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Hoodwinked: The Anti-Saloon League and the Ku Klux Klan in 1920s Prohibition Enforcement1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 November 2010

Thomas R. Pegram
Affiliation:
Loyola College

Abstract

The relationship between the Anti-Saloon League and the Ku Klux Klan in support of national prohibition has been a source of controversy since the 1920s. Both the ASL and the KKK acted to enforce prohibition, the ASL through legal and political means, the KKK through grassroots political pressure and extralegal vigilante methods. Wet observers and, more recently, historians of the Klan movement claimed that the ASL cooperated with the Invisible Empire in direct enforcement of dry laws. ASL activists and prohibition historians, in turn, denied league involvement with the intolerant, occasionally violent, dry vigilantism of the Klan and instead stressed the nonpartisan bureaucratic operations of the ASL. The actual ambivalent relationship reflected shortcomings in the dry regime and in the two organizations. Ineffective enforcement pushed some ASL officials into informal ties with local Klans, while the league tolerated pro-Klan sentiments among some leaders. But extensive and persistent cooperation was not apparent.

Type
Essays
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 2008

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References

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41 Charles A. Pollack to McBride, Nov. 23, 1925, MP 7.

42 McBride to Thomas W Gales, Feb. 8, 1926, MP 12; Gales to McBride, Dec. 12, 1925, MP 3; O. M. Pullen to McBride, July 25, 1924, MP 7.

43 Samuel G.Jones to McBride, Jan. 27, 1926, MP 13.

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49 Atticus Webb to McBride, Aug. 21, 1924, MP 9 (first quotation); Webb to the Executive Committee, Anti-Saloon League of America, n.d., marked Sept.-Oct. 1924, MP 9; McBride to Wayne Wheeler, Sept. 18, 1924, MP 10 (second quotation); McBride to W J. Milburn, Sept. 22, 1924, MP 6; “Report to the Executive Committee of the Anti-Saloon League of America by Francis Scott McBride, General Superintendent. Given at Washington, D.C., November 25, 1924,” 4, EHC 84; Milburn to McBride, Sept. 26, 1924, EHC 91; “Woman Governor or Klan: A Texas Choice,” NYT, Aug. 3, 1924, XX3Google Scholar; “The Fergusons Stand Back to the Wall,” NYT, Dec. 6, 1925, XX3Google Scholar.

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54 Andrew B. Wood to Senator Thad H. Caraway, Aug. 7, 1926, MP 15; Howard H. Russell to Mrs. William H. Anderson, Apr. 16, 1928, Anderson Papers.

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