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Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

Hugo Black Confesses to Ku Klux Klan Membership, 1937

Posted By on May 9, 2018

The story of the the nomination and confirmation of Sen. Hugo L. Black, Alabama, to the U. S. Supreme Court in 1937, was widely reported in the national and local press.  Black’s association with and membership in the Ku Klux Klan was of great concern to most Americans.

Three interesting articles appeared in the West Schuylkill Herald, Tower City, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania.  Given that the area of Tower City and the Lykens Valley were significant supporters of the Klan, particularly in the mid-1920s, the articles showed a change to a more neutral attitude toward the hate organization – but whether the Herald received any letters supporting or decrying the nomination is not known as no local opinion was presented on the subject.

This post is a continuation of the reporting on hate groups that were active in the Lykens Valley area in the years following the Civil War.  It was a widely known fact that the Ku Klux Klan had a significant presence in the Lykens Valley and adjacent valleys during the early years of the 20th Century.  This iteration of the Klan was strongly white supremacist and was opposed to equal rights for African Americans, Catholics, Jews, and immigrants.

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From the West Schuylkill Herald, 3 September 1937:

Question Black’s Eligibility

The senate confirmed the President’s nomination of Sen. Hugo L. Black of Alabama to the Supreme Court, 63 to 16, but only after a bitter fight, following which the minority protested that the confirmation had been railroaded through.

Six Democrats and ten Republicans voted against Black.  The Democratic insurgents, led by Edward R. Burke (Nebraska) and Royal S. Copeland (New York) based their objections principally upon charges that he was associated with the Ku Klux Klan, and therefore unfitted to sit with the high tribunal for reasons of racial and religious prejudice.  The Republicans, notably William E. Borah (Idaho), argued that he could not legally became a member of the court.

That his eligibility might be tested before the court itself was a possibility when Attorney Albert Levitt, former special assistant to Attorney General Homer S. Cummings, filed a plea for leave to pray an order for Black to show affirmatively why he should be permitted to serve as an associate justice.  He raised the same legal questions as the republican minority had:

1. That Black could not become a justice because during his term as a senator the Sumners Retirement Act was passed, permitting justices to retire at full pay.  The Constitution provided that no member of congress shall be appointed to an office which was created of the emolument of which was increased during his membership in congress.

2. That no vacancy existed on the Supreme court anyway, since Justice Willis VanDevanter had only retired, not resigned, and may still be called for judicial service by the chief justice.

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From the West Schuylkill Herald, 1 October 1937:

What Will Hughes Do?

Objections to the seating of Hugo Black as a justice of the Supreme Court on the Constitutional ground that the emoluments of the office were raised while Black was a senator brought Chief Justice Hughes back to Washington before his vacation was ended.  Associate Justice Brandeis also returned to the capital and he and Hughes were expected to confer on the matter and to examine the objections.  Just what Mr. Hughes or any other member of the court could do was uncertain.  Constitutional lawyers agree that Black could not be denied his seat because he was a member of the Ku Klux Klan, but many of them thought the court, if it decides to take jurisdiction, could bar him on constitutional grounds.  There was a reason to believe this solution of the exceedingly unpleasant matter would suit President Roosevelt.  Should the President ask Black to resign, the latter might refuse, and that would be most embarrassing for Mr. Roosevelt.

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From the West Schuylkill Herald, 15 October 1937:

Black Joined Klan:  Quit

“I did join the Ku Klux Klan.  I later resigned. I never re-joined.

Thus Hugo L. Black, now Associate Justice Black of the Supreme Court, admitted to an immense radio audience that the charges against him were true.

Black asserted that since he quit the Klan he has had nothing whatever to do with it.

He cited his record in the senate and private life to back up his assertion that he was entirely free from religious or race prejudices.  While he apparently repudiated the principles of the Klan, he did not explain why, on receiving a life pass card after his election to the senate, he said to a gathering of Klansmen:

“I realize that I was elected by men who believe in the principles that I have sought to advocate and which are the principles of this organization.”

Black emphatically declared his devotion to the principles of the constitution and the Bill of Rights, and said that he was of “that group of liberal senators who have consistently fought for the civil, economic and religious rights of all Americans, without regard to race or creed.”  Some of his best friends, he added, were Catholics and Jews, and members of the colored race.

At the outset of his address Black undertook to turn the tables on his accusers by asserting that the “campaign” to discredit him “fans the flames of prejudice and is calculated to create racial and religious prejudice.”

“When this statement is ended,” he concluded, “my discussion of the question is closed.”

There was a definite note of defiance in Black’s address, but it is fair to assume that the American public was not satisfied with his explanation.  From all parts of the country came renewed protests against his presence on the Supreme Court bench, and various large associations “resoluted” about it.  Many of the senators who voted to confirm his appointment because they accepted the assertion of his friends that he was not a Kluxer are resentful at the deception practiced on them — but what can they do about it now?

President Roosevelt, up to the time of writing, had maintained silence.  One of his aides explained that the President decided some time ago that there was no course of action open to him in the Black case.

