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         THETWENTIES C                                                                       IN
                                                                                                          O N T E M P O R A R Y
                                                                                                                OMMENTARY
*
    National Humanities Center, AMERICA IN CLASS,® 2012: americainclass.org/. Middletown excerpts reproduced by permission of Mr. Staughton Lynd.
    Klan publications and Dallas Citizens League publication courtesy of Michigan State University Libraries. Photo on this page (Ku Klux Klan meeting at
    Lowndes Hill, Clarksburg, W. Va., ca. 1920), West Virginia and Regional History Collection, West Virginia University Libraries; permission request in
    process. Title font (TestarossaNF) courtesy of Nick’s Fonts at FontSpace.com. Punctuation and spelling modernized for clarity. Complete image credits
    at americainclass.org/sources/becoming modern/imagecredits.htm.
    1
      Thomas Dixon: author of the 1905 novel The Clansman, adapted by film director D. W. Griffith as the 1915 silent film The Birth of a Nation.
The Forum, a magazine published in New York City, regularly published invited essays on controversial issues of the day. In
September 1925 it published two defining essays on the Klan by the Klan’s national leaders and by a Maine anti-Klan statesman. 2*
*
    Photos (details of originals): Pattangall, Maine Historical Society; Evans, Library of Congress.
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan                                                                    2
  The Ku Klux Klan: Citizens’ League                                                                        Henry P. Fry
  of Dallas, Texas, Takes Action                                                          The Modern Ku Klux Klan
  Against the Activities of the Klan                                                                                   1922
  Denver, 1922(?)                                                               [In his expose of the Ku Klux Klan (initially
                                                                                published in the New York World), white
The Dallas County Citizens League was                                           journalist Fry listed forty-eight “published
organized April 4, 1922, by a mass meeting                                      cases of lawlessness in the South, indicating
                                                                                the methods of Ku Kluxism”—incidents that
of five thousand citizens held in the                                           occurred February through July 1921. A
Municipal Auditorium on the street on                                           representative sample follows.]
which it faces. It was organized to oppose                                       March 3, 1921.—At Houston, Texas, J. La
the Ku Klux Klan. Its opposition is based on                                          Fayette Cockrell, a negro dentist, was
the broad ground that the Klan is unlawful                                            mutilated by masked men for alleged
                                                                                      association with white women. A race riot
in that it cannot exist and function without                                          nearly resulted from this attack.
violating the Constitution and certain            April 1, 1921.—Alexander Johnson, a negro bell boy, of Dallas, Texas, was
statutes of the State, and that it is un-               taken out by masked men, whipped, and the letters “K. K. K.” burned
American because it cannot exist and                    on his forehead with acid. He was said to have associated with white
                                                        women.
function without destroying that political
                                                  May 4, 1921.—Sam King, Marshal at Brenham, Texas, was tarred and
and religious freedom that is the glory of our          feathered. He then resigned his office.
institutions. . . .                               May 20, 1921.—One thousand men marched through the streets of Dallas,
                                                        Texas, at night, mounted and unmounted, all of them attired in the Ku
    . . . In the popular mind the Ku Klux               Klux regalia. They carried a fiery cross, and several banners bearing
Klan has been convicted many times of                   these words: “The Invisible Empire,” “White Supremacy,” “Pure
denying to American citizens the right of               Womanhood,” “Dallas Must Be Clean,” “Our Little Girls Must Be
                                                        Protected,” “All Native Born,” “The Guilty Must Pay.” They rode and
trial by jury. We understand, of course, the            marched through the streets silently and without interference from the
Klan denies that it has officially ordered the          authorities. Announcements of the purposes and objects of the Klan
punishment of any man. It is not yet strong             had previously been accepted and printed by the Dallas papers.
enough to openly operate its government.          June 8, 1921.—Dr. R. H. Lenert, at Brenham, Texas, was whipped, tarred,
                                                        and feathered by eight masked men. He was charged with “disloyalty
But the evidence is overwhelming in many                during the war” and with “speaking German.”
instances that members of the Klan have           July 4, 1921.—At Austin, Texas, Governor Neff, chief executive of the State
conducted whipping parties that have                    in an address before the Rotary Club said that a crime wave had
violated the sacred guarantees of the Bill of           struck the State and that “the entire administration of the criminal code
                                                        had broken down.” On the same day warnings of the Ku Klux Klan
Rights and the laws of the State enacted                were posted on the State Capitol grounds.
thereunder. . . .                                 July 12, 1921.—At Enid, Okla., Walter Billings, a motion-picture operator,
    The growth of the Ku Klux Klan in                   was given a coating of cotton and crude oil, after being whipped by
                                                        masked men.
