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lor of law to any interference which was deemed necessary。
Federal troops served other ends than the mere preservation of order and the support of the radical state governments。 They were used on occasion to decide between opposing factions and to oust conservatives who had forced their way into office。 The army officers purged the Legislature of Georgia in 1870; that of Alabama in 1872; and that of Louisiana in 1875。 In 1875 the city government of Vicksburg and the state government of Louisiana were overturned by the whites; but General Sheridan at once intervened to put back the Negroes and carpetbaggers。 He suggested to President Grant that the conservatives be declared 〃banditti〃 and he would make himself responsible for the rest。 As soon as a State showed signs of going over to the Democrats or an important election was lost by the radicals; one House or the other of Congress in many instances sent an investigation committee to ascertain the reasons。 The Committees on the Condition of the South or on the Late Insurrectionary States were nearly always ready with reports to establish the necessity of intervention。
Besides the army there was in every state a powerful group of Federal officials who formed a 〃ring〃 for the direction of all good radicals。 These marshals; deputies; postmasters; district attorneys; and customhouse officials were in close touch with Washington and frequently dictated nominations and platforms。 At New Orleans the officials acted as a committee on credentials and held all the state conventions under their control in the customhouse。
Such was the machinery used to sustain a party which; with the gradual defection of the whites; became throughout the South almost uniformly black。 At first few Negroes asked for offices; but soon the carpetbaggers found it necessary to divide with the rapidly growing number of Negro politicians。 No Negro was elected governor; though several reached the office of lieutenant governor; secretary of state; auditor; superintendent of education; justice of the state supreme court; and fifteen were elected to Congress。* It would not be correct to say that the Negro race was malicious or on evil bent。 Unless deliberately stirred up by white leaders; few Negroes showed signs of mean spirit。 Few even made exorbitant demands。 They wanted 〃something〃schools and freedom and 〃something else;〃 they knew not what。 Deprived of the leadership of the best whites; they could not possibly act with the scalawagstheir traditional enemies。 Nothing was left for them but to follow the carpetbagger。
* Revels; Lynch; and Bruce represent the better Negro officeholders; Pinchback; Rainey; and Nash; the less respectable ones; and below these were the rascals whose ambition was to equal their white preceptors in corruption。
CHAPTER XI。 THE KU KLUX MOVEMENT
The Ku Klux movement; which took the form of secret revolutionary societies; grew out of a general conviction among the whites that the reconstruction policies were impossible and not to be endured。 Somers; an English traveler; says that at this time 〃nearly every respectable white man in the Southern States was not only disfranchised but under fear of arrest or confiscation; the old foundations of authority were utterly razed before any new ones had yet been laid; and in the dark and benighted interval the remains of the Confederate armiesswept after a long and heroic day of fair fight from the fieldflitted before the eyes of the people in this weird and midnight shape of a Ku Klux Klan。〃 Ryland Randolph; an Alabama editor who was also an official of the Klan; stated in his paper that 〃the origin of Ku Klux Klan is in the galling despotism that broods like a nightmare over these Southern Statesa fungus growth of military tyranny superinduced by the fostering of Loyal Leagues; the abrogation of our civil laws; the habitual violation of our national Constitution; and a persistent prostitution of all government; all resources and all powers; to degrade the white man by the establishment of Negro supremacy。〃
The secret orders; regardless of their original purposes; were all finally to be found opposing radical reconstruction。 Everywhere their objects were the same: to recover for the white race their former control of society and government; and to destroy the baneful influence of the alien among the blacks。 The people of the South were by law helpless to take steps towards setting up any kind of government in a land infested by a vicious elementFederal and Confederate deserters; bushwhackers; outlaws of every description; and Negroes; some of whom proved insolent and violent in their newly found freedom。 Nowhere was property or person safe; and for a time many feared a Negro insurrection。 General Hardee said to his neighbors; 〃I advise you to get ready for what may come。 We are standing over a sleeping volcano。〃
To cope with this situation ante…bellum patrolsthe 〃patter…rollers〃 as the Negroes called themwere often secretly reorganized。 In each community for several months after the Civil War; and in many of them for months before the end of the war; there were informal vigilance committees。 Some of these had such names as the Black Cavalry and Men of Justice in Alabama; the Home Guards in many other places; while the anti Confederate societies of the war; the Heroes of America; the Red Strings; and the Peace Societies; transformed themselves in certain localities into regulatory bodies。 Later these secret societies numbered scores; perhaps hundreds; varying from small bodies of local police to great federated bodies which covered almost the entire South and even had membership in the North and West。 Other important organizations were the Constitutional Union Guards; the Pale Faces; the White Brotherhood; the Council of Safety; the '76 Association; the Sons of '76; the Order of the White Rose; and the White Boys。 As the fight against reconstruction became bolder; the orders threw off their disguises and appeared openly as armed whites fighting for the control of society。 The White League of Louisiana; the White Line of Mississippi; the White Man's party of Alabama; and the Rifle Clubs of South Carolina; were later manifestations of the general Ku Klux movement。
The two largest secret orders; however; were the Ku Klux Klan; from which the movement took its name; and the Knights of the White Camelia。 The Ku Klux Klan originated at Pulaski; Tennessee; in the autumn of 1865; as a local organization for social purposes。 The founders were young Confederates; united for fun and mischief。 The name was an accidental corruption of the Greek word Kuklos; a circle。 The officers adopted queer sounding titles and strange disguises。 Weird nightriders in ghostly attire thoroughly frightened the superstitious Negroes; who were told that the spirits of dead Confederates were abroad。 This terrorizing of the blacks successfully provided the amusement which the founders desired; and there were many applications for admission to the society。 The Pulaski Club; or Den; was in the habit of parading in full uniform at social gatherings of the whites at night; much to the delight of the small boys and girls。 Pulaski was near the Alabama line; and many