era of high interest in civil rights, historian Thomas D. Clark wrote:

The first thing to be said in discussing Thomas Dixon, Jr.'s novel, The Clansman is that no person of critical judgment thinks of it as having artistic conception or literary craftsmanship.... The novel opened a wider a vein of racial hatred which was to poison further in age already in a social and political upheaval.[11]

The play edit

In 1915, when Birth of a Nation appeared, The Clansman was best known as a play. Much of the movie is taken from the play, rather than directly from the novel.

Dixon rewrote the novel as a play In order to further publicize his views. "In most cases, Dixon's adaptation of a novel for the stage was merely intended to present his message to a larger audience, for his avowed purpose as a writer was to reach as many people as possible."[12]: 107 [13]: 15 [14]: 280  He enrolled in a correspondence course given by the one-man American School of Playwriting, of William Thompson Price. Price was "the greatest critic of the theater since Aristotle"; Dixon also compares him with Daniel Boone and Henry Clay, adding "The State of Kentucky has given the nation no greater man."[14]: 281  Apparently as an advertisement for the school, he reproduced in the program his handwritten thank-you note. (At the time, reproducing handwriting was expensive, and to send a handwritten, as opposed to typed, letter was an indication of special esteem.)

November 11, 1905
My dear Mr. Price,
Thanks for your letter of congratulations. It is for me to thank you for invaluable aid as my instructor in the technique of playwriting.
I learned more from your course in one year than I could have gotten in ten years unaided. It is new, not found in books, thorough and practical. The student who neglects this course is missing the opportunity of a life [sic]. I could never have written "The Clansman" without the grasp of its principles. Our association has been an inspiration to me from the first.
Sincerely,
Thomas Dixon Jr.[15]

The contract for the production specified, at Dixon's request, that Dixon would pay half the cost of the production, and have half ownership. He chose the cast and had a "secret power in the...management of the company".[14]: 280–282  "The production of the play became the most fascinating adventure on which I had ever embarked. I lived in a dream world with dream people. I never worked so hard or so happily in my life. Work was play, thrilling, glorious, inspiring play."[14]: 282 

Four horses in Klan costumes "raced across the stage in a climax. The horses were ridden in the streets as advertising."[14]: 285 

Reception edit

In Montgomery, Alabama, and Macon, Georgia, the play was banned.[16] The next day the Washington Post, in an editorial, called for the same to be done in Washington, saying the play was abominable, stupid, and misleading:

The play does not possess even the merit of historic truth. It is as false as "Uncle Tom's Cabin" and a hundred times more wicked, for it excites the passions and prejudices of the dominant class at the expense of the defenseless minority. We can imagine no circumstances under which its production would be useful or wholesome, since it disgusts the judicious and the well-informed, and exerts an influence only upon the ignorant, the credulous, and the ill disposed. But in the present condition of the public mind at [sic] the South it is a firebrand, a counsel of barbarity, in fact, a crime.[17]

In an effort to prevent a performance in Washington, D.C., a group of pastors appealed to President Theodore Roosevelt to intercede on their behalf.[18]

In Philadelphia, the play was banned after it opened by Mayor Weaver, who said that "the tendency of the play is to produce racial hatred".[19] At the opening rotten eggs were thrown at the actors.[20]

The play, despite these protests, was extremely popular in the South. It opened with a huge premiere in Norfolk, Virginia, and drew record-breaking audiences in Columbia, South Carolina, and[21][22] In fact, the vast majority of news stories about The Clansman have to do with the play, not the novel.[citation needed]

In Bainbridge, Georgia, a black man was lynched shortly after presentation of the play in October, 1905. A newspaper article reported it under the title: "Lynching Laid to 'The Clansman'. Georgia Mob, Wrought Up by Dixon's Story, Hangs Negro Murderer." "The feeling against negroes, never kindly, has been embittered by the Dixon play, following which stories of negroes' depredations during the reconstruction period have been revived, and whites have been wrought up to a high tension."[23]

