The Ku Klux Klan (KKK) is an organization that formed in the South
after the American Civil War (1861–65). Its members believe strongly
in the superiority of whites over other races. They work to ensure that
the freedom of blacks do not threaten the social advantages of whites.
The original organization disintegrated in the 1870s, but it was revived
in its current form in 1915.
Reconstruction-era KKK
The original KKK was formed in 1865 in Pulaski, Tennessee. Six young
Confederate soldiers organized what they called a social club. They
adopted disguises, secret signs, and rituals similar to those used by other
fraternal organizations. The name “Ku Klux Klan” derives from the
Greek word kyklos, meaning circle, and the English word clan, meaning
family. Within months, the Klan’s activities focused on spreading terror
among newly freed slaves and their supporters.
The KKK organized under a hierarchy of leaders and quickly gained
members throughout the South. It served as an underground resistance
to the Republican federal government in Washington, D.C., which had
taken control of the southern states following the American Civil War.
By giving slaves their freedom and taking steps to give them equal rights,
the federal government shook the social order that had existed in the
South. Worried that the governments’ policies would threaten the social
and economic advantages that whites enjoyed, the KKK resorted to intimidation through terror to advance its cause. Attacking anyone, black
or white, who supported the rights of blacks, members of the KKK whipped, robbed, raped, and murdered their victims. Klan violence
peaked around 1870.
Several factors contributed to the KKK’s dissolution within the next
few years. In 1869, the head of the KKK, Imperial Wizard Nathan
Bedford Forrest (1821–1877), ordered its groups to disband in response
to public pressure and excessive violence. Congressional attention led to
investigations of the group and the passage of four anti-Klan laws in
1870 and 1871. The laws enabled the U.S. government to bring numerous Klansmen to justice. Finally, by the 1870s, the KKK’s goal of maintaining white social supremacy throughout the South had been met.
Black Codes (state and local laws restricting blacks’ civil rights) and then
Jim Crow laws provided legal means to hinder black equality. The Ku
Klux Klan was no longer necessary for suppressing the rights of black
Americans.
Present-day KKK
The spirit and name of the Ku Klux Klan was revived in 1915 by
William Joseph Simmons (1880–1945). America’s experience during
World War I (1914–18) fed public fears and intolerance. As a result, the
new Klan, revived as a Protestant fraternal organization, widened its
focus of persecution. It opposed not only blacks, but also Catholics,
Jews, immigrants, supporters of the political Left (liberals), and proponents of unionization.
The new KKK grew rapidly, peaking at more than four million members in the 1920s. Many of its members won election to public office. The
Klan’s acts of violence raised public anger, and by the 1940s Klan membership dwindled and nearly died out. The civil rights movement of the
1950s and 1960s, however, revived membership in the Klan. Although it
has survived into the twenty-first century, its membership has fallen to a few thousand and its groups have become increasingly divided.