American Decades
Backlash
History.
Ku Klux Klan (KKK) activism and violence in the 1920s represented a reaction by some native-born, Protestant whites to the growing diversification of American society and an effort to impose their version of law and order on it. Based on the vigilante group that sprung up in the post-Civil War South, a new KKK emerged in 1915 at Stone Mountain, Georgia, when sixteen men lit a cross symbolizing the Klan's resurrection. Between 1920 and 1925 the group quickly grew until it had five million members. Klansmen, who viewed themselves as embodying "100 percent Americanism," shared an antipathy to blacks, Jews, Catholics, and immigrants.
KKK Methods.
The Klan primarily used violent viligantism to terrorize so-called moral offenders, but it also worked through political channels. In the early 1920s the Klan dominated politics in Indiana, Texas, Oklahoma, and Colorado. It deadlocked the 1924 Democratic National...
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1920's Lifestyles and Social Trends
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- The Affair With the Automobile
- The African American Experience
- Backlash
- The Birth Control Movement
- Boosterism
- Fads and Crazes
- Freudianism
- The Impact of Technology on Daily Life
- Masculinity and the Experience of Men
- The Noble Experiment
- Scientific Child Rearing
- Women Get the Vote
- Women Go to Work
- Youth Culture
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Lifestyles and Social Trends, 1920–1929