According to news stories, the "mob" which lynched three negroes in Springfield, Missouri in April, 1906, "seemed filled with the spirit of 'The Clansman', which created such a strong anti-negro feeling here six weeks ago."[24] Dixon called this attribution "the acme of absurdity", claiming that the play had reduced lynchings. The lynching in Springfield, he opined, "was caused by the commission of a crime by negroes—a crime so horrible and revolting to every instinct of white manhood that a whole community went mad with rage for justice, swift and terrible. Such things have happened in the south before and they will happen again so long as such crimes are committed by negroes."[25]

The play had an opulent 60-page program, with pictures, sold at the high price of 50¢ when a newspaper cost 5¢. It included "A Portrait and Sketch of the Author", and "Mr. Dixon's Famous Articles on 'The Future of the Negro', 'The Story of the Ku Klux Klan', and 'What Our Nation owes to the Klan'".[26] The play, being concerned with the KKK and Reconstruction, is adapted in the second half of The Birth of a Nation. According to Professor Russell Merritt, key differences between the play and film are that Dixon was more sympathetic to Southerners' pursuing education and modern professions, whereas Griffith stressed ownership of plantations.[27]

A four-page program of a traveling production, held by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library in Springfield, Illinois, tells us that "Hundreds [were] turned away at every performance since the memorable opening in Norfolk, VA., Sept, 22, 1905".[28]

The play was not published until 2007.[29] A scholar says it was not only not published, it was not printed,[13]: 16  but with so many involved in the production — two companies were touring simultaneously[13]: 22  — copies had to be printed for internal use. Two such copies are known, one in the Library of Congress, the other in the Cortland Free Library.[30]

Rebirth of the Klan edit

Thomas Dixon's novel did not have the immediate effect of causing the recreation of the Ku Klux Klan. Neither did the subsequent play. The release of the movie The Birth of a Nation in 1915 finally let Dixon's work reach an audience large enough to start the resurrection of the Klan.

One of the images most commonly associated with the Klan, that of a burning Latin cross, was actually taken from The Clansman, but was not used by the original Klan. Dixon, who had Scottish ancestry, drew upon the Scottish tradition of the Crann Tara, a burning cross used to call clan members to arms, as inspiration for the depiction of cross burning.[31] The Klan's white robes are also an invention of Dixon, and he protested their appropriation of the "livery" he created.[5]

