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ORIGINAL TARGETS AND TACTICS The Klansmen regarded the Reconstruction governments as hostile and oppressive and resented the rise of former slaves to a status of civil equality and often to positions of political power. Waging a battle against Reconstruction governments, the Klan quickly spread throughout the former states of the Confederacy. Attired in robes or sheets and wearing masks topped with pointed hoods, the Klansmen terrorized public officials in efforts to drive them from office and blacks in general to prevent them from voting, holding office, and otherwise exercising their newly acquired political rights.
It was customary for Klansmen to burn crosses on hillsides and near the homes of those they wished to frighten. When such tactics failed to produce the desired effect, their victims might be flogged, mutilated, or murdered. A secret convention of Klansmen held in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1867 adopted a declaration of principles expressing loyalty to the United States government and its Constitution and declaring the determination of the Klan to "protect the weak, the innocent and the defenseless ...; to relieve the injured and oppressed; [and] to succor the suffering...." The convention designated the Klan as an Invisible Empire and provided for a supreme official, called Grand Wizard of the Empire, who wielded virtually autocratic power and who was assisted by ten Genii. Other principal officials of the Klan were the Grand Dragon of the Realm, who was assisted by eight Hydras; the Grand Titan of the Dominion, assisted by six Furies; and the Grand Cyclops of the Den, assisted by two Nighthawks. From 1868 to 1870, as federal occupation troops began withdrawing from the Southern states and Democrats started to regain control of state governments from Republicans, the Klan was increasingly dominated by rougher elements in the population. The local organizations, called klaverns, became so uncontrollable and violent that the Grand Wizard, former Confederate general Nathan B. Forrest, officially disbanded the Klan in 1869. Klaverns,
however, continued to operate on their own. In 1871 Congress passed the
Force Bill to implement the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guaranteeing
the rights of all citizens. In the same year, President Ulysses S. Grant
issued a proclamation calling on members of illegal organizations to disarm
and disband; thereafter hundreds of Klansmen were arrested. The remaining
klaverns gradually faded as the political and social subordination of
blacks was reestablished. |
Viola Liuzzo killed by 3 Klansmen 1965 more Poetry
by Northover Viola Liuzzo killed by 3 Klansmen 1965 more |
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