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About this book
Indiana had the largest and most politically significant state organization in the massive national Ku Klux Klan movement of the 1920s. Using a unique set of Klan membership documents, quantitative analysis, and a variety of other sources, Leonard Moore provides the first comprehensive analysis of the social characteristics and activities of the Indiana Klan membership and thereby reveals the nature of the group's political support.
Challenging traditional assumptions about the Klan, Moore argues that in Indiana the organization represented an extraordinarily wide cross section of white Protestant society. More than 25 percent of native-born men in the state became official members. Indeed, the Klan was many times larger than any of the veterans' organizations that flourished in Indiana at the same time and was even larger than the Methodist church, the state's leading Protestant denomination.
The Klan's enormous popularity, says Moore, cannot be explained solely by the group's appeal to nativist sentiment and its antagonism toward ethnic minorities. Rather, the Klan gained wide-spread support in large part because of its response to popular discontent with changing community relations and values, problems of Prohibition enforcement, and growing social and political domination by elites. Moreover, Moore shows that the Klan was seen as an organization that could promote traditional comunity values through social, civic, and political activities.
It was, he argues, a movement primarily concerned not simply with persecuting ethnic minorities but with promoting the ability of average citizens to influence the workings of soiciety and government. Thus, Moore concludes, the Klan of the 1920s may not have been as much a backward-looking aberration as it was an important example of one of the powerful popular responses to social conditions in twentieth-century America.
Challenging traditional assumptions about the Klan, Moore argues that in Indiana the organization represented an extraordinarily wide cross section of white Protestant society. More than 25 percent of native-born men in the state became official members. Indeed, the Klan was many times larger than any of the veterans' organizations that flourished in Indiana at the same time and was even larger than the Methodist church, the state's leading Protestant denomination.
The Klan's enormous popularity, says Moore, cannot be explained solely by the group's appeal to nativist sentiment and its antagonism toward ethnic minorities. Rather, the Klan gained wide-spread support in large part because of its response to popular discontent with changing community relations and values, problems of Prohibition enforcement, and growing social and political domination by elites. Moreover, Moore shows that the Klan was seen as an organization that could promote traditional comunity values through social, civic, and political activities.
It was, he argues, a movement primarily concerned not simply with persecuting ethnic minorities but with promoting the ability of average citizens to influence the workings of soiciety and government. Thus, Moore concludes, the Klan of the 1920s may not have been as much a backward-looking aberration as it was an important example of one of the powerful popular responses to social conditions in twentieth-century America.
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Yes, you can access Citizen Klansmen by Leonard J. Moore in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & North American History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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1. Introduction
Indiana and the Radical Interpretation of the Ku Klux Klan
The image of the robed and hooded Ku Klux Klansman is one of the most vivid and frightening in American history. It is the image of the southern racial terrorist, the midnight raider with the lash or club in hand and the hangmanâs noose or shotgun within easy reachâthe image, in other words, of the Reconstruction-era Klansman and his descendant who emerged during the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s. Most Americans are probably aware that Klan groups made their presence felt at other times between 1865 and 1965, and that isolated pockets of Klansmen continue to exist today. But the popular perception of the Klansmen seems welded securely to those two momentous periods, when reformers pressured the federal government to extend basic civil liberties to black Americans, and when Ku Klux Klansmen acted as the self-appointed shock troops of white supremacy, the most radical and dangerous bigots in American society.1
Historians have long maintained that the other major Klan movement in American historyâthat of the 1920sâdid not conform in many respects to the popular images so strongly associated with the Klans of the Reconstruction and civil rights eras.2 Unlike its earlier and later counterparts, the Klan of the twenties was not primarily southern. Rather, it became popular throughout the nation, enrolling at least three million and perhaps as many as six million members. From its national headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, the Klan did attract a significant following in southern states, particularly Georgia and Alabama, but it prospered as well in parts of northeastern states such as Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York. It built large, extremely influential organizations west of the Mississippi in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas, Colorado, Montana, California, and Oregon. The largest, most powerful state organizations were those of the MidwestâOhio, Illinois, Michigan, and especially Indiana, where, by all accounts, the Klan gained its greatest influence and highest level of membership for any state.3
