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White supremacy had an outspoken advocate in backwater Grants Pass, Ore., between 1924 and 1927 in the form of a short-lived newspaper published by J.J.…
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The rights given to newly-freed slaves after the Civil War did not sit well with some whites in the South. Within a few years of the war, the original Ku…
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The Ku Klux Klan swore in its first Oregon klansmen in Medford in 1921. Within two years, the Klan claimed 35,000 members and more than 60 chapters in…
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A Ku Klux Klan kleagle called on the Ashland Weekly Tidings on March 22, 1922, to refute reports the Klan had anything to do with a “necktie party” the…