A few
outrages!!!! Letters Received by the Office of the Adjutant General (Main
Series), 1871 - 1880 National Archives Microfilm Publication M666 Roll 1
"Statements, depositions, and other records submitted by Gov. William W.
Holden relating to crimes of the Ku Klux Klan against citizens of North
Carolina, 1869 - 1871"
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Jan.
5, 1871 Case of Holden, Govr. N. C. Concerning Outrages in North Carolina Respectfully
referred to the Honorable Secretary of War By order of the President: (22
enclo.) D. E. Babeoth The jail of Lenoir County broken open, and five
men taken out, their throats cut, and their bodies thrown in Neuse river.
The jail of Orange County broken open, and three men shot at, two
escaped, but one was wounded, and died of his wound. The jail of Chatham
County broken open and a United States prisoner released. He was in jail for
violating the revenue law. He has not since been arrested. The Sheriff
of Jones County and Colonel of Militia, shot and killed from behind a blind, in
the open day, on the public highway. His death was decreed by a Kuklux camp in
the adjoining county of Lenoir. He was hated because he was a Northern man and a
Republican. A colored man who was on horseback, in company with Sheriff
Colgrove, was also shot and mortally wounded. The Colonel of the Militia
of Jones County, and a Justice of the Peace, shot and killed in the open day
while at work in his saw mill. A colored man with him, at the same time badly
shot. A man named Grant shot and killed in Lenoir County, by order of a
camp, because he threatened to divulge the secrets of the Kuklux. A man
shot from the back of a horse in Lenoir County and killed. A colored man
in Wayne shot in his own door and killed. The family of Daniel Blue,
colored, murdered in Moore County. Blue was wounded and escaped. His wife was
killed. She was heavy with child. His five other children were murdered, the
house set on fire, and the bones of all found next morning. A colored
man murdered in Harnett County. Two white men of the name of McLeod
murdered in Cumberland. The men who murdered them had painted faces. The Kuklux
charged the murder on colored men, and one colored man was killed by them on
account of it. A colored man hanged in Chatham County. A revenue officer
riding along the road, saw his body hanging and reported. His wife and children
were sitting under the body moaning. Nothing was done about it. A
colored man in Chatham County badly whipped. As he returned to his house, the
Kuklux followed. One of his daughters came out of his house with an infant in
her arms, and fled. The Kuklux fired on her and wounded her and her infant.
A colored woman near Pittsborough, Chatham County, beaten with a club
until her life was despaired of, because she complained to a magistrate that a
white man, a Kuklux, had stolen her chickens. A colored minister of the
gospel in Gulf Township, Chatham County, compelled to take a torch and burn his
own church, which he and others had built on his own land. The next morning,
after the Kuklux had departed, the melancholy sight was presented of the
minister and his congregation holding prayer over the ashes of his church.
A colored exhorter taken out of his house, in Orange County, made to
double-quick for half an hour in the public road, and then required, on pain of
death, to fall on his knees and pray! A colored woman drowned in a mill
pond in Orange County, because she had been "impudent" to a white lady! This is
the only charge. Two colored men taken out of their houses in Orange
County, and hanged, on suspicion of having burnt barns. A colored man in
Orange County hanged, because he was found in the house of a white man at night,
and suspected of being intimate with his daughters. A colored boy in
Orange County taken at midnight from his father, while they were burning
charcoal, and hanged. The charge was that he had made some improper and foolish
remark about the white ladies. His body hung ten days until the vultures partly
consumed it, and no one during that time dared to take him down. An
expedition from the camp at Hillsborough, Orange County, to Gilbreath's Bridge,
to aid in murdering Mr. Shoffner, one of the Senators from Alamance and
Guilford, because he had introduced into the legislature a bill to protect life
and property and to punish the Kuklux. A leading Kuklux, fearing the
consequences of such an act, met this force of Kuklux and turned them back.
