[1965] Ala. Test., p. 723.
[1966] “The company of K. K. K.’s which was organized in Tuscaloosa, was an independent organization, i.e. it was altogether a local affair, having no connection with any general Klan.”—Randolph.
[1967] Miss. Test., pp. 60, 223, 249; Ala. Test., pp. 213, 1822-1824; Garner, “Reconstruction in Mississippi,” pp. 345, 346.
[1968] Ala. Test., p. 942; Lester and Wilson, p. 78.
[1969] The anti-negro bands of the hills and mountains were rather of the spurious Ku Klux and were largely composed of tories and Radicals.
[1970] Ala. Test., p. 1763.
[1971] Constitution, Article 76; Brown, “Ku Klux Movement,” Atlantic Monthly, May, 1901.
[1972] Ala. Test., pp. 226-257.
[1973] Ala. Test., pp. 159-225.
[1974] With the White Camelia in south Alabama the case was somewhat different.