Texas has been marked by lawlessness and          July 14, 1921.—One hundred masked men gathered at the jail at
violence. Mob rule has supplanted action by             Greeneville, Texas, and unsuccessfully attempted to lynch Matt
legally constituted law enforcement                     Olizen, negro, charged with killing Orbie Standlee.
agencies, the police, sheriffs, and the courts.   July 17, 1921.—At Miami, Fla. At the close of his evening services, eight
                                                        masked men waylaid the Rev. Philip S. Irwin, archdeacon of the
In some cities and counties, this has been              English Episcopal Church, and head of the work of that church among
made possible through the cooperation with              South Florida negroes, carried him into the woods, whipped him, and
the Klan of some law enforcement officers               then applied a coat of tar and feathers to his body. He was placed in a
                                                        sack and taken in an automobile to a spot in the center of the town
who have disregarded their solemn oaths to              and dumped into the street. . . .
the State of Texas and remembered only            July 16, 1921.—At Bay City, Tex., W. M. Hoopengarner, a banker, was
their obligation to the “Imperial Wizard” at            tarred and feathered and beaten. The reason alleged was domestic
Atlanta and his “Invisible Empire.”                     infidelity.
                                                  July 19, 1921.—Declaring that he had information that fifty per cent of the
    There can be no question in the minds of            members of the Oklahoma City police department belonged to the Ku
unprejudiced citizens that the Ku Klux Klan             Klux Klan, Mayor John C. Welton directed Chief Glitsch to investigate
is solely responsible for this condition.               and to discharge every police officer who did not resign immediately
                                                        from the Klan. On July 24, Mayor Welton was called on the telephone,
                                                        and was told: “We warn you to lay off the Ku Klux Klan, or we will have
                                                        to wait on you.” The mayor paid no attention to the warning.
                                                  July 26, 1921.—At Topeka, Kan., a warning was sent to Senator Capper’s
                                                        newspaper to “leave the Ku Klux Klan alone.”
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan                                          3
Indiana Historical Society                                                                                                         Indianapolis, Indiana, 1924
                                       ___QUESTIONS ANSWERED___
                                  OFFICIAL QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS GIVEN AS A BASIS
                                 FOR AN INTERVIEW TO A CERTAIN NATIONAL MAGAZINE
                                                   Klan publication, n.d. [ca. 1922], excerpts
    6. Have not a large number of men joined the Klan for reasons different from those which the Klan avow?
       Blatherskites, religious fanatics, cheap politicians and meddlers like the so-called vigilance committee?
       . . . There is a general and common phrase within the Klan that the front door of the organization must be
       small and carefully guarded, but that the back door is wide and deep. During the propagating period,
       Kleagles are vested with arbitrary authority to expel any undesirable individual, and this is promptly
       carried out.
    8. Has not the Klan gathered much strength by catering to distinctly anti-social, race, and religious
       prejudices, by “selling hate?”
       The Klan does not cultivate nor deal in hatred or division between the races and religion. . . I believe that
       some people have joined this movement with unworthy motives, because such an institution will seem to
       them to give opportunity for the gratification of selfish purposes.
10. Cannot a Jew, Roman Catholic, or Negro be a good citizen?
    According to their capabilities, they could. The Klan has no bitterness toward any one of these people. The
    Klan is simply standing for certain principles and they think that these principles can best be exemplified
    and carried out by people possessing certain qualifications and beliefs. They feel that a man born and
    reared on American soil, under the American flag, is more likely to be true to American principles if he is
    educated in the public schools.
11. What is the basis, then, for the distinction which the Klan draws against members of these races and
    religions?
    Simply this, * that one places a limitation on his citizenship on a religious principle that precludes
    possibility of a separation of Church and State, while the other for two thousand years has rigidly
    adhered to a racial limitation of intermarriage which prevents their assimilation into an American life,
    wholly and unreservedly. Americans must face the fact that God Almighty never intended for social
    equality of the negro and the white man. The Negro is America’s problem, and it should give him all of
    the privileges of citizenship that it can give, but face squarely the issue that intermarriage and social
    equality is impossible. . . America owes it to the Negro to give him every privilege, protection, and
    every opportunity consistent with national safety, but dare not risk the destruction of our civilization
    that might come if its control should ever fall into his hands.