Wyatt Outlaw, a colored man, hanged near the Court House in Graham,
Alamance County. He was a leading Republican, an industrious mechanic, and a man
of unblemished character. His offense was that Gov. Holden had appointed him a
justice of the Peace, and he had accepted the appointment, and was President in
that county of the Union League of America. It was charged that he had incited
colored men to fire on the Kuklux on the public highway, but this statement can
be disproved by respectable witnesses. He was dragged from his house at
midnight, his little son clinging to him as long as he could, and his aged
mother pleading for him. He was hanged near the Court House, that the Kuklux
might thereby show their contempt for the civil law. William Puryear, a
half-witted colored man who witnessed the murder of Wyatt Outlaw, followed two
of the disguised murderers to their homes. On his return to Graham he told who
these murderers were. In a short time he was taken out of his house and drowned
in a mill pond near Graham. Caswell Holt, a colored man, taken from his
house in Alamance and badly whipped. He presumed to complain and appealed to a
magistrate for justice. The case was tried and the parties who had whipped him
proved that they were not present when he was whipped! One of the camps then
decreed his death because he had asked for justice. He was again attacked in his
own house, shot through the body, and was carried to Graham by order of the
County Commissioners, nursed, and at last recovered. The house of a
colored man (Harvey) in Alamance, was visited by the Kuklux. Their appearance
and conduct so frightened his wife that she dropped her infant child which she
had in her lap, and the infant died from the fall. They then cruelly whipped
Harvey. They whipped the father without cause, and were the cause of the death
of the child. A school house and church at Company Shops, Alamance
County, for the use of the colored people, was burnt by order of a camp. The
guilty party was arrested by order of Gov. Holden, and will be tried for the
crime. The Rev. Mr. Conliss, a native of Vermont, and a teacher of a
colored school at Company Shops, Alamance, was taken from his house at night and
badly whipped. His wife endeavored to protect him, and was struck on the head
with a heavy pistol and badly wounded. Mr. Conliss was lame, and went on
crutches; but the Kuklux had no mercy on the poor old crippled man. He was
whipped because he taught a colored school and was a loyal man. John W.
Stephens, State Senator from the County of Casswell, was murdered in the open
day in the Court House, in the town of Yanceyville. Four persons charged with
having murdered him, or being accessory thereto, have been bound to appear and
answer, as the result of the military movement of Gov. Holden. He was killed in
the Court House, in the open day, to show Kuklux contempt for the civil law.
Sam Allen was driven from his house near Leasburg, Caswell County. A few
nights afterward some colored men, friends of his, were watching at his house
with his wife while he was concealed in the woods. The Kuklux appeared, these
colored men fled, and Robin Jacobs, one of them and an old man, not being able
to get out of the way, was shot through the head and killed. The Kuklux
of Rockingham County made a raid and fired into a house and shot a colored woman
through the brain and killed her. In the same county, in another case they
thrust chunks of wood on fire into the faces and mouths of their victims!
In Forsyth County, a colored man was taken from his house, his hands and
feet were tied, and a gag, described thus, placed in his mouth: -- a ball of
hardwood, filled with hard, sharp, wooden pegs. This was forced into his mouth,
and by leather strings attached to it, it was tied behind his head. He was then
laid on his face , and one hundred lashes given him on his bare back. In
Alamance County a colored man named Noah Trollinger was whipped, and compelled
to take a knife and hack and mutilate his private parts! After they had whipped
Trollinger, and compelled him to mutilate himself, they rubbed his back with a
rough persimmon stick! Mr. A. L. Ramsour, white man, of Catawba County,
was set upon in his house by about thirty Ku Klux, taken out, and whipped on his
naked back by three men with hickory switches. His son, a young man grown, was
forced to stand and see his father whipped. His little daughter clung to him as
long as she could, and begged for her father. Mr. Ramsour is a farmer of
excellent character, a peaceable man, and religiously a non-resistant. His only
fault was that he is an iron clad Republican. When Gen. Stoneman, in 1865, was
in his neighborhood he hoisted the Stars and Stripes on his house. A certain
man, one of his neighbors, took the flag down. Mr. Ramsour reported this traitor
to Gen. Stoneman. This no doubt added to the venom and hatred cherished against
him. A colored man, a tenant on Mr. Ramsour's land, was also badly
whipped at the same time by these Ku Klux. In Lincoln County, the Kuklux
were on the public highway, looking for a certain colored man to whip or kill
him. They met another colored man, fired on him and wounded him. Seeing their
mistake, they laid him on a pile of rails, and told him to call for help. A
gentleman who recently visited the cabin of this man says, he found his little
children crying for bread, the mother absent working to get a little bread for
the family, the father hobbling about on crutches unable to work and a cripple
for life. Sandy Sellars, colored, of Alamance, was whipped in January,
1869. After they had whipped him they rubbed or scraped his back with a rough
persimmon stick! Frederick Pool and wife, white, were taken from their
bed at night in February, 1870, and severely whipped for speaking against the Ku
Klux. This in Coats' District, Johnston County. These are some of the
worst Kuklux cases in North Carolina. Hundreds of other cases of scourging, and
the cases of mutilation are necessarily omitted. There have been no
cases thus far in which the parties have been convicted by the civil courts. As
the result of the action of Gov. Holden about sixty have been bound over for
trial in the counties of Lenoir, Jones, Alamance and Caswell. We shall see
whether any of these 60 persons, thus charged with crime, will be convicted by a
jury.
