TIME MAGAZINE - MARCH 15, 1948
As warm,
humid darkness fell on Wrightsville, Ga., one night last week, a long
line of automobiles drew up at the ballpark. It was the eve of rural
Johnson County's Democratic primary, and 400 Negroes had registered to
vote. Two hundred and forty-nine men & women climbed solemnly out of the
cars, holding black oilcloth bags. Heads down to evade the gaze of
curious bystanders, they took out the white sheets and sugarsack masks
of the Ku Klux Klan and hurriedly pulled them on. (Last week Georgia's
Grand Dragon Samuel Green carefully explained that Ku Klux Klansmen wear
masks to protect themselves against the prejudice of Jews, Catholics and
foreigners.) Then, in slow single file, they marched to the paved square
before the town's dilapidated courthouse, where a crowd of 700 waited to
applaud.
A white-robed figure scrambled selfconsciously to the courthouse lawn
with a posthole digger. Four more, grunting quite humanly, lugged up a
big kerosene-drenched cross. One touched a match to it. As the flamed
shot up, a green-robed man--Atlanta Physician Samuel Green, Georgia's
Grand Dragon--stepped into the light.
Because it is hard to shout intelligibly through a sugar sack. Green
wore no mask. Spectacles glinting, mustache working, he began a tirade
against President Harry Truman and his espousal of civil rights
legislation.
"Again you will see Yankee bayonets trying to force social and racial
equality between the black and white races...." he bellowed. "If that
happens there are those among you who will see blood flow in these
streets. The Klan will not permit the people of this country to become a
mongrel race." (Southern man has seldom condemned sexual relations
between whites and Negro women: before the Civil War, when mulatto
slaves brought high prices, the practice was encouraged. Today,
approximately 70% of American Negroes have some white blood.)
When he had finished, the Klansmen paraded back to the ballpark and had
a barbecue.
In the election the next day, no Negroes voted.
A great many Georgians were intensely displeased by this tawdry
barbarism. Governor Melvin Thompson took steps to counteract it. He
ordered two prisoners removed from Reidsville's safe Tatnall State
Prison and sent back to a rural jail in Emanuel County where they are
accused of having murdered a state patrolman. This was done to prove
that no Georgian would lynch them. The Governor said that the Klan
meetings should be outlawed. His reason: their activities might
encourage the interference of Northern "race baiters."