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"Visit of the Ku-Klux"

Image description:
"Visit of the Ku-Klux"
by Frank Bellew,
wood engraving, created in 1872 - depicts a Black woman (mother and wife) cooking over a hearth, a man seated alongside her, and three children nearby, as two members of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) in the doorway one with a rifle, about to enter an the household with intent to commit violence.
Bellew’s portrait is one of the most visceral depictions of KKK violence during the Reconstruction era.

Source: This was an Illus. in: Harper’s weekly, v. 16, no. 791 (1872 Feb. 24), p. 160.

Source: LOC - Library of Congress

White Southern Violence - The Klan.

*Though this information tells about what happened in Georgia and South Carolina, we are adding it to a gallery that focuses on North Carolina because the Klan was just as violent and prominent here also. In this post, we have combined several different portions of the documented account of this violent act done by the Klan to Mr. Abram Colby, with links.*
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Image description:
"Visit of the Ku-Klux"
by Frank Bellew,
wood engraving, created in 1872 - depicts a Black woman (mother and wife) cooking over a hearth, a man seated alongside her, and three children nearby, as two members of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) in the doorway one with a rifle, about to enter an the household with intent to commit violence.
Bellew’s portrait is one of the most visceral depictions of KKK violence during the Reconstruction era.

Source: This was an Illus. in: Harper’s weekly, v. 16, no. 791 (1872 Feb. 24), p. 160.

Source: LOC - Library of Congress

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On October 29, 1869, Klansmen abducted and savagely beat Georgia legislator 52-year-old Abram Colby, leaving him for dead.

Abram Colby was born into slavery in Greene County, Georgia, in approximately 1817. The son of an enslaved Black woman and a White landowner he was freed 15 years before emancipation, he became an early organizer of Black Americans.

A Radical Republican, he represented Greene County in 1865 at a convention for freed African Americans and was elected to the Georgia Legislature a year later.

In 1869, the Ku Klux Klan offered him a $7,500 bribe to not run for re-election, but he refused.
“I told them that I would not do it if they would give me all the county was worth,” he recalled.

A year later, Klansmen broke down his door, snatched him from bed, dragged him to the woods and beat him for more than three hours. During this violent act he was asked, “Do you think you will ever vote another damned Radical ticket?”

When he answered yes, the beating became even more severe.

“They set in and whipped me a thousand licks more, with sticks and straps that had buckles on the ends of them,” he recalled.

Although he survived, he was unable to work or hold office.

Three years later, he testified before a joint House and Senate committee investigating reports of White Southern violence, detailing what had happened. Mr. Colby bravely identified his attackers as some of the “first class men in our town. One is a lawyer, one a doctor, and some are farmers.”

“The worst thing was my mother, wife and daughter were in the room when they came,” he recalled.

“My little daughter begged them not to carry me away. They drew up a gun and actually frightened her to death. She never got over it until she died. That was the part that grieves me the most.”

Source: https://calendar.eji.org/racial-injustice/oct/29

Source: https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/resrep30691.7.pdf

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KKK - White Southern Violence - PBS

Excerpts from Testimony of B.W. Marston Re: The Coushatta Affair. House Reports, 44th Congress, 1st Session, No. 816, 645-727.

The First-Class Men of Our Town

Abram Colby, a former slave and member of the Georgia legislature, was called to Washington in 1872 to testify before a joint House and Senate committee investigating reports of Southern violence.

Members of the Ku Klux Klan had beaten Colby savagely in 1869 in an attempt to end his political activities as a Radical Republican, after earlier efforts to bribe the Black legislator had failed. Colby, permanently injured by the assault which had nearly killed him, defied intimidation to remain active in eastern Georgia politics.

Colby: On the 29th of October 1869, [the Klansmen] broke my door open, took me out of bed, took me to the woods and whipped me three hours or more and left me for dead. They said to me, "Do you think you will ever vote another damned Radical ticket?" I said, "If there was an election tomorrow, I would vote the Radical ticket." They set in and whipped me a thousand licks more, with sticks and straps that had buckles on the ends of them.

Question: What is the character of those men who were engaged in whipping you?