13. Secrecy is a part of the Klan method. What is its justification?
    . . . A force which is in the open, and can be seen and calculated, is far less feared by a corrupt official or
    an anti-American propagandist than one which he cannot see. It is far more difficult and far less
    comfortable to undertake a conspiracy against good government or against Americanism if the conspirator
*
    The first sentence refers to Roman Catholics and to Jews, i.e., that Catholics’ allegiance to the Pope would supersede allegiance to the U.S., and that
    Jews’ historic cultural homogeneity makes them unassimilable.
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan                                                                      4
      has no means of knowing that the first                              CREED OF KLANSWOMEN
      man in whom he confides may not be a                                        America for Americans,
      Klansman. These advantages are real, and                       As Interpreted by the Women of the Ku Klux Klan
      assist in carrying out the Klan’s ideals. In                               Little Rock, Arkansas (?), 19—
      an open Democracy, they would not be
      necessary. In the present condition of the                WE BELIEVE in the fatherhood of God, the brotherhood of
      country, when it is necessary to combat                      Jesus Christ, and the eternal tenets of the Christian religion as
      organizations, using these methods, it                       practiced by enlightened Protestant churches.
      would be folly to surrender any advantage.                WE BELIEVE that church and state should continue separate
                                                                   in administration and organization, although united in their
21. What is the idea of “bedsheets and pillow                      mission and purpose to serve mankind unselfishly.
    cases” if it is not to create terror?                       WE BELIEVE in the American home as the foundation upon
    “Bedsheets and pillow cases” referred to                       which rests secure the American Republic, the future of its
    by the general public and held in the                          institutions, and the liberties of its citizens.
    public mind are certainly not “bedsheets                    WE BELIEVE in the mission of emancipated womanhood, freed
    and pillow cases” to a Klansman. They are                      from the shackles of old-world traditions, and standing
    “regalia,” and carry to him important                          unafraid in the full effulgence of equality and enlightenment.
    significance and typifies certain deals that                WE BELIEVE in the equality of men and women in political,
    are as old as the ages themselves, and are                     religious, fraternal, civic, and social affairs, wherein there
    just as sacred to him as the fez and plume                     should be no distinction of sex.
    to the Masons and other religious regalia                   WE BELIEVE in the free public schools where our children are
    to church and government functions . . .                       trained in the principles and ideals that make America the
28. Will not the Klan become extremely                             greatest of all nations.
    dangerous to America if it is ever                          WE BELIEVE the Stars and Stripe the most beautiful flag on
    perverted from its present purposes?                           the earth, symbolizing the purity of race, the blood of
    It would. It would be frightful. But the                       martyrs, and the fidelity of patriots.
    very organization of the plan is such that                  WE BELIEVE in the supremacy of the Constitution of the
    if the attempt were ever made to pervert it,                   United States and the several states, and consecrate ourselves
    it would automatically destroy itself as an                    to its preservation against all enemies at home and abroad.
    organization. The strength of the Klan is                   WE BELIEVE that the freedom of speech, of press, and of
    in the idealism of the Klansmen. And that                      worship is an inalienable right of all citizens whose allegiance
                                                                   and loyalty to our country are unquestioned.
    strength cannot be used apart from those
    ideals.                                                     WE BELIEVE that principle comes before party, that justice
33. I do not find in your literature any                           should be firm but impartial, and that partisanship must yield
                                                                   to intelligent cooperation.
    definition of the following officials: Genii,
    Hydras, Furies, and Terrors.                                WE BELIEVE that the current of pure American blood must be
                                                                   kept uncontaminated by mongrel strains and protected from
    Give me ten dollars as your donation to
                                                                   racial pollution.
    Klankraft, sign the questionnaire, and if
    found acceptable, you will be given the                     WE BELIEVE that the government of the United States must
                                                                   be kept inviolate from the control or domination or alien races
    oath and taken into the Klavern, and I will                    and the baleful influence of inferior peoples.
    then tell you all about it. That is some of
                                                                WE BELIEVE that the people are greater than any foreign
    the Klan secrecy.