Archival material edit

References edit

  1. ^ Maxwell Bloomfield, "Dixon's The Leopard's Spots: A Study in Popular Racism." American Quarterly 16.3 (1964): 387-401. online
  2. ^ Dixon, Thomas (February 25, 1905). ""THE CLANSMAN.": Its Author, Thomas Dixon, Jr., Replies with Spirit and Good Humor to Some of His Critics". The New York Times Book Review. ProQuest 96517397.
  3. ^ "THE CLANSMAN DENOUNCED.: South Carolina Editor Denies Charges Made by Thomas Dixon, Jr" (PDF). TNew York Times. January 2, 1906. Retrieved August 27, 2017.
  4. ^ Dixon, Thomas Jr. (2007). The Clansman. An historical romance of the Ku Klux Klan. New York: A. Wessels. p. iv.
  5. ^ a b "Klan Is Denounced by 'The Clansman'". New York Times. January 23, 1923.
  6. ^ "KLOKARD HAYWOOD HERE TO AID KU KLUX: Issues Challenge to Author of 'The Clansman' to Meet Him in Public Debate. PLANS PUBLIC ADDRESSES Pastor Calls Men Rouge Outrages a Plot -- Says Disclosures Would Shake the World". The New York Times. February 5, 1923. ProQuest 103217416.
  7. ^ Dixon, Thomas (1998). "The Leopard's Spots". Documenting the American South. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved July 19, 2013.
  8. ^ "Tom Dixon and His Clansman". The Washington Post. November 9, 1905. ProQuest 144598127.
  9. ^ The Clansman, by Thomas Dixon. The play that is sweeping the nation. New York: American News Co. 1905. p. 15. Retrieved April 25, 2019.
  10. ^ DiMare, Philip C. (2011). Movies in American History: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 41–42.
  11. ^ Thomas D. Clark, "Introduction", The Clansman (University University Press of Kentucky, 1970) p. i.
  12. ^ Cook, Raymond A. (1974). Thomas Dixon. Lexington, Kentucky: Twayne. ISBN 9780850702064. OCLC 878907961.
  13. ^ a b c da Ponte, Durant (1957). "The Greatest Play of the South". Tennessee Studies in Literature. Vol. 2. pp. 15–24. Retrieved May 3, 2019.
  14. ^ a b c d e Dixon, Thomas Jr. (1984). Crowe, Karen (ed.). Southern horizons: the autobiography of Thomas Dixon. Alexandria, Virginia: IWV Publishing. OCLC 11398740.
  15. ^ The Play that is Stirring the Nation. The Clansman. New York: American News Company. 1905. p. 69.
  16. ^ "'The Clansman' Tabooed". Washington Post. September 25, 1906. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
  17. ^ "Suppress "The Clansman"!". Washington Post. September 26, 1906. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
  18. ^ "WOULD STOP "THE CLANSMAN.": Pastors Appeal to President to Prevent the Performance". The Washington Post. October 6, 1906. ProQuest 144659181.
  19. ^ "'Clansman' Prohibited". New York Age. October 25, 1906. p. 1.
  20. ^ "'Clansman' Prohibited". New York Age. October 25, 1906. p. 3.
  21. ^ "HISSING OF "THE CLANSMAN.": Majority of People of Columbia, S.C., Commend the Play". The Washington Post. August 21, 1905. ProQuest 144554467.
  22. ^ "PREMIER OF CLANSMAN.: Thomas Dixon's Dramatic Answer to "Uncle Tom's Cabin" Scores Success". September 23, 1905. ProQuest 144588850.
  23. ^ "Lynching Laid to 'The Clansman'". Minneapolis Journal. October 30, 1905. p. 1.
  24. ^ "Negroes Lynched". Sedalia Weekly Democrat. Sedalia, Missouri. April 20, 1906. p. 9 – via newspapers.com.
  25. ^ "Not the Fault of the 'Clansman'". St. Joseph Gazette. St. Joseph, Missouri. May 3, 1906. p. 5 – via newspapers.com.
  26. ^ The Clansman, by Thomas Dixon. The play that is sweeping the nation. New York: American News Co. 1905. Retrieved April 25, 2019.
  27. ^ Russell Merritt, "Dixon, Griffith, and the Southern Legend." Cinema Journal, Vol. 12, No. 1. (Autumn, 1972)
  28. ^ Brennan, George H. (c. 1905). 'The Clansman': an American drama: founded on his two famous novels: 'The Leopard's Spots' and 'The Clansman' [playbill]. New York: The Madison Press. OCLC 884731140.
  29. ^ Dixon, Thomas Jr. (2007). "The Clansman. An American Drama". Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film. 34 (2): 60–138. doi:10.7227/NCTF.34.2.5. S2CID 219961909.
  30. ^ Dixon, Thomas Jr. (1905). "The clansman : an American drama: from the material of his two novels, the leopard's spots and the clansman". LCCN 47036857. Retrieved May 3, 2019.
  31. ^ Oliver, Neil; Frantz Parsons, Elaine. "Were Scots responsible for the Ku Klux Klan?". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 4 October 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Dixon, Thomas Jr (January 1906). "Why I Wrote The Clansman". The Theatre. Vol. 6, no. 59. pp. 20–22. (Reprinted in Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film, volume 34, number 2, 2007, pages 139–142. doi:10.7227/NCTF.34.2.6. (subscription required).)