When Justice Black took his seat, the chamber of the Supreme Court was crowded to capacity.  Albert Levitt, an attorney, was on hand to ask permission to file a suit seeking to force Justice Black to show cause why he should not be declared ineligible to sit.  The court deferred action on the request.  Another motion to the same effect was filed by Patrick H. Kelly, a Boston lawyer.

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News article from Newspapers.com.

The Travels of Daniel Paul, 1898

Posted By on May 7, 2018

During the Civil War, Daniel Paul served as a Private in the 130th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company H.  After the Civil War, he moved to Michigan, but kept in touch with his Lykens Valley friends and relatives via correspondence to the editor of the Lykens newspaper.

One result of that correspondence from the year 1898 is reported below:

LETTER FROM MICHIGAN

EDITOR: Enclosed find remittance for renewal of my subscription to the Register, the best newspaper in the upper end of Dauphin County.

The weather is fine here now and our farmers are busy sowing wheat.  Corn is all cut, and the crop was excellent, as was the case with all our cereals.  The peach crop, however, was not good, but apples, grapes, plums and other fruit are very plentiful.  Potatoes are plenty and sell at 30 cents a bushel by the wagon load.  Melons are a drug on the market and wagons of them go to waste, as Mrs. Nelson Enders and her daughter, Miss Della Enders, of Harrisburg, who were spending several weeks with us, can testify to.

We are glad to know that our visitors reached home safely.  Emma was home over Sunday.  Don’t forget, Della, that the National Encampment will take place in Philadelphia next year.

Wonder if your western and southern mossbacks will soon let us hear from them through the columns of the Register. We like to read their letters.

Mr. Rock Creek, Kansas, wake up, sell a few of those fat steers and come up here and pay us a visit.  We will use you well and feed you well.

DANIEL PAUL

Constantine, Michigan, 19 September 1898.

Lykens Register, 22 September 1898.

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News articles from Newspapers.com.  This series will continue up through the death of Daniel Paul, which occurred in Lykens in 1911.

Special thanks to Debby Rabold, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for discovering these articles about her relative.

April 2018 Posts

Posted By on May 4, 2018

A listing of the April 2018 posts on The Civil War Blog with direct links:

Conrad Zimmerman – Last G.A.R. Member of Halifax

Ku Klux Klan Day at Elizabethville Attracts Huge Crowd, 1926

March 2018 Posts

Two Militia Men Named John Wingert or One?

Obituary of George N. Wilver

Civil War Soldiers Buried at Lykens – The Claude Keiser List

The Ku Klux Klan Funeral of Harry Lubold, Tower City, 1925

Obituary of Daniel Paul – 130th Pennsylvania Infantry

The Ku Klux Klan Funeral of Simon Nelson, Orwin, 1925

Hillary Zimmerman Breaks Her Leg at Ku Klux Klan Demontration, 1924

The Ku Klux Klan Funeral of Lenore Schwalm of Hegins, 1925

The Travels of Daniel Paul, 1873-1896

The Disappearance and Return of John Adams Miller of Halifax

 

Tower City Area Schools Close to Allow Student Attendance at Ku Klux Klan Picnic, 1925

Posted By on May 2, 2018

It is not known whether the Ku Klux Klan would have survived in the Lykens Valley area without the support of major institutions, including religion, government and the schools.  This example of a Klan event was reported by a Tower City newspaper, which indicated that the schools of the area were officially closed following the morning roll call so that the students could attend a picnic sponsored by the hate group.  Also noteworthy from the brief article is that the official band of Orwin was a featured attraction at the event.

From the West Schuylkill Herald, 18 September 1925:

Klan Picnic Thursday

The Ku Klux Klan of this valley held a picnic in Thompson’s Grove on Thursday.  The schools of Tower City and Porter Township were closed for the day following the roll call  The Orwin Band led the parade to the picnic grounds, being the first musical organization to parade over the new concrete highway on Grand Avenue.

This post is a continuation of the reporting on hate groups that were active in the Lykens Valley area in the years following the Civil War.  It was a widely known fact that the Ku Klux Klan had a significant presence in the Lykens Valley and adjacent valleys during the early years of the 20th Century.  This iteration of the Klan was strongly white supremacist and was opposed to equal rights for African Americans, Catholics, Jews, and immigrants.

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News clipping from Newspapers.com.

The Disappearance and Return of John Adams Miller of Halifax

Posted By on April 30, 2018

In September 1910, news reports of the discovery of a long-lost Halifax area Civil War veteran began to appear in the local newspapers.  That veteran was John Adams Miller who was born in Jackson Township, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, on 23 May 1834, the son of Joseph H. Miller III (1812-1897) and Elizabeth B. [Bowerman] Miller (1814-1885).

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From the Elizabethville Echo, 29 September 1910:

FORMER HALIFAX RESIDENT RETURNS TO DAUPHIN COUNTY

Absent 49 Years

Until recently the whereabouts of John Adams Miller were unknown, but on Monday morning he arrived at Harrisburg and that evening there was a happy reunion at the home of his daughter, Mrs. W. H. McFadden, at 610 North Third Street.

