Following World War I, parades followed throughout cities. After these festivities, the Ku Klux Klan made their own festive event. “Between 9:30 and 10:30 p.m. that evening, large burning crosses appeared in or near communities throughout the Keystone State, reportedly about two hundred in number.” There was a sixteen foot high cross illuminating on the hill of a Catholic cemetery. At around the exact same time, there were “long-tailed sky rockets’ in the air about Indiana, Pennsylvania. The community realized this was an of the Ku Klux Klan by blazing a cross across the clear sky. A blazing cross also appeared in Oil City, Venango County the same time. In Pittsburgh’s North Side, members of the Ku Klux Klan assembled a burning cross and members …show more content…
A pamphlet called “The Ideals of the Ku Klux Klan” identifies the ideals as follow: “Every effort to wrest from White Men the management affairs in order to transfer it to the control of black or any other color, or permit them to share in its control is an invasion of our sacred constitutional prerogatives and violation of divinely established laws. Every effort to wrest from the White man control of this country must be resisted. . . We would not rob the colored population of their tights, but we demand that they respect the rights of the White Race in whose country they are permitted to reside. When it comes to the point that they cannot and will not respect those rights, they must be reminded that this is a White Man’s country, so they will seek for themselves a country more agreeable to their tastes and aspirations” (Ideals of the Ku Klux …show more content…
Two thousand people attended this meeting in Wilkinsburg. A member of the KKK, Rev. Dempster insisted, “God intended his country of ours for Protestants only.” He also said, “I believe in the Ku Klux Klan and I believe it to be the clanniest clan I have ever clanned with. If a Knight of the Ku Klux Klan gets into trouble of any sort every last member of the clan will go to his assistance. A clansman can do no wrong; but if he does his fellow clansmen will either rescue him from the results of the temptation to which he has succumbed or sink with him” (The Jewish