Bartoletti, Susan Campbell. They Called Themselves the KKK: the Birth of an American Terrorist
Group. Houghton Mifflin Books for Children, New York: 2010. 172 pages. Tr.
$19.00 ISBN 9780618440337
Annotation
They
Called Themselves the KKK is a history of the South after the
Civil War. Bartoletti describes the
disparity between the whites and blacks in the South during Reconstruction and
how the Ku Klux Klan was founded as a medium to continue racism and the white
establishment.
Review
In They Called
Themselves the KKK Susan Campbell Bartoletti has written a comprehensive
and unflinching history of one of America’s best known terrorist groups. The Ku Kluxers, as they were referred to, was
started in Tennessee by six former Confederate officers. The men began the club by disguising
themselves and harassing locals at night, but soon the group spread throughout
the South and focused on the intimidation of African Americans who the Ku
Kluxers deemed too successful, who dared to exercise their right to vote, or
who thought themselves equal to whites.
The KKK also targeted whites who aided blacks by helping African
Americans register to vote or educating them. Bartoletti appeals the readers
emotions with the inclusion of firsthand accounts of the atrocities the KKK
committed against freedman in era of Reconstruction. She accurately describes the terror that must
have reigned in the South for blacks who dared exercise their new rights and
demand equal treatment.
Awards/Honors
ALSC Notable Book
Front
and Back Matter
TOC, Note to Reader, Civil Rights Timeline, Quote
Attributions, Bibliography and Source Notes, Index
Author’s
Website
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