The role racism played in the emergence of the Ku Klux Klan included the rise of southern whites through violence to prevent African Americans from gaining social, political, and economic equality. Socially the Klan prevented African Americans from religious practices by burning down churches blacks went to. One of the most well known church burnings in American history happened on September 15, 1963 at 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham Alabama, four members of the Ku Klux Klan planted dynamite in the church and the dynamite ended up killing 4 girls and injuring over 20 people. After the bombing, thousands of black protesters went to the scene of the bombing demanding justice and being emotionally tired of the racism that was happening. …show more content…
If a black man agitated against the law for example he tried to register to vote the Klan would use violence. They would start by intimidation, meeting the man on the street in a group and beat him for his actions and the Klan would also burn crosses in black people’s lawn to intimidate them more. Economically the Ku Klux Klan would also use scare tactics to keep African Americans out of white neighborhood because they didn’t want them there and feared change. By keeping African Americans segregated from whites, they thought keeping them grounded and stuck in their place would make the south great again. In closing, the role racism played in the emergence of the Ku Klux Klan was tremendous because of all the heinous acts the Klan did to the African Americans to keep them down in the south and all over the United States. Racism and the Ku Klux Klan still exist today but, that’s not going to keep African Americans like myself and others from achieving goals and living
It also influenced the world, and caused many after effects. We still feel the effects today. On September 15,1963, a bomb went off at Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham. 4 girls were killed, and 14 were injured. The suspects were 3 former Ku Klux Klan members.
On September 15, 1963, the 16th street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama was bombed by members of the Klu Klux Klan. It drew
The Klu-Klux-Klan was a white supremacist group that opposed “Reconstruction” and equal rights for freed slaves (Hook Exercise). They, to my standards, really would do whatever it takes to stop Reconstruction, even if it meant killing innocent people for that. John W. Stephens, a former senator from Caswell, was brutally murdered by none other than the Klu-Klux-Klan in a Grand Jury room (Doc. A Par.1). John W. Stephens was stabbed five to six times then even hanged on a hook in the same jury room.
On Sunday, September 15, 1963, there was an explosion that killed 4 girls and injured 22 others at the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham Alabama (“Vigilance and Victory”). In spite of the deaths, this act of white supremacy was the one that united the nation to combat segregation and discrimination. The 4 KKK members who had induced such pain and sorrow in many Americans were Thomas Edwin Jr., Herman Frank Cash, Robert Edward Chambliss, and Bobby Frank Cherry. (“16th Street Baptist Church Bombing, Wikipedia”). These four men intended to slow down the progression of the Civil Rights Movement, but rather sprung it ahead into the creation of the Civil Rights Act which desegregated many public areas.
The KKK used terrorism, including physical harm and murder, against groups and people that would not agree with the Klan. All three movements have been called the "purification" of American society by the Klan. This felt to the Klan like they had conquered the world, had supreme power, and they had did it. They have erased blacks from our country politically and socially in their
The KKK caused fear by threatening other people. “They set in and whipped me a thousand licks more, with sticks and straps that had buckles on the ends of them.” (Colby 513) Abram Colby was a freedman who was in the government during the reconstruction era. The KKK did not like him in the government
Four innocent lives taken, twenty-two people injured, causing affliction in the families lives. Because of Birmingham having a big impact United States and the Civil Rights Movement, it changed racial history. The KKK had a momentous role in the Racial equality fight, The Civil Rights Movement. Birmingham 16th Street Church Bombing had a significant impact on the Civil Rights Movement in the United States.
“Black churches and schools were burned, teachers were attacked, and freedpeople who refused to show proper deference were beaten and killed” (Bryant 4). Klansmen were outraged and showed no signs of repentance. The Klan made huge parades during the night to show their rebellious behavior towards blacks and Republicans. Blacks did their best to defend themselves, but the KKK never saw a reason to give up. After the Confederates lost for the South, the Ku Klux Klan saw its main goal, to prevent black domination in the Southern states.
The Bombing 16th Street, Baptist Church The tragic event occurred on September 15, 1963. The act was carried out by members of the Ku Klux Klan, people who disliked blacks and did horrible things because of this, in Birmingham, Alabama. Alabama was a Southern state and allowed segregation. The explosion went off at approximately 10:20 A.M., when Sunday school was ending and the service was beginning.
Who killed Reconstruction: The North or South? Following the civil war, the south killed the reconstruction of the United States. (Reconstruction was putting the country back together after the Civil War) There are many reasons why, the south slowed down the reconstruction of the United States, the main reason was freedmen were not seen as equals to the white.
Terror groups rose up to assure white supremacy in the South. African Americans could never win, especially when the Ku Klux Klan always forced them into debt. Although government awareness was brought up when they interviewed Henry Blake in Document 5, nothing could be done to stop the terrorizing feelings of individuals who fail to see that people of color are human as much as someone white is. African Americans worked to get the rights they deserved so of course they would be proud of what they accomplished. Document 4 is an account of Lucy McMillan, an African American, who had her house burned down by the Ku Klux Klan for “bragging” about her land owning rights.
While the Ku Klux Klan of the 1860s and of the 1920s had certain similarities and differences, these groups represent a particular American virtue: intolerance. In my opinion, this intolerance promoted the formation of the Klan. Camouflaging these hateful and violent crimes and righteous intentions is ignorant and prevents progress. Change is what molds a country into a better one. While I feel as though the United States today is a large accomplishment in terms of progression, I believe that the Klan was an unnecessary feature toward the improvement of our country and American
The Ku Klux Klan first emerged in Pulaski, Tennessee following the Civil War. As we know today, the mere mention of the Klan triggers fear as the KKK is known for its various tactics of violence that came in the form if lynchings, murders, and mutilations. Following their emergence, the KKK were quickly symbolized and portrayed as the protectors of the South, following the defeat of the Southern states in the Civil War and the beginning of the period of Reconstruction by the federal government (Gurr, 1989, p. 132). During the 1920s, the KKK achieved its greatest political success and growth outside of the South. During this period, the membership of the Klan heavily expanded to the states of Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Oregon, to which the KKK obtained two to two and one-half million members at its apex.
The Ku Klux Klan or KKK has created centuries of fear. They originated in Pulaski, Tennessee. The famous hate group was out to re establish white supremacy. The KKK has influenced local governments and people in power. It has also had an impact on American people and specifically black minorities.
Around fifty years ago, civil rights activist Martin Luther King dreamed about a United States that is free of racism, where all people regardless of the color of their skin would live peacefully and equally. Fifty years later, this dream of King, who died for this very cause, could be said to have been realized, albeit not thoroughly. Although it cannot be argued that the minority groups in the US have become more accepted into the society and are receiving the same rights as the White Americans for being citizens of the US, it also cannot be denied that there are still instances of racism that happen in the modern American society. The only difference, and could be a great development, is that these instances of racism are found more in the