                                                                   power or potentate, prince, or prelate, and that no other
                                                                   allegiance in America should be tolerated.
                                                                WE BELIEVE that the perpetuity of our nation rests upon the
                                                                   solidarity and purity of our native-born, white, Gentile,
                                                                   Protestant men and women.
                                                                WE BELIEVE that under God, the Women of the Ku Klux
                                                                   Klan is a militant body of American free-women by whom
                                                                   these principles shall be maintained, our racial purity
                                                                   preserved, our homes and children protected, our happiness
                                                                   insured, and the prosperity of our community, our state, and
                                                                   our nation guaranteed against usurpation, disloyalty, and
                                                                   selfish exploitation.
Library of Congress       Virginia, near Washington, DC, 1922
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan                                            5
Indiana Historical Society
   Walter F. White                        But what, many ask, is behind the attempt to establish this
   “Reviving the Ku Klux Klan”            movement in the North? The answer is easy. Drawn on the one
   The Forum, April 1921                  hand into the North during the war by industrial opportunity, and
                                          driven out of the South on the other hand by oppressive
conditions there, between 750,000 and 1,000,000 Negroes have migrated since 1925. As a result, the
South has felt keenly the losing of this labor and has suffered heavy financial losses. Among a small
percentage of Southern employers there is a realization that the old order of Negro oppression has passed
and definite steps are being taken to eradicate some of the evils. But, unfortunately, there is a larger
element which still holds to the doctrine of “keeping the nigger in his place.” The Ku Klux Klan, by
spreading its propaganda in Northern industrial centers, seeks to oust Negroes from employment, thinking
that they will be forced to return to the South. Having served America faithfully during the War, and with
the prospect of a tide of immigration from Europe furnishing a great mass of cheap labor for Northern
industries, Negroes are to be driven by unemployment and starvation back to the land of lynchings.
   Henry Louis Mencken                         Ku Kluxry is the Southern poor white’s answer to the progress
   “Autopsy”                                   of the emerging Negro, once his equal and now threatening to
   American Mercury, Sept. 1927                become his superior.
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan                         6
  “The Klan and Its Propaganda Methods”
                                                                                                      State Historical Society of Wisconsin
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan                                                   7
boycott of those not in the Klan, with a resultant diversion of trade to those who are numbered in the fold
of the “Invisible Empire” promise big financial returns as an inducement.
    An utter and reckless disregard of truth characterizes all the Klan propaganda. Whipping parties
appealing to the latent mob instinct of a certain type of brutal individual are instigated by whispered lies.
When Klan officials decide a whipping is necessary to gather in new members, the victim is selected.
Then the process of character assassination is deliberately set in motion. Whispered charges of immorality
are circulated, enlarged upon until the whipping or the tarring and feathering is done.
    After a man or woman is whipped, no matter how innocent the victim may be, the most atrocious and
libelous stories are immediately circulated about the victim with a view to prejudicing public opinion and
preventing investigation and punishment for the criminals who perpetrate the lawless act.
      W. E. B. Du Bois, “The Shape of Fear”            Until last year I was of those mildly amused at the
   The North American Review                           K.K.K. It seemed to me incredible that in 1925 such a
   June 1926                                           movement could attract any number of people or
                                                       become really serious. And then at first hand and at
second I saw the Klan and its workings in widely different places.
    I was lecturing in Akron, Ohio. Now Ohio is one of those States upon whose essential Americanism
and devotion to the finer ideals of democracy I have long banked. There in the Middle West that finer
flower of democracy, born in New England, and later choked by the industrialism of the East, had, to my
mind, gone for replanting and renewal. I looked for sanity in the United States to come from a democratic
appeal to the Middle West. And yet, there in Akron, in the land of Joshua R. Giddings, * in the Western
Reserve, I found the Klan calmly and openly in the saddle. The leader of the local Klan was president of
the Board of Education and had just been tremendously busied in driving a Jew out of the public schools.
The Mayor, the secretary of the Y.M.C.A., prominent men in many walks of life, were either open
Klansmen or secret sympathizers. I was too astonished to talk. Throughout parts of Ohio, Illinois and
Indiana I found a similar state of affairs. . . .