External links edit

  • Full text with illustrations
  • The Clansman: A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan at Google Books
  •   The Clansman public domain audiobook at LibriVox

clansman, historical, romance, klux, klan, clansman, redirects, here, other, uses, clansman, novel, published, 1905, second, work, klux, klan, trilogy, thomas, dixon, others, leopard, spots, traitor, chronicling, american, civil, reconstruction, from, confeder. The Clansman redirects here For other uses see Clansman The Clansman A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan is a novel published in 1905 the second work in the Ku Klux Klan trilogy by Thomas Dixon Jr the others are The Leopard s Spots and The Traitor Chronicling the American Civil War and Reconstruction era from a pro Confederate perspective it presents the Ku Klux Klan heroically The novel was adapted first by the author as a highly successful play entitled The Clansman 1905 and a decade later by D W Griffith in the 1915 movie The Birth of a Nation 1 The ClansmanAuthorsThomas Dixon Jr LanguageEnglishGenreLost Cause myth pseudohistoryPublication date1905Dixon wrote The Clansman in support of racial segregation as it showed free blacks turning savage and violent committing crimes such as murder rape and robbery far out of proportion to their percentage of the population He claimed that 18 000 000 Southerners supported his beliefs 2 Dixon portrays the Radical Republican speaker of the house Austin Stoneman based on Thaddeus Stevens from Pennsylvania as a rapacious vindictive race traitor mad with power and eaten up with hate His goal is to punish the Southern whites for their revolution against an oppressive government the Union by turning the former slaves against the white Southerners and using the iron fist of the Union occupation troops to make them the new masters In Dixon s characterization the Klan s job is to protect white Southerners from the carpetbaggers and their allies black and white The book and its stage and film adaptations were highly controversial in their time and continue to receive criticism for their espousal of racist and Neo Confederate sentiments In addition to concerns that The Clansman would stir up political and racial tensions in the South Dixon s portrayal of the Klan as chivalrous freedom fighters was ridiculed as absurd 3 Contents 1 Characters 2 Plot 3 Reception 4 The play 4 1 Reception 5 Rebirth of the Klan 6 Archival material 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksCharacters editAustin Stoneman Northern political leader who advocates and implements Reconstruction in the conquered Southern States introduces bill to impeach President Andrew Johnson Elsie Stoneman daughter of the above defies father s wishes by falling in love with young Southern patriot Ben Cameron Phil Stoneman son and brother of the above falls in love with Southerner Margaret Cameron Lydia Brown Austin Stoneman s mulatto housekeeper Silas Lynch mulatto assistant to Austin Stoneman aids him in forcing Reconstruction on the defiant Southerners Marion Lenoir Fifteen year old white girl who was Ben Cameron s childhood sweetheart after being brutally raped by Gus she commits suicide by jumping off a cliff Jeannie Lenoir mother of the above joins her daughter in fatal cliff leap Gus a former slave of the Camerons rapes Marion and is then captured and executed by the Ku Klux Klan under the supervision of the Grand Dragon Ben Cameron Dr Richard Cameron a Southern doctor falsely charged with complicity in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln Mrs Gloria Cameron wife of Dr Richard Cameron Benjamin Ben Cameron son of the above and the hero of the novel falls in love with Northerner Elsie Stoneman fought for the South in the Civil War and later joins the Ku Klux Klan in order to resist Northern occupation forces Margaret Cameron sister of the above Mammy Jake President Abraham Lincoln portrayed as a sympathetic character who sought to restore normalcy by shipping former slaves back to Africa President Andrew Johnson Lincoln s successor who was impeached but not convicted in Congress for opposing ReconstructionPlot edit nbsp Frontispiece to the first edition ofDixon s The Clansman by Arthur I Keller nbsp The Fiery Cross of old Scotland s hills Illustration from the first edition of The Clansman by Arthur I Keller Note figures in background In The Clansman Reconstruction was an attempt by Augustus Stoneman a thinly veiled reference to Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania to ensure that the Republican Party would stay in power by securing the Southern black vote Stoneman s hatred for President Johnson stems from Johnson s refusal to disenfranchise Southern whites His anger towards former slaveholders is intensified after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln when he vows revenge