"OVER THE YEARS historians have contended that the original Ku Klux Klan was a joke. Literally. Drawn mainly from the work of southern writers who were close to the secret society’s founders and often repeated to this day, the story goes like this: The original Klan began as a social club for a handful of men with time on their hands, a taste for the absurd, and a penchant for harmless mischief. In the spring of 1866, in the town of Pulaski, Tennessee, a half dozen men met at the office a prominent attorney to dream up a diversion from the doldrums of small-town-life. Just back from the Civil War with no immediate plans for the future, the former Confederate officers decided to form a social society much like the student fraternities gaining popularity on college campuses. The founders struggled to come up with a name until one man threw out the word “kuklos” –Greek for “circle” or “band.” His fellow brainstormers quickly added the word “clan” but started it with a K to harden the alliteration and to add a touch of mystery. After a bit of back and forth the founders had their name: Ku Klux Klan. They liked the sound of it. It felt like bones rattling in the closet. Building on the mysterious name, the “circle of brothers” added weird wardrobes, unusual rituals, mysterious code words, and absolute secrecy to the group. Members were required to wear handmade robes that flowed to the floor and high, pointed hoods that added two or three feet to their height. The officers were given titles drawn from mythology or just made up on the spot. The chief officer was the Grand Cyclops, his assistant was the Grand Magi, and the rank and file were Ghouls. After outgrowing their original meeting place, as local lore has it, the Klan moved to a more alluring venue: the ruins of an old farmhouse that had been decimated by a storm, engulfed with fallen trees, and rumored to be haunted. In strange midnight ceremonies the men donned their ghostly garb, recited their rambling incantations, pledged vows of secrecy, and indoctrinated new recruits. In time, the robed and hooded figures, masquerading as ghosts of Confederate soldiers returning from the battlefield, mounted horses and rode through neighboring farms and villages. The ghastly, ghostly figures told shocked onlookers that they had not had a drink since the Battle of Shiloh and had rode twice around the world since suppertime. Soon dozens of new dens had formed throughout the region, and sighting of hooded night riders were commonplace. Major newspapers speculated that this mysterious secret order must have a greater mission-for good or evil."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Organizations based in the United StatesAntisemitismRacism in the United StatesTennesseeAnti-communism in the United States
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Chapter 7 THE ORIGINAL KLAN, pp.57-58
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ku_Klux_Klan
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Ku Klux Klan
29 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Ku Klux Klan →
Related Quotes
"The flood of newcomers, vividly different from earlier migrants in faiths, tongues, and habits, aroused powerful anxi…"
"They were common folk, and their commonness radiated from them like heat from a stove….The wheelbarrow handle, it was…"
"The KKK took my baby away They took her away Away from me"
"We must remember that the KKK was a white terrorist organization that intimidated and killed African Americans to pre…"
"With Knowles' testimony, an Alabama jury convicted Henry Hays of first-degree murder and sentenced him to life in pri…"
"If Hindutva is Hinduism then the Ku Klux Klan is Christianity"
"SEVEN-YEAR-OLD Stetson Kennedy took a seat on the curb on Main Street in downtown Jacksonville, Florida. The air was …"
"Kennedy was born in Jacksonville, Florida, in 1916. He grew up in the 14-room, white-columned house owned by his trad…"
"Shortly after attending that Ku Klux Klan parade, Kennedy began to see the truth about the men in hoods and robes. He…"
"The Chicago Fraternal Order of Police is the most rabid, racist body of criminal lawlessness by police in the land. I…"