    What is the cause of all this? There can be little doubt but that the Klan in its present form is a legacy
of the World War. Whatever there was of it before that great catastrophe was negligible and of little
moment. The wages of War is Hate; and the End,
and indeed the Beginning, of Hate is Fear. The
civilized world today and the world half-civilized
and uncivilized are desperately afraid. The Shape
of Fear looms over them. Germany fears the Jew,
England fears the Indian; America fears the Negro,
the Christian fears the Moslem, Europe fears Asia,
Protestant fears Catholic, Religion fears Science.
Above all, Wealth fears Democracy. These fears
and others are ancient or at least longstanding fears.
But they are renewed and revivified today because
the world has at present a severe case of nerves; it
feels it necessary to be nervous because the
Unexpected has happened.                                  Indiana Historical Society     Women of the Ku Klux Klan, ca.1923
*
    Joshua Reed Giddings: anti-slavery Ohio representative in the U.S. House, 1838-1859.
†
    Listen to the monologue in National Jukebox, Library of Congress, at www.loc.gov/jukebox/recordings/detail/id/9195.
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan                                             8
  Edward S. Martin
  “The War Against Prejudice”
  Harper’s, September 1924
The world has enormous prejudices to get over. We
need so muchalmost all peoples need so muchto
see other folks as they are and not as we traditionally
expect them to be. Think of the row about the Ku
Klux in the Democratic Convention. What
extraordinary prejudices and credulities are behind it.
What can you think of people who suppose it is true
that the Roman Catholics bury a gun under a church
whenever a boy child is born? Perhaps something will
be done in the campaign now proceeding to let the
light into dark places like that. That is what
presidential campaigns should be forto let light into
dark places, scare bugaboos out of their lairs, make
the truth evident even in politics. Not all campaigners
will contribute to that, but some will, and discussion
in general will contribute to it. Part of the business of
                                                                               “This Is Going to Be Good!” Los Angeles Times, June 24, 1924
campaigning is to nail lies, and if that is done with
due energy it may accomplish something.
                           In Lewis’s novel of a hypocritical
  Sinclair Lewis
                           Protestant minister in the Midwest,
  Elmer Gantry             Rev. Gantry must deal with the Klan’s
  1927                     presence and power in his town.
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan                                                   9
   Rev. W. C. Wright                WACO, TEXAS
                                                         The Purpose of This Little Folder Is to REMOVE THE MASK OF WEIRD
                                                         SECRECY and LIFT THE DARK VEIL OF MYSTERY from THE KU KLUX
   The Ku Klux Klan Unmasked                             KLAN and permit the reader to look into the most secret chambers of the Invisible
   ca. 1924                                              Empire and learn for himself the inside facts about WHAT IT IS, WHAT IT STANDS
                                                         FOR, WHO ARE ITS MEMBERS, AND WHO ARE ITS ENEMIES.
    What do you really KNOW about the Ku Klux Klan? Have you heard both sides and carefully considered
the facts with impartial fairness and without prejudice? Have you made an HONEST effort to learn the truth?
Have you given the Klan a just, fair, and impartial trial? Are you “PLAYING THE GAME FAIR?,” or have
you condemned the Klan on the testimony of its enemies without hearing the other side? . . .
    Enemies have tried every conceivable method to suppress the activities and growth of the Klan. They
have tried mob violence, brickbats, clubs, and guns; they have tried frame-ups, courts, and investigations;
they have tried lawsuits, injunctions, and false witnesses; they have tried crooks, liars, and traitors; they
have tried wine, women, and graft; they have tried lawyers, judges, and governors;—in fact, they have
tried all the hellish means, diabolical methods, and devilish schemes that the spirits of demons and
fiendish minds of men, aided by his Satanic Majesty, could conceive and invent to wreck and destroy the
Klan; but they have all miserably failed. In spite of the fiendish desire and hellborn efforts to check its
growth, disrupt its membership, and destroy its influence, the Klan marches steadily onward and upward
toward the successful defeat of wrong, and a triumphant victory for the right.
    Surely the hand of God is leading and the Spirit of God is hovering over this great movement. Nothing
short of Divine Providence could ever have saved the Klan from wreck and ruin as it has passed through
such trying ordeals and dangerous experiences. If this work be of men it will come to naught; but if it be
of God you cannot stop it. The right will always prevail, and the wrong will fail.
   “Vain Effort to Discredit Klan Record”                           From the local Klan newspaper of Alma, Michigan, this article was
                                                                    published during the presidential campaign of Herbert Hoover (Rep.)
