Where Knowledge Junkies Get Their Fix
Jason English
Klan Economics in Black and White (But Mostly White)
by Jason English - September 15, 2007 - 4:06 AM

The Ku Klux Klan is in the news in Virginia, raising tensions and lowering property values through an anti-Mexican campaign. The KKK passed out flyers door-to-door, a distribution strategy that included many African-Americans. Oops.

“Mexico is invading the United States and soon will demand we cede the southwestern states to their control,” the flier warned. It went on to ask Virginia residents to send $10 for more information.

Way back in our second issue, Richard Zacks skillfully tackled the subject of Klan finances. “Kind of like Amway for bigots,” he said of the KKK. Here, I’ll let him tell you:

Klan Economics in Black and White (But Mostly White)

by Richard Zacks

KKK.jpgIt sounds like a cruel joke, but it isn’t—The Ku Klux Klan made huge profits selling white sheets. The Klan had its own sheet factory in Atlanta called Gates City Factory, which produced hooded white robes at two dollars apiece in 1923, and these were in turn sold to the racist faithful for $6.50. Considering that the Klan peaked at three million members in 1925, there was a lot of money to be made in the worsted white cotton. Many of those millions of dollars were pocketed by the Imperial Wizard and his corrupt cohorts.

In many ways, the KKK was a vast, grotesque pyramid scheme to enrich its top members. Kind of like Amway for bigots.

birthofanation.jpgRed-haired former minister William J. Simmons of Atlanta (below, at right) revived the Klan in 1915—piggybacking on the publicity for D.W. Griffith’s film “Birth of a Nation,” based on the novel The Clansman—and Simmons charged new members an initiation fee of $10 each, called a klectoken. He also sold Klan life insurance to almost half his first batch of recruits.

But it wasn’t until 1920 that a couple of high-powered commission salesmen created the actual pyramid that relaunched the Klan across the nation.

In 1920, a small Atlanta public relations firm, Southern Publicity Association, which had repped clients such as the Salvation Army and Anti-Saloon League, was close to bankruptcy when it signed a deal with the KKK. The arrangement entitled the publicity firm to keep $8 of the $10 initiation fee paid by each new Klan member it signed up.

williamsimmons.jpgThe firm’s owners—Edward Clarke and Mrs. Elizabeth Tyler—divvied up the county into “Provinces” and sent out a sales force of 1,100 “Kleagles” (also on commission) to drum up new racist members. The duo handed over a $4 commission per KKK member to each Kleagle and gave $1.50 to a regional supervisor called a Grand Goblin. They kept $2.50 for themselves. The remaining two dollars went straight to the Klan’s florid founder, William J. Simmons.

In the first 16 months, Clarke and Tyler had cleared a then hefty $212,000 in net profit, while Simmons received $170,000, according to business historian Charles Alexander. A muckraking campaign by the “New York World” wound up backfiring when the congressional committee investigating the Klan in 1921 brought no charges against them. With this de facto government stamp of approval, membership soared higher than the flames of a burning cross, as did sales of hooded sheets, the Klan newspaper and even the sale of obscure titles, like Imperial Kligrapp and Klexter, Klageroo and Kladd.

By 1922, with business booming, the Klan found itself almost bankrupt. Although it had grossed about $10.5 million in the previous two years, the looting was so excessive there was almost no money left.

A new clique—led by the chubby dentist from Texas, Hiram Walker—bullied their way to top leadership, finally buying out Simmons for $146,500 in February 1924.

Although the Klan under Imperial Wizard Evans dropped the price of custom hooded sheets to five dollars, it wasn’t enough to save the Klan. And, appropriately enough for a business scam, back taxes finally put the KKK out of business. In 1944 the Feds sued the KKK for $685,000 in unpaid back taxes. That year the Klan officially disbanded. Splinter groups using the name would sporadically resurface, but never with the same national power or profitable pyramid scheme.

Previously on mental_floss:
• When Typos Get in the Way
• A Looong List of People Who’ve Attempted Suicide
Strange Gravestones
• Lifestyles of the Rich, Famous and Surprisingly Smart
• Gotta Read ‘Em All: Authors You’ve “Finished”
• The First Time News was Fit to Print, VII
• Quiz: Match the Drug to its Side Effect

Comments (6)
  1. Growing up the south (north Georgia), I had a couple of interesting encounters with the Klan. My across the street neighbor and friend’s father was a surveyor for the DOT. He working in conjunction with the completion of I-75 through north Georgia — which was being built in areas where Civil War battles had taken place. Almost every day during this period he brought home small relics of those battles: minnie balls, cannonball shards and brass Confederate buttons. It was a pretty interesting house to go to. Anyway, one day I went over there was a luxurious garment box open on the bed and inside was a vibrant satiny scarlet hooded robe with a black and white circular cross emblem sewn over the heart. According to my friend’s father, his father was some sort of Imperial Wizard or something in the Klan. Pretty amazing.
    In the mid 70s, while in college at the University of Georgia, I was out for a night of heavy duty drinking with some other art students and we ended up at a print shop in downtown Athens. The shelves in the shop were loaded with KKK materials — membership cards, manuals, fliers — one stop bigotry shopping. All that seems so long ago.

  2. oh. my. god. someone other than me who has read from the richard zachs book.
    that is my favorite book. i wore it out reading it over and over. it was your one stop shop for strange things you didn’t know you wanted to know.
    number 1 great excuse for buying it, there is a picture of a real guy with two dicks. lol!
    i believe it’s the underground education, but i’m spacing at the moment. lol
    my friend stole it from me so i can’t look.

  3. Back in the ’90s, the KKK wanted to participate in the ‘Adopt a Highway’ Program in Missouri. The officials in charge tried to veto it, but it was deemed unconstitutional to discriminate against the Klan. The highway department responded by assigning the Klan a stretch of road, which was named ‘The Rosa Parks Highway.’ When no one showed up to clean it, they were eventually dropped from the program.
    I’d have liked to see the sign, because they always put the name of both the highway and the adopting organization on it together…

  4. Interesting story, gibson8tor.

  5. I teach special ed in a large, urban district in Michigan (guess which one? :)). We took some kids on a field trip to the Henry Ford museum. On display were numerous Klan robes and other paraphernalia. I actually shivered when I saw it, and one of the girls asked what the robe was. To my utter amazement, most of the kids had never heard of the Klan and had no idea about their vile history. We had an impromptu lesson, right then and there. As they say, you need to know the past, in order to avoid repeating it….

  6. One wonders how the clan survived when its leaders had such ridiculous names.

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