While the Reconstruction- and civil rights-era Klans depended exclusively on violence and intimidation, Klansmen in the twenties engaged in a wide range of activities and appeared especially interested in political power. The Democratic National Convention of 1924 provided one example of the Klans political influence. During a bitter, sixteen-day meeting at New Yorkâs Madison Square Garden, Klan supporters and detractors hopelessly divided the convention and the party. In the process, they all but ensured that the presidency would remain in the hands of Calvin Coolidge and the Republicansâwho carefully avoided the Klan issue at their convention.4 Numerous political candidates supported by the Klan won state and local elections throughout the nation, including U.S. Senate races in Alabama, Colorado, Georgia, Indiana, Oklahoma, and Texas, and gubernatorial contests in each of these states except Texas, where an anti-Klan candidate narrowly won. In 1924, a Klan candidate won the governorship in Kansas and another was narrowly defeated in the U.S. Senate race in Montana. Oregon voters elected a Klanendorsed gubernatorial candidate in 1922 and at the same time passed an anti-Catholic school bill that the secret order sponsored even more enthusiastically than the governor. In many communitiesâprobably many more, in fact, than historians have currently documentedâKlan chapters briefly dominated local politics. This was true in major cities such as Denver and Indianapolis, as well as in smaller communities such as Youngstown, Ohio, El Paso, Texas, Canon City, Colorado, and Anaheim, California.5
The Klan movement of the twenties stood apart not only because of its national scope and emphasis on politics, but also because of its ideological orientation. While the Klans of the Reconstruction and civil rights eras were driven primarily by the single issue of white supremacy in the South, the Klan of the 1920s espoused, through its many newspapers and widely distributed recruiting pamphlets, a more complex creed of racism, nativism, Americanism; the defense of traditional moral and family values; and support for Prohibition. The popularity of this ideology, historians have generally concluded, could be traced to a sense of national peril, a pervasive fear by native white Protestants that rural, small-town culture had lost its place at the center of American life, that the nation had been delivered into the hands of urbanites, anarchists, and immigrants.6
Although historians have noted these distinct characteristics of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s, the accepted interpretation of this mass movement still remains tied to the radical image of its counterparts during Reconstruction and the civil rights periodâand not without reason. The Klan of the twenties, after all, drew its inspiration from the mysterious Reconstruction-era vigilantes romanticized in Thomas Dixonâs best-selling novels and D. W. Griffithâs controversial, but immensely popular film, The Birth of a Nation, which Klan agents used as a recruiting tool.7 The ideology of the Klan in the twenties, though more elaborate, in its own way seemed no less extreme than the ideas of the vigilante Klans. To some degree, the Klan of the twenties may have appeared even more threatening precisely because its list of enemies was so long, including, in addition to blacks, Catholics, Jews, immigrants, political radicals, feminists, intellectuals, gamblers, bootleggers, thrill-seeking teenagers, motion picture producers, and many others. Moreover, it clearly contained extremist elements and during its early stages, many individual incidents of vigilante violenceâboth mild and severeâwere associated with the movement, particularly in the South and the Southwest. Indeed, in a decade that witnessed a frightening wave of race riots, the Red Scare, the onset of national Prohibition, blatantly racist and discriminatory immigration restrictions, Sacco and Vanzetti, and the Scopes trial, the Klan in many ways appeared to be at the forefront of a national wave of dangerous intolerance, confusion, and fear. Like the southern Klansmen of other eras who were unwilling to accept the idea of racial integration, those who participated in the Klan movement in the twenties seemed unable to adjust to the wider notion of pluralism in an urban-based society.8