on the South His programs strip away the land owned by whites giving it to former slaves See Forty acres and a mule Men claiming to represent the government confiscate the material wealth of the South destroying plantation owning families Finally the former slaves are taught that they are superior to their former owners and should rise up against them These injustices are the impetuses for the creation of the Klan Similar to his statements about The Leopard s Spots Dixon insists in a To the reader prologue that the novel is historical I have sought to preserve in this romance both the letter and the spirit of this remarkable period The men who enact the drama of fierce revenge into which I have woven a double love story are historical figures I have merely changed their names without taking a liberty with any essential historic fact 4 Reception editThe publication of The Clansman caused significant uproar not only in the North but throughout the South Thomas Dixon was denounced for renewing old conflicts and glorifying what many thought was an unfortunate part of American history When offered membership in the KKK Dixon reportedly turned it down because he claimed he did not agree with the Klan s methods 5 The Klokard of the Klan Oscar Haywood at one point challenged Dixon to a debate over the nature of the Ku Klux Klan 6 Despite Dixon s reported claims that he rejected violence except in self defense in the book previous to The Clansman in Dixon s trilogy The Leopard s Spots the Klan dealt thusly with a black man who had asked a white woman to kiss him 7 When the sun rose next morning the lifeless body of Tim Shelby was dangling from a rope tied to the iron rail of the balcony of the court house His neck was broken and his body was hanging low scarcely three feet from the ground His thick lips had been split with a sharp knife and from his teeth hung this placard The answer of the Anglo Saxon race to Negro lips that dare pollute with words the womanhood of the South K K K Thomas Dixon The Leopard s Spots Chapter XIX The Rally of the Clansmen p 150 Dixon s novel is often contraposed with Harriet Beecher Stowe s Uncle Tom s Cabin 8 Dixon himself described it as a sequel 9 The character of Gus in The Clansman who is shown as the worst kind of former slave going as far as to rape a white woman is the opposite of the benevolent Uncle Tom who is portrayed as angelic The books are also similar for the reactions they stirred up among their readers Uncle Tom s Cabin was detested and banned throughout the South while The Clansman was ranted against in Northern papers Also like Uncle Tom s Cabin The Clansman reached its greatest audience not through its book form which sold over 100 000 copies but through the subsequent play that had an audience of millions 10 In the introduction to a university press edition of the book in 1970 an era of high interest in civil rights historian Thomas D Clark wrote The first thing to be said in discussing Thomas Dixon Jr s novel The Clansman is that no person of critical judgment thinks of it as having artistic conception or literary craftsmanship The novel opened a wider a vein of racial hatred which was to poison further in age already in a social and political upheaval 11 The play editIn 1915 when Birth of a Nation appeared The Clansman was best known as a play Much of the movie is taken from the play rather than directly from the novel Dixon rewrote the novel as a play In order to further publicize his views In most cases Dixon s adaptation of a novel for the stage was merely intended to present his message to a larger audience for his avowed purpose as a writer was to reach as many people as possible 12 107 13 15 14 280 He enrolled in a correspondence course given by the one man American School of Playwriting of William Thompson Price Price was the greatest critic of the theater since Aristotle Dixon also compares him with Daniel Boone and Henry Clay adding The State of Kentucky has given the nation no greater man 14 281 Apparently as an advertisement for the school he reproduced in the program his handwritten thank you note At the time reproducing handwriting was expensive and to send a handwritten as opposed to typed letter was an indication of special esteem November 11 1905My dear Mr Price Thanks for your letter of congratulations It is for me to thank you for invaluable aid as my instructor in the technique of playwriting I learned more from your course in one year than I could have gotten in ten years unaided It is new not found in books thorough and practical The student who neglects this course is missing the opportunity of a life sic I could never have written The Clansman without the grasp of its principles Our association has been an inspiration to me from the first Sincerely Thomas Dixon Jr 15 The contract for the production specified at Dixon s request that