Colby: Some are first-class men in our town. One is a lawyer, one a doctor, and some are farmers. They had their pistols and they took me in my night-clothes and carried me from home. They hit me five thousand blows. I told President Grant the same that I tell you now. They told me to take off my shirt. I said, "I never do that for any man." My drawers fell down about my feet and they took hold of them and tripped me up. Then they pulled my shirt up over my head. They said I had voted for Grant and had carried the Negroes against them. About two days before they whipped me they offered me $5,000 to go with them and said they would pay me $2,500 in cash if I would let another man go to the legislature in my place. I told them that I would not do it if they would give me all the county was worth.

The worst thing was my mother, wife and daughter were in the room when they came. My little daughter begged them not to carry me away. They drew up a gun and actually frightened her to death. She never got over it until she died. That was the part that grieves me the most.

Question: How long before you recovered from the effects of this treatment?

Colby: I have never got over it yet. They broke something inside of me. I cannot do any work now, though I always made my living before in the barber-shop, hauling wood, etc.

Question: You spoke about being elected to the next legislature?

Colby: Yes, sir, but they run me off during the election. They swore they would kill me if I stayed. The Saturday night before the election I went to church. When I got home they just peppered the house with shot and bullets.

Question: Did you make a general canvas there last fall?

Colby: No, sir. I was not allowed to. No man can make a free speech in my county. I do not believe it can be done anywhere in Georgia.

Question: You say no man can do it?

Colby: I mean no Republican, either white or colored.

Excerpt from Testimony Taken by the Joint Select Committee to Inquire into the Condition of Affairs in the Late Insurrectionary States (Washington, 1872), printed in Dorothy Sterling, ed., Trouble They Seen: The Story of Reconstruction in the Words of African Americans. New York: Da Capo Press, 1994.

Proposing Security for the Future

Colonel John Singleton Mosby fought for the Confederacy, but he became a supporter of General Ulysses S. Grant and the Republican party after the war. In an interview with the Richmond Enquirer in January 1873, he confirmed his support of Grant and advocated the alliance in order to restore relations between the South and the federal government.

Reporter: I see it stated generally that you have some influence with General Grant -- is this true?

Colonel Mosby: I don't know what amount of influence I may have with the president, but General Grant knows the fiery ordeal I have been through here in supporting him, and I suppose he has some appreciation of it.

Reporter: What is the policy that you have advocated for the Virginia people?

Colonel Mosby: The issues that formerly divided the Virginia people from the Republican party were those growing out of the reconstruction measures. Last year the Virginia people agreed to make no further opposition to those measures and to accept all questions growing out of them as settled. There being no longer any questions, then, on principles separating Virginia people from General Grant, it became a mere matter of policy and expediency whether they would support him or [Liberal Republican party candidate] Horace Greeley. I thought it was the first opportunity the Southern people had had to be restored to their proper relation and influence with the federal administration. In other words, I said the Southern statesmen ought to avail themselves of this opportunity and support General Grant for re-election, and thereby acquire influence and control over his administration. That was the only way I saw of displacing the carpetbag crew that represented the government in the Southern states. I think that events have demonstrated that I was right.

General Grant has certainly accorded to me as much consideration or influence as any one man could have a right to expect. I know it is the disposition of General Grant to do everything in his power for the relief of the Southern people, if Southern politicians will allow him to do it. The men who control the policy of the Conservative party combine with the extreme Radicals to keep the Southern people arrayed against General Grant. As long as this course is pursued, the carpetbag crew who profess to support the administration get all the Federal patronage. This is the sustenance, the support of the carpetbag party in the South. Deprived of that, it would die tomorrow. I admit, as every Southern man must admit, the gross wrongs that have been perpetrated upon the Southern people. I am no apologist for them, but neither party proposes any atonement or indemnity for the past. I propose at least to give security for the future by an alliance between the Southern people and General Grant's administration....

Reporter: Has the president ever tendered you any position under his administration?

Colonel Mosby: Shortly after the presidential election the president said something to me on the subject of giving me an office. I told him while I would as lief hold an office under him as under any other man who had ever been president, yet there was no office within his gift that I desired or would accept. I told him that my motives in supporting him had been assailed, and my accepting a position under his administration would be regarded as a confirmation of the truth of the charge that I was governed by selfish motives. But my principal reason for not accepting anything from him was that I would have far more influence for good by taking nothing for myself....

Reporter: Colonel, I have heard that you are now promoting claims against the Government, --is that a fact?

