White Terror: How the Ku Klux Klan Targeted Black Communities during Reconstruction
Reconstruction and the Birth of Organized White Terror The period of Reconstruction (1865–1877) following the American Civil War marked a transformative yet violently contested era in United States history. Formerly enslaved African Americans gained legal freedom, citizenship rights, and, crucially, political participation through constitutional amendments and federal policies. However, these gains were met with fierce resistance from segments of the white Southern population. At the center of this backlash stood the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), a clandestine organization that became synonymous with racial terror. Historians increasingly reject earlier interpretations that portrayed the Klan as a reactionary social club. Instead, modern scholarship frames it as a coordinated terrorist movement. As one study notes, the Klan was “a terrorist organization used…to restore ‘home rule’ in the South,” relying on violence to suppress Black political participation and Republican influence. This es...