Dixon would pay half the cost of the production and have half ownership He chose the cast and had a secret power in the management of the company 14 280 282 The production of the play became the most fascinating adventure on which I had ever embarked I lived in a dream world with dream people I never worked so hard or so happily in my life Work was play thrilling glorious inspiring play 14 282 Four horses in Klan costumes raced across the stage in a climax The horses were ridden in the streets as advertising 14 285 Reception edit See also Atlanta race riot In Montgomery Alabama and Macon Georgia the play was banned 16 The next day the Washington Post in an editorial called for the same to be done in Washington saying the play was abominable stupid and misleading The play does not possess even the merit of historic truth It is as false as Uncle Tom s Cabin and a hundred times more wicked for it excites the passions and prejudices of the dominant class at the expense of the defenseless minority We can imagine no circumstances under which its production would be useful or wholesome since it disgusts the judicious and the well informed and exerts an influence only upon the ignorant the credulous and the ill disposed But in the present condition of the public mind at sic the South it is a firebrand a counsel of barbarity in fact a crime 17 In an effort to prevent a performance in Washington D C a group of pastors appealed to President Theodore Roosevelt to intercede on their behalf 18 In Philadelphia the play was banned after it opened by Mayor Weaver who said that the tendency of the play is to produce racial hatred 19 At the opening rotten eggs were thrown at the actors 20 The play despite these protests was extremely popular in the South It opened with a huge premiere in Norfolk Virginia and drew record breaking audiences in Columbia South Carolina and 21 22 In fact the vast majority of news stories about The Clansman have to do with the play not the novel citation needed In Bainbridge Georgia a black man was lynched shortly after presentation of the play in October 1905 A newspaper article reported it under the title Lynching Laid to The Clansman Georgia Mob Wrought Up by Dixon s Story Hangs Negro Murderer The feeling against negroes never kindly has been embittered by the Dixon play following which stories of negroes depredations during the reconstruction period have been revived and whites have been wrought up to a high tension 23 According to news stories the mob which lynched three negroes in Springfield Missouri in April 1906 seemed filled with the spirit of The Clansman which created such a strong anti negro feeling here six weeks ago 24 Dixon called this attribution the acme of absurdity claiming that the play had reduced lynchings The lynching in Springfield he opined was caused by the commission of a crime by negroes a crime so horrible and revolting to every instinct of white manhood that a whole community went mad with rage for justice swift and terrible Such things have happened in the south before and they will happen again so long as such crimes are committed by negroes 25 The play had an opulent 60 page program with pictures sold at the high price of 50 when a newspaper cost 5 It included A Portrait and Sketch of the Author and Mr Dixon s Famous Articles on The Future of the Negro The Story of the Ku Klux Klan and What Our Nation owes to the Klan 26 The play being concerned with the KKK and Reconstruction is adapted in the second half of The Birth of a Nation According to Professor Russell Merritt key differences between the play and film are that Dixon was more sympathetic to Southerners pursuing education and modern professions whereas Griffith stressed ownership of plantations 27 A four page program of a traveling production held by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library in Springfield Illinois tells us that Hundreds were turned away at every performance since the memorable opening in Norfolk VA Sept 22 1905 28 The play was not published until 2007 29 A scholar says it was not only not published it was not printed 13 16 but with so many involved in the production two companies were touring simultaneously 13 22 copies had to be printed for internal use Two such copies are known one in the Library of Congress the other in the Cortland Free Library 30 Rebirth of the Klan editThomas Dixon s novel did not have the immediate effect of causing the recreation of the Ku Klux Klan Neither did the subsequent play The release of the movie The Birth of a Nation in 1915 finally let Dixon s work reach an audience large enough to start the resurrection of the Klan One of the images most commonly associated with the Klan that of a burning Latin cross was actually taken from The Clansman but was not used by the original Klan Dixon who had Scottish ancestry drew upon the Scottish