Colonel Mosby: It is not. I have filed one claim for a citizen before the Southern Claims Commission. I shall turn this over, however, to a claim agent. I have had hundreds of claims of all sorts for prosecution against the Government offered me, but have declined them all, as I have no idea of bartering my political influence.... I do not think that any man nominated at Lynchburg will stand the most remote chance of success, because he will only be supported by the negroes of the state, led by a few white men. No matter what my relations to the administration may be, I wouldn't assist in putting this set in power.

Excerpt from John S. Mosby, The Memoirs of Colonel John S. Mosby. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1959.

With the White People, Right or Wrong

Called to testify about murderous violence in Louisiana, white planter B. W. Marston explained the attacks by pointing to widespread poverty among whites, and his sense that Northern exploiters, led by Freedman's Bureau representative marshall Twitchell, had arrived to tyrranize him and others in the planter class. In Marston's view, Twitchell was working "to organize the freedmen element against the interests of the white people." Marston condoned violence as a means of restoring the pre-war social, economic, and political climate.

Coushatta, Louisiana, June 7, 1876

The campaign of 1874 opened... The cotton-worm had destroyed the crop again. The people were very much impoverished. I remember speaking on one occasion to Captain Twitchell and telling him I believed this country was suffering more today than it ever had since it had been a country. I know it was very hard with me and every one I could hear from to get along....

All the paying offices of the parish have been held by strangers from abroad, who have been put in, I suppose, through the influence of Mr. Twitchell...

[He] called on me at my private residence, and we had a long conversation on the state of affairs. Among other things, I recollect telling him distinctly... that if he proposed to rule these people with a rod of iron he could not do it; that these were American people, and they would never be made serfs of... I told him that my planting interests were such that I did not want any excitement... I wanted him to understand that I would always go with the white people of our country right or wrong, because I would not place my judgment against them; that I was one of them and would share their fate...

[My] proposition was this; that he would guarantee us a reform government, and as a guarantee of that government give the bona-fideresidents of this parish one-half of all the offices, his party could take the other half, and we would have no political excitement during the campaign of 1874... My object was reform, and to avoid a war in this parish, which was approaching. Twitchell remarked, "Well, it is very natural that the minority should wish to be represented." That is all that was done about that proposition...

Mr. Twitchell controlled everything connected with the affairs of this parish. There was no doubt about that. He controlled the tax-collector's office; his brother was tax-collector. He was leader of this country. There was no doubt but that everything was done that he wanted...

I consider the assessment of 1873, for which we held him responsible, as one of the most tyrannical things that ever happened. I consider him a tyrant, because he has been representing these people and has betrayed them; because he held the position of state senator; president of the school board; president of the police jury; controlled the tax collector's office, and was everything connected with the affairs of the parish... took the money paid for taxes for his own use, and settled with himself; and if that is not tyranny in America; there is no tyranny anywhere.

If I should take Mr. Twitchell's position and undertake to organize the freedmen element against the interests of the white people... I would not be as safe as if I should undertake to organize the white element. If I were to make incendiary speeches and collect the Negroes in the night like it was done here before the riot, when one of the most respectable citizens in this community was shot in the back, I do not think I would be safe in this country, because these people are Americans, and they will defend themselves as quick as any other people in the world. If they suppose a man is coming here for incendiary purposes, they will deal with him promptly...

There is a very severe feeling against Mr. Twitchell among these people... Republicanism or democracy has nothing to do with it; it is from the fact that these people believe they have been plundered by him, and their property has been attempted to be confiscated by him; that he has undertaken his way to make a serfdom of this country.

Excerpts from Testimony of B.W. Marston Re: The Coushatta Affair. House Reports, 44th Congress, 1st Session, No. 816, 645-727.

Source: https://www.pbs.org/.../reconstruction-southern-violence/

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President Grant Takes on the Ku Klux Klan / NPS . Gov

Ulysses S. Grant faced numerous challenges during his presidency (1869-1877). The Civil War had recently ended in 1865, ushering in the beginning of the Reconstruction era. The transition to Reconstruction altered the direction of the country, especially the lives of African Americans. The 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments ended slavery, extended US citizenship to African Americans with equal protection under the law, and established voting rights for African American men.

Black Americans also attended school, established their own churches, becoming politically active, and held political offices at the local, state and federal level. They were overwhelmingly members of the Republican Party largely due to Republican support for emancipation and civil rights. As these dramatic changes were taking place throughout southern society, many White Southerners resented this newfound independence among African Americans and rejected the Republican Party. Some turned towards violence to maintain White supremacy and topple Republican rule in the south. As president, Grant needed to find ways to curb this violence.