The radical image of the Klan and the volatile climate of the 1920s also led historians to conclude that those who joined the order or supported it with their votes represented disaffected fringe groups in society. One persistent view was that the Klan of the twenties attracted a particularly strong following in small towns and villages. The residents of these communities, historians believed, were the victims of provincial isolation and ignorance. Almost all of them were thought to be fundamentalists, drawn to the Klan as a result of their deep resentment of what, by that time, had become the obvious dominance of cities and cosmopolitan values in American life.9 Other scholars placed less emphasis on the idea of urban-rural conflict, claiming that the Klan movement was equally popular in major cities. According to this interpretation, large numbers of Klansmen could be found in lower middle-class white and blue-collar neighborhoods. Badly paid and poorly educated, residents of these areas were thought to have joined the Klan largely out of resentment at being trapped in economic and residential competition with the growing populations of blacks and immigrants nearby.10
Historiansâ just contempt for the Klanâs intolerance certainly contributed to many of these conclusions. Much of the history of the Ku Klux Klan was written during the late 1950s and 1960s by a generation of scholars that had witnessed the horrific consequences of European fascism, the anticommunist hysteria of the 1950s, and the hard-fought battles of the civil rights movement. Many of the most well-known works on the Klan of the 1920s, in fact, were written at the same time that new, extremely violent Klan groups were being linked with the bombings of black homes and churches, the widely publicized execution-style murder of civil rights workers, and numerous other crimes. In such an atmosphere, it may have been inevitable that the condemnation of bigotry would be the first priority in any writing about the Klan. Historians, like many other Americans who were confronted by these deep and disturbing divisions in American society, ultimately concluded that Klan organizations, regardless of the era in which they appeared, represented aberrant outbursts of hatred, ignorance, and anxiety over lost status.11
Yet to whatever degree one may sympathize with these ideas, the fact remains that it has been much easier to damn the Klan of the 1920s than to explain convincingly the reasons for its extraordinary popularity and influence. This book, supported by a number of recent studies of Klan organizations throughout the nation, asserts that the traditional interpretation contains basic flaws and ultimately does not divorce strongly enough the Klan movement of the twenties from the infamous traditions of the southern vigilante Klans.12
One weakness in the radical interpretation has been its reliance on an extremely small body of evidence. Klan documents have always been scarce. For the most part, historians have interpreted the movement by examining Klan newspapers, pamphlets, and other writings, and by following the activities of Klan leaders through local newspapers and national publications. As a result, historians have uncovered relatively little reliable information about the social characteristics of the rank-and-file Klansmen, their motives for joining the order, and the activities in which they engaged. Were Klansmen religious fundamentalists, small-town bumpkins, and ignorant, economically marginal individuals? Did they come together primarily to initiate a campaign of intimidation against threatening foreigners and the loathsome city? The authors of the radical interpretation have made these assumptions because they viewed the Klanâs ideology as backward and militant and its leaders as corrupt. But without membership documents, close inspection of local circumstances and events, or analysis of the basis for Klan political victories, such generalizations cannot be substantiated.
The radical interpretation has also suffered from a narrow focus on the idea that the Klan movement of the twenties resulted primarily from increased conflict between white Protestants and other ethnic groups in American society. The Klanâs white supremacist, anti-Catholic, and anti-Semitic ideology certainly played an important role in the success of the movement, but exactly what role? If the Klan existed to persecute ethnic minority groups, why did it become most popular in states such as Indiana, Colorado, and Oregon where members of these groups constituted only a tiny fraction of the population and no serious threat to white Protestant hegemony? When Klans assumed political power in these and other areas, why did they all but ignore the small communities of Catholics, Jews, and blacks that did reside within their domains? With millions of members assumed to be overwhelmed by resentment of the foreign born, why, despite some claims to the contrary, did the Klan engage in so little violence, especially in cities like Chicago and Detroit where the Klansmen and their perceived enemies both lived in huge numbers?13 According to the traditional argument, these aspects of the movement could be explained by the fact that the Klanâs fixation on ethnic minorities was primarily symbolic. Catholics, Jews, and immigrantsâproximate or notârepresented convenient targets for the anger of white Protestants whose values and traditions had been displaced by ascendant modernism.14 It is possible, however, that people joined the Klan not merely to express their rage at immigrants and all that they symbolized, but also, or perhaps primarily, to address other, real concerns that historians have overlookedâconcerns that grew out of social conditions in the communities and states in which the largest concentrations of Klansmen actually lived.
