Another part of KKK history, a part that is not well known, is the 
			pervasive nature of the movement in the Northern states. During the 
			early decades of the 20th century, Indiana and Illinois were states 
			with thousands of KKK members. The organization even invaded central 
			Illinois, Logan County and the small town of Atlanta during the 
			1920s.
			Bill Thomas of the Atlanta Public Library and Museum shed some 
			light on this part of Atlanta history at the dinner lecture Friday 
			at the Palms Grill Café. The title of Thomas' lecture was "The KKK 
			in Atlanta — Why is it a mystery?"  
			The mystery is how an organization estimated at 200 members, some 
			of whom were pillars of the community during its heyday in Atlanta, 
			primarily from 1919 until 1928, could have so little documentation 
			in the recorded history of the town. 
			"The KKK in the early decades of the 20th century may have been 
			fomented by the growth of popular media at the time," said Thomas. 
			
			  
			Radio, newspapers and the easy dissemination of news from other 
			parts of the United States and even overseas brought to central 
			Illinois the news of the Russian Revolution and the conversion of 
			that huge country to communism, the dreaded red menace.  
			The first decades of the 20th century also brought an influx of 
			immigrants from Eastern Europe and Russia that was unprecedented in 
			United States history. Thomas' contention is that these events 
			contributed to a feeling of fear in the U.S., especially in small, 
			insular communities. These immigrants were different from the 
			residents of the U.S. whose families had been around for 
			generations.  
			The new immigrants were mostly Catholic along with other 
			religions, and their political experience was different from U.S. 
			democracy. They were different. The U.S. until then was a 
			predominantly white, Protestant country. This change in demographics 
			may have contributed to the growth of the KKK as a reaction to this 
			social upheaval in the world that flowed into the U.S.  
			Thomas went on to document the activities of the Ku Klux Klan in 
			Atlanta. Though the record is thin about the organization's 
			activities in the community, several aspects of the KKK in other 
			parts of the country were not in evidence in Atlanta. While in the 
			South the organization was against blacks, Jews and any other 
			non-Protestant religion, and members did burn crosses and resort to 
			violence under cover of their hoods and robes, these activities were 
			not the focus of the local group. 
			The Logan County chapter of the KKK was designated Chapter 152 of 
			the national organization. The Atlanta-based chapter seems to have 
			stressed Protestantism, patriotism and policies favoring the 
			inception of Prohibition in the early 1920s. 
			While there were a few black residents in Atlanta at the time, 
			Thomas stressed that there is no solid evidence of anti-black 
			activities by the local KKK. In fact, the black population of 
			Atlanta peaked in the decades after the Civil War and saw a steady 
			decline in Atlanta in the first decade of the 20th century, even 
			before the local KKK chapter's inception. 
			What few references there are to the Ku Klux Klan in Atlanta can 
			be divided into several categories.  
			At one time there were seven movie theaters in the town. One of 
			them, the Liberty, did show a movie, a silent movie, that showed the 
			Klan in a very positive light.  
			
			
			  
			The Atlanta newspaper, the Argus, had advertisements announcing 
			Klan lectures at Murphy Hall, a renowned Atlanta auditorium, in 1924 
			and 1926. There were several articles describing Klan members in 
			full regalia entering Protestant congregations during Sunday 
			services to applaud the good work of the pastors and members and 
			then leaving a donation in the offering plate. 
			
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				 One of the largest annual events in Atlanta was the county 
				fair, actually a fair that represented three counties and took 
				place each August. This event drew thousands from the 
				surrounding area. The Argus records Klan events at the fair in 
				1925 and 1926. The odd thing is that the fair program for those 
				years does not list the Klan events at the fair. The only 
				mention of the time and date is in the Argus. Thomas indicated 
				that this omission in the fair program may have been 
				significant.  
			The site of the Atlanta Fair was also the site of a KKK rally in 
			September 1923, about a month after the fair. This event drew an 
			estimated 4,000 attendees, a very big deal. The guest speaker was a 
			Dr. Mitchell, the head of the Texas state chapter of the KKK. His 
			official title was the Grand Dragon of the KKK of Texas. 
			Other items in the Atlanta Museum show an ad in the Argus for an 
			Atlanta business with early air conditioning and the words "Kome 
			Keep Kool" in the body of the advertisement. The use of the letter 
			"K" to start each word was a surreptitious way of broadcasting the 
			Ku Klux Klan affiliation of the store owner.  
			The last item in Thomas' PowerPoint presentation was a photo of a 
			parade of school children dressed in tiny Klan robes, an event 
			seemingly sanctioned by local authorities. The KKK even had a 
			children's auxiliary.  
			Several artifacts do exist from the heyday of the KKK in Atlanta. 
			Thomas brought a display of KKK robes that had been the property of 
			an Atlanta family. There is one each for a man and a woman and two 
			in children's sizes. Thomas has been unable to uncover the iconic 
			pointed Klan hoods with the eye cutouts that would complete the 
			costumes.  
			The other artifact that was found is a stamp machine that when 
			pressed on paper, produces a raised, embossed seal for the Logan 
			County chapter of the KKK. This seal was found in an Atlanta home 
			and donated to the Atlanta Museum. Thomas had it restored to working 
			condition. 
			
			  
			While Thomas gave a presentation that covered actual Klan events 
			in Atlanta, "as a historian," he said, "I have attempted to make 
			some interpretations from the material we do have." Chief among 
			these are that the Klan in Atlanta was popular, accepted and highly 
			organized. "The local Klan was most in evidence from 1922 until 1928 
			and stressed high moral standards and patriotism. There was no solid 
			evidence of anti-black activities," he said.  
			The KKK in the Midwest soon fell upon hard times. The Grand 
			Dragon of Indiana was caught embezzling from the organization's 
			coffers and was arrested for raping a teenager. Following these 
			events, the KKK fell into disrepute locally. 
			For a short time, the Ku Klux Klan was an important part of the 
			social life fabric in Logan County and Atlanta. Remnants of it 
			remain in the Atlanta Argus articles from the era and in the 
			memories of local residents whose relatives may have been members.
			 
			Several members of the dinner lecture audience at the Palms Grill 
			offered anecdotal stories that had been related to them over the 
			years about the local chapter of the KKK. 
			As Thomas said: "This is part of our local history. It should not 
			be ignored because of the unsavory reputation of the KKK in other 
			parts of the country." 
			
[By CURT FOX]  |