The most well-known violent White supremacist group to form during this period was the Ku Klux Klan. The Klan had rather mysterious origins. It was formed in Pulaski, Tennessee in 1866 by six Confederate veterans who, bored with civilian life, founded the Klan to mainly play pranks.

However, as the Klan spread throughout the South, its members’ intentions became more sinister and violent. KKK members attacked freedpeople exercising their new rights as well as Whites who supported the Republican Party.

Their methods included burning Black schools and churches, intimidating Black and Republican voters, and even resorting to rape and murder. KKK members often wore ghoulish disguises and committed their crimes at night, terrifying their victims. Worse, the Klan’s goals were supported by many local officials as well as law enforcement, which meant that Klan violence was rarely prosecuted at the local or state level. Klan activities threatened to undermine federal reconstruction efforts in the former Confederacy. Therefore, Republican governors and officials appealed to President Grant for help if local and state authorities were unable or unwilling.

President Grant looked at the violence with increasing concern. He had a genuine regard for the well-being of the freedpeople who had supported the Union in large numbers and was concerned that the actions of the Ku Klux Klan were undermining the verdict of the Civil War.

Sadly, the Federal Government’s resources for curbing this widespread violence were limited, especially within the U.S. military, which had downsized significantly since the end of the Civil War. Grant was nevertheless determined to do something. In a letter to Speaker of the House James G. Blaine, Grant wrote, “there is a deplorable state of affairs existing in some portions of the south demanding the immediate attention of Congress.

If the attention of Congress can be confined to the single subject of providing means for the protection of life and property in those sections of the Country where the present civil authority fails to secure that end, I feel that we should have such legislation.”

Congress responded with three “Force Acts” aimed at stopping the violence, especially within the Ku Klux Klan. The Enforcement Act of May 1870 prohibited “banding together” or “going in disguise upon the public highways or upon the premises of another” to violate a citizen’s constitutional rights.

As the Klan was known for their disguises, this act called put them on notice. The Second Force Act of February 1871 put federal elections under federal supervision mainly by federal judges and U.S. Marshals. Finally, the Third Force Act of April of 1871 empowered President Grant to suspend Habeas Corpus and use the military to enforce these acts. The latter two Force Acts were also known as the “Ku Klux Klan Acts.”

Grant didn’t waste much time. On May 3, 1871, he issued a proclamation warning that terroristic acts of violence would not be tolerated by his administration. Grant tried to appeal to the people of the South.

“I do particularly exhort the people of those parts of the country to suppress all such combinations [lawlessness] by their own voluntary efforts,” Grant remarked, “and to maintain the rights of all citizens of the United States and to secure to all such citizens the equal protection of the laws.”

Continuing, the President warned that “I will not hesitate to exhaust the powers thus vested in the Executive, whenever and wherever it shall become necessary to do so for the purpose of securing to all citizens of the United States the peaceful enjoyment of the rights guaranteed to them by the Constitution and laws.”

Read more here: https://www.nps.gov/.../president-grant-takes-on-the-ku...

The Hawley Museum is passionately committed to uncovering and sharing the fascinating family stories that have influenced our state's and nation's history.  We believe that every family has a unique story to tell, one that adds depth to the rich tapestry of North Carolina and U.S. History.  

 

We encourage you to reflect on your own family narrative—did your ancestors play a pivotal role in these historical events?  We invite you to become a part of our family curator team by sharing your family's history, whether it be through photos, videos, articles, or documents.  

 

Let’s work together and weave a more comprehensive narrative that honors the roles families have played in our collective past to inspire future museum visitors.

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The Hawley Museum is passionately committed to uncovering and sharing the fascinating family stories that have influenced our state's and nation's history.  We believe that every family has a unique story to tell, one that adds depth to the rich tapestry of North Carolina and U.S. History.  

 

We encourage you to reflect on your own family narrative—did your ancestors play a pivotal role in these historical events?  We invite you to become a part of our family curator team by sharing your family's history, whether it be through photos, videos, articles, or documents.  

 

Let’s work together and weave a more comprehensive narrative that honors the roles families have played in our collective past to inspire future museum visitors.

Date
Month
Day
Year
Drawing mode selected. Drawing requires a mouse or touchpad. For keyboard accessibility, select Type or Upload.
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