The traditional interpretation of the Klan of the 1920s contains another flaw as well. In general, it underestimates the importance of the movement by viewing it as a temporary outburst against modern culture that was sparked by âpost-war excitement,â the Red Scare, renewed immigration, and other events of the early 1920s. In this view, the Klan was of fleeting significance, an irrational last gasp of nineteenth-century nativism that appeared as white Protestants went through a process of adjustment to their declining ability to shape the nation according to their values and traditions. Yet the ethnic nationalism of white Protestant Americans was not rendered insignificant during the twenties, as this interpretation implies. Instead, it has formed the basis for many conservative social and political movements of the twentieth century. These movements, including Prohibition, fundamentalism, anticommunism, antievolutionism, antifeminism, and, in recent years, the various campaigns of the New Right, have been far from insignificant. As one of the outstanding examples of white Protestant ethnic nationalism and, indeed, as one of the largest social movements in modern American history, the Klan of the twenties may not have been a backward-looking aberration as much as it was an important example of one of the powerful popular responses to social conditions in twentieth-century America.15
Perhaps the most fertile ground for testing any theory about the Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s is the state of Indiana. Between 1922 and 1925, Indiana was the epicenter of the national Klan movement, the state that produced the Klanâs largest, most enthusiastic membership, its greatest political victories, and its most powerful, well-known leaders outside of Atlanta. By any standard, Klan membership in Indiana was enormous. Between one-quarter and one-third of all native-born white men in the state paid ten dollars to become Klansmen during the 1920s; in some communities, the figure was as high as 40 or 50 percent. As astonishing as these figures may seem, they do not even include the thousands of women who joined the auxiliary order, Women of the Ku Klux Klan, or the Junior Klan for children.16 Hardly a fringe group, the Klan became the largest organization of any kind in the state. It was many times larger, for instance, than any of the veteransâ organizations that flourished in Indiana at the same time and even larger than the Methodist church, the stateâs leading Protestant denomination.17
With its massive following, the Klan temporarily transformed Indiana politics, assuming control of the state Republican party in 1924 and electing a governor and an entire slate of candidates for state government, a majority in both houses of the state legislature, and nearly all of the stateâs thirteen congressmen. In local politics, the Klan stunned established leaders in both parties, capturing city and county offices throughout the state and, for a time, controlling local party organizations.18 The great popularity of the Indiana Klan made its leaders powerful figures, both within the Klanâs national organization and in state politics, as well as the focus of a great deal of national publicity. David Curtis (D. C.) Stephenson, who stood at the head of the Indiana Klan, at least in its early stages, rivaled the orderâs national leader, Hiram Wesley Evans, as the most prominent Klansman of the period. Stephensonâs influence in state politics led him to boast in 1924 that he was âthe lawâ in Indiana. Moreover, the scandal surrounding his downfall played a critical role in undermining the national Klan movement.19
Recently uncovered membership documents make the case of the Indiana Klan even more consequential. One document, a report on conditions in local chapters prepared at the state Klan headquarters in Indianapolis during the summer of 1925, discloses membership figures for all but three of Indianaâs ninety-two counties. This information opens the door to the kind of analysis that has been missing in studies of the 1920sâ Klan: reliable estimates of statewide membership; regional membership variations, especially in regard to the urban-rural question; the social characteristics of Klansmen on a broad scale; and the dynamics of the Klanâs electoral victories. Individual membership lists for several communities have also survived, making it possible to examine local trends and circumstances. One document c...
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- 1. Introduction: Indiana and the Radical Interpretation of the Ku Klux Klan
- 2. White Protestant Nationalism
- 3. The Klansmen
- 4. Klan and Community
- 5. City, Town, and Village
- 6. Political Power
- 7. Conclusion
- Appendix. Documentation
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index