   The Gratiot County Night Hawk                     MICHIGAN
                                                                    and Al Smith (Dem.), the Catholic anti-Prohibition New York governor.
   August 1928
    It is natural during a campaign in which the Ku Klux Klan is standing against the forces of alienism,
Romanism [Roman Catholicism], and booze, the period just before the primaries has seen wild efforts on
the part of these powerful interests to discredit it, and to fasten upon it unfounded charges of crime and
violence. No reputable person has come forward to give any testimony in this direction, but others have,
and their so-called evidence has been given wide publicity before any court has had a chance to decide
whether they are even entitled to be heard as witnesses. And, it can be said, no respectable and truthful
man will be found to say the things the propagandists want said.
         The enemies of the Klan have brought various [law]suits—to oust it from Indiana, Pennsylvania,
and so forth. In support of these suits they have taken depositions hither and yon. Depositions are not
evidence till they have been accepted by a court; a witness may say almost anything he wishes in them
with little danger to himself. They offer a splendid chance to spread false accusations, or to work off
grievance, or to earn the good will of someone with an axe to grind.
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan                                                    10
                                         In his first of two
   Walter F. White                       novels on race in
   The Fire in the Flint                 America, Walter
   1924                                  White, an NAACP
                                         official who investi-
gated race riots and lynchings, characterized the Klan of
the fictional “Central City” in his native Georgia.
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan                                                                        11
   Robert S. Lynd & Helen Merrell Lynd                      Selected in 1924 as typical town of “middle America,” Muncie, Indiana,
                                                            was the focus of two sociologists’ research into the changes wrought in
   Middletown: A Study in American Culture                  modernizing America since the late 1890s.
   1929
    Coming upon Middletown like a tornado, catching up many of these latent [class and ethnic]
differences into a frenzy of activity, the Ku Klux Klan has emphasized during its brief career in
Middletown, potential factors of disintegration. . . . Tales against the Catholics ran like wildfire through
the city. In a sermon on “The Godliness of America,” the minister of a thriving working class church
earnestly passed on to his flock this story:
          “They say the Pope isn’t wanted in Italy. France has been approached and she doesn’t want him. The
          Balkans say no. Russia ‘Not on your life!’ England, Germany, Switzerland, Japanall refuse; and
          they say the Catholics are building a great cathedral in our national capital at Washington which is to
          become his home.” Then, as though half-ashamed at relaying this gossip, the minister added, “I don’t
          know this; it’s just talk, but that’s what they say.”
    ...
    To this Catholic hatred was added Negro and Jewish hatred led by stories that the Negroes have
a powder which they put on their arms which turns their bodies white, and that the Jews have all the
money, but when the Klan gets into power, it will make a new kind of money, so that the Jews’
money will be no good.
          “We are charged with being against the Jew,” thundered a lawyer from the state capital at a Klan rally.
          “We are against no man. Jesus Christ is the leader of the Ku Klux Klan, and we are for Him. The Jew
          is not for Him, and therefore the Jew has shut himself out of the Klan. We are not against the Negro.
          Rome fell because she mixed her blood. God Almighty has commanded us, ‘Thou shalt not mix thy
          blood.’ The Outlookor some other periodicalreported the other day 113 marriages last year in
          Boston between whites and blacks, and I’m sorry to say it was white women marrying black men. We
          must protect American womanhood.”
     ...
     Klan feeling was fanned to white heat by constant insistence in season and out that “every method
known to man has been used and is being used by the alien-minded and foreign influence to halt our
growth.” Social clubs were broken up and church groups rocked to their foundations by the tense feelings
all this engendered. The secret of this eruption of strife within the group probably lies in the fact that it
blew off the cylinder head of the humdrum. It afforded an outlet for many of the constant frustrations of
life, economic tensions and social insecurity, by providing a wealth of scapegoats against whom wrath
might be vented; and two of the most powerful latent emotional storm centers of Middletownreligion
and patriotismwere adroitly maneuvered out of their habitual uneventful status into a wild enthusiasm
of utter devotion to a persecuted but noble cause. The high tide of bitterness was reached in 1923, and by
1925 the energy was mainly spent and the Klan disappeared as a local power, leaving in its wake wide
areas of local bitterness.
Ball State University Libraries The Post-Democrat, Muncie, Indiana, July 18, 1924
National Humanities Center  The Twenties in Contemporary Commentary: The Ku Klux Klan 12