Alabama, State
of
Names of some of the persons who have been put to
death in that state within the last 2 years by persons wearing the disguise of
the Ku Klux Klan 1.Alexander Boyd, Esq. - white. Solicitor for Greene
County, living at Eutaw, the county seat. He was taken from his room in the
night of May 31, 1870 by a large band of K. K. and put to death in the passage
leading to it from the upper piazza of the Hotel where he was boarding. The Klan
left his body where he fell, mounted their horses and rode off. 2.
Guilford Coleman - colored. A leading man of his race - living in Greene Co., --
had just returned from the Republican State Convention. His body was found in an
old well shockingly mangled. 3. Thomas Johnson - colored man living in
Greene County. 4. Levi Smiley - a colored man living in Greene County.
5. David Jones - a colored man living in Greene County. 6.
Samuel or Thomas Snoddy - a colored man living in Greene County. 7.
Burke a colored man who lived in Sumter County at the time he was put to death.
He was a prominent man among his race & was very much beloved &
respected by them - was a member of the legislature. 8. Frank Diggs - a
colored man who was U. S. Mail agent on the Selma & Meridian R. R. He was
shot dead in his mail car while the train was taking on wood near the line of
Alabama & Mississippi, about half an hour before sun down, by a man armed
with a double barreled shot gun & in full Ku Klux disguise, not long before
the elections in November last. Frank Diggs was liked by every body that knew
him. 9. William C. Luke - a white man - teacher of a Sunday School or
day school for colored children at ?Patonee in Calhoun Co., Ala. - a thoroughly
educated Christian gentleman from the north who spoke several languages. He was
put to death by a band of Ku Klux near the village of Cross Plains in that
county a little after midnight of Monday, July 21, 1870. 10. Toney Cliff
- a colored man - was put to death at thhe same time & place with Mr. Luke -
hung on the same tree. 11. Berry Harris - a colored man - was put to
death at the same time & place - hung on another tree about thirty yards
distant. 12. Caesar Fredrick - a colored man - was put to death at the
same time & place with Mr. Luke - shot & his body left under a tree
about thirty yards nearer the village of Cross Plains than the tree on which Mr.
Luke & Toney Cliff were hung. 13. William Hall - a colored man - was
put to death at the same time & place with Mr. Luke - shot & his body
left under the same tree with that of Caesar Fredrick. 14. Essex
Hendrick - a colored man - was put to death the same night with Mr. Luke &
his body found hanging to a tree about five hundred yards from the Selma Rome
& Dalton R. R. at a station called ?Amberson about four or five miles from
Cross Plains. When his body was taken down the next morning it was found he had
been shot in the head & breast seven times. 15. Jacob Moore - a
colored man was shot at Patona on Monday the 11 of July 1870 & wounded so
that it was supposed he would die during that night - when the Ku Klux took Mr.
Luke & the others they left him where he lay. 16. In addition to
these outrages it is proper to state that eighteen colored men living near
Millerville in Clay Co., Ala. were cruelly beaten by a band of disguised [men]
for voting the Republican ticket at the election in November last. Most of them
were whipped with hickory switches - but two were beaten unmercifully with
boards into which small nails had been driven!