When the war broke out Miller was a resident of Halifax and he enlisted in the 130th Pennsylvania’s Volunteers [130th Pennsylvania Infantry] at the age of 26.

He served in the Army of the Potomac and later marched with Sherman to the sea.

After the war he enlisted in the regular army and until 1870 served as a government blacksmith, and then settled down as a Texas farmer.  He was married to a Southern lady and four children are living by his second marriage.  His first wife died at Halifax 23 years ago.

Through the efforts of Mrs. McFadden, her father’s whereabouts were discovered.  She applied to Captain Harry C. Hontz, private secretary to Congressman Obmsted.  Mr. Hontz found the name of John Adams Miller on the pension rolls, and by communicating with him at Delhart, Texas, the long looked-for parent was found. 

Although Mr. Miller is now past 75 he at once made preparations to come east, arriving at Harrisburg on Monday morning, where he was met and welcomed by his children.  His brother, James Miller, lives at Loyalton.

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From the Lykens Standard, 7 October 1910:

Returned After Many Years

At the outbreak of the Civil War, John Adams Miller, a person well known in the upper end of the county, enlisted in the Union Army and became a private in the 130th Pennsylvania Volunteers [130th Pennsylvania Infantry].  After the term of enlistment expired he re-enlisted in the regular army and served eight years.  For more than 49 years he had not been heard from, his children had grown to manhood and womanhood and some died, as did his wife whom he left behind.  His daughter, Mrs. McFadden, of Harrisburg, believed her father was still living, and made efforts to ascertain the truth.  The pension records at Washington were examined and he was finally located in Texas.  Monday of last week he came back to Dauphin County, and was welcomed with rejoicing by his children and relatives.  He is a brother of Mrs. John Novinger of Penbrook, James Miller of Loyalton, and Joseph Miller of Wiconisco.

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From the Harrisburg Telegraph, 25 November 1910:

Complimentary Dinner to John A. Miller

John Adams Miller, who recently returned from Texas, after having been mourned as dead for forty-nine years, was a guest of honor at a Thanksgiving celebration, held at the home of his son, John H. Miller, Penbrook.

Among the guests were:  B. P. Clark, of Academia, and Daniel Paul, of Constantine, Michigan, who were Mr. Miller’s comrades in arms during the Civil War.  Both old soldiers made telling addresses and Joseph Miller told of the achievements of this special branch of the Miller family.

In the party were:  William H. McFadden, Mrs. McFadden who discovered her father’s whereabouts through records of the War Department, Mr. and Mrs. James Miller, John A. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. James Novinger, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Knauff, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Machamer and son, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bordner, Mr. and Mrs. Percy Saunders and children, Miss Mary Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller of Fisherville, Mr. and Mrs. John Johns, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Bowerman, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Miller, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Grubb, B. P. Clark, Daniel Paul, Miss Ruth Grimm, Miss Maude Bordner, Ammon Miller, Miss Martha Miller, Mylon Johns, Arthur Miller, R. M. Grimm, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Grimm, Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Weidman, Mrs. E. M. Swartz, Mrs. William Goudy, Miss Nettie Seeger, Miss Sarah Herst, Mrs. J. H. Reese, Mrs. Charles Shadle, Miss Esther Bixler, Miss Edna Novinger, Miles Flory, James Novinger Jr., Joseph Novinger, John Bortner, James Miller Jr., and Edward Knupp.

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From the Harrisburg Daily Independent, 25 November 1910:

BIG RECEPTION FOR JOHN ADAMS MILLER

[includes photo featured at top of this post]

John H. Miller, of Penbrook, gave a dinner yesterday in honor of his father, John Adams Miller, and the occasion was in the shape of an all-day family reunion for one who had been mourned as dead for years.  The man mourned as dead was John Adams Miller, the guest of honor at yesterday’s dinner and who had left the upper end of this county at the breaking out of the Civil War and was not heard of until less than a year ago, when his daughter, Mrs. William McFadden, of 610 North Third Street [Harrisburg], located him in Texas.  Mrs. McFadden, after locating her father, lost no time in getting him to come east.  In September of this year she made a trip to Texas and had her father accompany her hack to the east.

Mr. Miller, since his arrival in this county, has been visiting his sons and daughters and the scenes of his boyhood days in Halifax and Jackson Townships.  His sons and daughters a few weeks ago planned to fix Thanksgiving Day as an appropriate time to fittingly celebrate his return after years spent on ranches and farms in Texas and New Mexico.  Among those present at the big dinner and reunion were B. P. Clark, of Academia, who was a comrade of Mr. Miller in the regular army, and also Daniel Paul, of Constantine, Michigan, who was a comrade at the outbreak of the Civil War, when Mr. Miller served with a volunteer company.  Both old soldiers made fitting addresses yesterday and James Miller in a speech told of the Miller family and trace it back for several generations.

Those present were….  [See list in preceding article from Harrisburg Telegraph, 25 November 1910].

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Additional information is sought about this story, including the reasons for Mr. Miller abandoning his Lykens Valley area family and marrying another woman while his first wife was still alive, having children with her, and not communicating with his children from the first marriage for more than 40 years.

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News articles from Newspapers.com.