Black Klansmen? – Secret Societies – tribe.net

ixquick-proxy.com_2016-02-21_19-14-19.jpgBlack Klansmen? – Secret Societies – tribe.net

[Editor’s Note: this data comes from the Ku Klux Klan itself (from: http://www.kkklan.com/negroklan.htm / the link is defunct) and appears to tell another side of the story using Afro-American historical sources as primary data. I leave it to the reader to judge the martial itself. – TheAngryindian]

My first source of Negro Klan membership is the book, “The Ku Klux Spirit”, by J.A. Rogers, noted Negro historian of the 1920’s. The Ku Klux Spirit was first published in 1923, by Messenger Publishing Co. It was republished in 1980, by Black Classic Press. On page 34 of his book we find the amazing passage: “A fact not generally known is that there were thousands of Negro Klansmen. These were used as spies on other Negroes and on Northern Whites.” Very interesting. In the 1920’s, there were plenty of original Klansmen still living as well as many other people of both races who lived during the Reconstruction Era. J.A. Rogers would have been able to interview many. Why would a Black historian make such a thing up? And if he did make it up there would have been plenty of people who would have objected. His book would not have survived to this day. Yet, it did. My second source is a book written by a Carpetbagger, Albion Winegar Tourgee (1838-1905). In 1880 he published his book, “A Fool’s Errand”, (New York: Fords, Howard and Hubert). It was republished in 1989 by Louisiana State University Press as, “The Invisible Empire”. On page 79 of his book we find the passage: “There were no Colored men in the band (of Klansmen) that night. Their hands were not covered. I could see their boots and pants, and I could judge from their hands and feet. Most of them were genteel people, besides being white people. I could also have told by their language if there had been any Colored people among them. Their language was that of white men, and cultivated men.” OK, why claim that no Colored men were riding with the Klan that night unless the witness had seen Colored men with the Klan on another occasion? The men were in their robes since the witness had to look at their uncovered hands to see that no Colored men were among them. If he’s not telling the truth, why would a Carpetbagger, of all people, ever make such a thing up? My third source is, “Ku Klux Klan, It’s Origins, Growth, and Disbandment”, by J.C. Lester (one of the six original founders of the first Ku Klux Klan) and D.L. Wilson (another early Klansman). The book was first published in 1884. (I have an original copy). Reprints of this book are available from us for $7.00. The book was re-printed in 1905. In that edition, Walter L. Fleming, Ph.D., added an introduction. Again in 1905, there were still plenty of original Klansmen and others who had lived during the Reconstruction Era. In the introduction we find Fleming’s statement: “Many of the genuine Unionists later joined in the movement (the KKK), and there were some few Negro members, I have been told.” Now here we are told that there were “some few Negro members”. Above we were told that there “were thousands of Negro Klansmen.” But that is relative. When one considers that the original KKK had over 400,000 members “some few Negro members” could have totaled several thousand!

Extra: Urban Legend or True|The Black Klansman