(855) 4-ESSAYS

Type a new keyword(s) and press Enter to search

Ku Klux Klan


Although some of the Klansmen were injured, the death toll of Negroes and Republicans was close to a thousand. (2).
             The Klansmen boasted that they were a "rough bunch of boys."" They threatened, exiled, shot, and hanged Negroes who were not respectful, belonged to Union Leagues, or committed crimes. This also drove out the white people who would help out the black people (such as Northern schoolteachers and other Yankees as well as carpetbag judges). (10).
             Ryland Randolph was the official spokesman of the Alabama sector of the KKK as well as the editor of the Independent Monitor and Exalted Cyclops of the Tuscaloosa Klan. He wrote that the night riders had come from "the galling despotism that broods like a nightmare over these southern states."" Disruption of their usual lives and the presence of troops as well as "a persistent prostitution of all government, all resources, and all powers, to degrade the white man by the establishment of Negro supremacy- was what this "despotism- entailed. Randolph, as well as his fellow Klansmen, felt that not only were black people now free to do what they wanted, but were actually held up higher than the common white man. The poor white dirt farmers felt that these black men were going to try to take their jobs and interfere in their everyday, normal lives. (16-17).
             President Ulysses S. Grant began to get frustrated with the Ku Klux Klan after hearing of the turmoil they had been causing. On April 20, 1871 the Force Bill, also know as the Ku Klux Klan act, was passed to guarantee civil rights given by the Fourteenth Amendment to all people. It also gave the president the authority to use the United States military if necessary against the Klan. This made the Klan die out for a while.
             In the fall of 1915, the second era of the Ku Klux Klan was born. Colonel William J. Simmons was the founder of this major revival. He was born in Harpersville, Alabama in 1880, and grew up on his father's farm.


Essays Related to Ku Klux Klan


Got a writing question? Ask our professional writer!
Submit My Question