tradition of the Crann Tara a burning cross used to call clan members to arms as inspiration for the depiction of cross burning 31 The Klan s white robes are also an invention of Dixon and he protested their appropriation of the livery he created 5 Archival material editAn autograph manuscript is held by the Free Library of Philadelphia Corrected galley proofs are held by the Indiana University Library A mimeographed 1909 typescript of the play is held by the Van Pelt Library University of Pennsylvania A 131 page printed version of the play dated 1905 is held by the Cortland Free LibraryReferences edit Maxwell Bloomfield Dixon s The Leopard s Spots A Study in Popular Racism American Quarterly 16 3 1964 387 401 online Dixon Thomas February 25 1905 THE CLANSMAN Its Author Thomas Dixon Jr Replies with Spirit and Good Humor to Some of His Critics The New York Times Book Review ProQuest 96517397 THE CLANSMAN DENOUNCED South Carolina Editor Denies Charges Made by Thomas Dixon Jr PDF TNew York Times January 2 1906 Retrieved August 27 2017 Dixon Thomas Jr 2007 The Clansman An historical romance of the Ku Klux Klan New York A Wessels p iv a b Klan Is Denounced by The Clansman New York Times January 23 1923 KLOKARD HAYWOOD HERE TO AID KU KLUX Issues Challenge to Author of The Clansman to Meet Him in Public Debate PLANS PUBLIC ADDRESSES Pastor Calls Men Rouge Outrages a Plot Says Disclosures Would Shake the World The New York Times February 5 1923 ProQuest 103217416 Dixon Thomas 1998 The Leopard s Spots Documenting the American South The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Retrieved July 19 2013 Tom Dixon and His Clansman The Washington Post November 9 1905 ProQuest 144598127 The Clansman by Thomas Dixon The play that is sweeping the nation New York American News Co 1905 p 15 Retrieved April 25 2019 DiMare Philip C 2011 Movies in American History An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 41 42 Thomas D Clark Introduction The Clansman University University Press of Kentucky 1970 p i Cook Raymond A 1974 Thomas Dixon Lexington Kentucky Twayne ISBN 9780850702064 OCLC 878907961 a b c da Ponte Durant 1957 The Greatest Play of the South Tennessee Studies in Literature Vol 2 pp 15 24 Retrieved May 3 2019 a b c d e Dixon Thomas Jr 1984 Crowe Karen ed Southern horizons the autobiography of Thomas Dixon Alexandria Virginia IWV Publishing OCLC 11398740 The Play that is Stirring the Nation The Clansman New York American News Company 1905 p 69 The Clansman Tabooed Washington Post September 25 1906 p 1 via newspapers com Suppress The Clansman Washington Post September 26 1906 p 2 via newspapers com WOULD STOP THE CLANSMAN Pastors Appeal to President to Prevent the Performance The Washington Post October 6 1906 ProQuest 144659181 Clansman Prohibited New York Age October 25 1906 p 1 Clansman Prohibited New York Age October 25 1906 p 3 HISSING OF THE CLANSMAN Majority of People of Columbia S C Commend the Play The Washington Post August 21 1905 ProQuest 144554467 PREMIER OF CLANSMAN Thomas Dixon s Dramatic Answer to Uncle Tom s Cabin Scores Success September 23 1905 ProQuest 144588850 Lynching Laid to The Clansman Minneapolis Journal October 30 1905 p 1 Negroes Lynched Sedalia Weekly Democrat Sedalia Missouri April 20 1906 p 9 via newspapers com Not the Fault of the Clansman St Joseph Gazette St Joseph Missouri May 3 1906 p 5 via newspapers com The Clansman by Thomas Dixon The play that is sweeping the nation New York American News Co 1905 Retrieved April 25 2019 Russell Merritt Dixon Griffith and the Southern Legend Cinema Journal Vol 12 No 1 Autumn 1972 Brennan George H c 1905 The Clansman an American drama founded on his two famous novels The Leopard s Spots and The Clansman playbill New York The Madison Press OCLC 884731140 Dixon Thomas Jr 2007 The Clansman An American Drama Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film 34 2 60 138 doi 10 7227 NCTF 34 2 5 S2CID 219961909 Dixon Thomas Jr 1905 The clansman an American drama from the material of his two novels the leopard s spots and the clansman LCCN 47036857 Retrieved May 3 2019 Oliver Neil Frantz Parsons Elaine Were Scots responsible for the Ku Klux Klan bbc co uk Retrieved 4 October 2016 Further reading editDixon Thomas Jr January 1906 Why I Wrote The Clansman The Theatre Vol 6 no 59 pp 20 22 Reprinted in Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film volume 34 number 2 2007 pages 139 142 doi 10 7227 NCTF 34 2 6 subscription required External links editFull text with illustrations The Clansman A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan at Google Books nbsp The Clansman public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Clansman A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan amp oldid 1201892349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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