Tuesday, August 23, 2011

KNIGHTS OF THE GOLDEN CIRCLE By Bret Burquest


KNIGHTS OF THE GOLDEN CIRCLE
By Bret Burquest

 Bob Brewer was born and raised in western Arkansas. As a youngster, his great-uncle introduced him to a mystery that included wilderness paths, hidden symbols, carvings on trees and rocks, and the topography of certain areas. The old man was the keeper of some sort of secret knowledge that he kept to himself.

Brewer went off to a career in the Navy and retired in 1977. He returned to Arkansas and began to explore the mystery of his childhood. Over the next 25 years, he interviewed old-timers, researched documents, studied old maps, made alliances and went on expeditions. He became convinced he was on the trail of lost treasure.

Warren Getler, a former Wall Street Journal investigative reporter, has teamed with Brewer to create the book titled SHADOW OF THE SENTINEL which reveals the mystery of the Knights of the Golden Circle and their involvement in a vast Civil War era conspiracy.

The Knights of the Golden Circle (KGC) was a secret society formed in 1854 by sympathizers of Southern causes, dedicated to supporting pro-slavery policies and promoting the conquest of Mexico. It was created directly out of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry and linked to the highest circles of American Freemasons.

During the Civil War, KGC operatives amassed huge quantities of gold and silver through clandestine raids. The caches were hidden in various secret locations, particularly in Arkansas, Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas, marked by a trail of complicated KGC ciphers. The accumulation of riches continued after the end of the Civil War in anticipation of a second war. Operations ceased in 1922 and the caches were sealed for good.

Getler and Brewer claim that the infamous outlaw Jesse James, a member of the KGC who turned over much of his ill-gotten gain to the cause, wasn’t actually killed in 1882 by Bob Ford as reported. A fellow named Charlie Bigelow who resembled Jesse James had been robbing banks using Jesse’s name. Supposedly, Jesse killed him and hired a prostitute to pose as Mrs. Jesse James to officially identify the body. Others who identified the body were all relatives or members of Quantrill’s Raiders, Jesse’s former comrades.

The real Jesse James then changed his name to J. Frank Dalton (his mother’s maiden name was Dalton) and continued his nefarious life as Chief of the Inner Sanctum of the Knights of the Golden Circle.

According to the book titled JESSE JAMES WAS ONE OF HIS NAMES by Jesse James III (the grandson) and Del Schroeder, Jesse James was indeed a prominent member of the KGC and hid large quantities of stolen riches in various locations on behalf of the secret society. In addition, John Wilkes Booth, the man who assassinated President Lincoln, was also a member of the Knights of the Golden Circle and didn’t die as history tells us either.

Booth was smuggled by the Confederate underground to Texas where he became a bartender by the name of John St. Helen. In the 1870s, he began telling folks about his past. When members of the KGC found out, they decided to silence him. Booth fled to Enid, Oklahoma, under the name of David George but was eventually tracked down by Jesse James and William Lincoln (a distant cousin of Abraham Lincoln who had spent 14 years searching for the real Booth). James and Lincoln then tricked Booth to drink a glass of arsenic-laced lemonade. James subsequently arranged to have Booth’s mummified body exhibited on a national carnival tour.

In her book titled THIS ONE MAD ACT, John Wilkes Booth’s granddaughter, Iola Forrester Booth, reveals that her grandfather had belonged to the Knights of the Golden Circle and had not been killed in Baltimore as reported in history, but rather had escaped capture through the aid of fraternal brothers.

The Supreme Headquarters for the Knights of the Golden Circle was 814 Fatherland Drive in Nashville, Tennessee. This was the home of Dr. Sylvester Frank James, older brother of Jesse James and high-ranking member of the KGC. Years later it became the Dixie Tabernacle, the original home of the Grand Olde Opry.

As conspiracies go, it’s a whopper. But then again, it’s so bizarre it’s probably true.

I originally wrote this piece as a newspaper column in February of 2004. Not long after publication, a man from Tennessee and a woman from Mississippi, neither of whom knew each other, each sent me detailed messages confirming the authenticity of this story, claiming it had been passed down within their respective families.
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Quote for the Day – "A warrior lives by acting, not by thinking about acting, nor by thinking about what he will think when he has finished acting." Carlos Castaneda (shaman)
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Bret Burquest is a former award-winning columnist and author of four novels. He lives in the Ozark Mountains with a dog named Buddy Lee and a multitude of wilderness paths. His blogs appear on several websites, including www.myspace.com/bret1111

The Knights of the Golden Circle Research and Historical Archives
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Knights_of_the_Golden_Circle
http://knights-of-the-golden-circle.blogspot.com
http://knightofthegoldencircle.wordpress.com
http://knightsofthegoldencircle.webs.com

Monday, August 22, 2011

Secret society became model for KKK


By Steve Kemme
Aug 22, 2011
 
Only a few years after writing an anti-slavery novel in 1853, Cincinnatian George W. L. Bickley created a pro-slavery secret society that later became a model for the Ku Klux Klan.
 
The goal of the Knights of the Golden Circle was to use paramilitary force to create a slave-holding empire, including the southern United States, Mexico, the Caribbean and parts of Central America. Havana, Cuba, the geographical center of this vast “golden circle,” would become its capital.
 
Bickley, a native Virginian who moved to Cincinnati in 1851, created this extraordinary scheme at a time when the city, bordering a slave state, contained strong anti-slavery and pro-slavery forces.
 
But Bickley’s motive for founding the pro-slavery Knights of the Golden Circle in the late 1850s wasn’t rooted in racism or anti-Union convictions. He simply viewed it as a way to make a lot of money. The same was true for his anti-slavery novel, which he wrote hoping to capitalize on the commercial success of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” published two years before his.
 
An itinerant printer by trade who secured a position as a lecturer at the non-traditional Eclectic Medical Institute in Cincinnati by falsely claiming to be a physician, Bickley believed Southern slave owners would pay huge sums to finance his Golden Circle plan.
 
Although Bickley’s group received a lot of publicity and attracted many followers in Texas, the Knights of the Golden Circle fizzled out shortly after two failed attempts to organize an invasion of Mexico in 1860. In fact, the New Orleans faction expelled Bickley when he and the thousands of other Knights he said he would bring for the first invasion failed to show up.
 
“He was essentially a great con man,” said Mark Lause, a University of Cincinnati assistant professor of history who has written a book called “A Secret Society History of the Civil War” that will be published this fall by the University of Illinois Press.
 
“I don’t think he believed in anything. He was entirely market-driven.”
 
Bickley’s obsession with money-making ventures may have grown from his difficult early years in Virginia.
 
Bickley’s father died in 1830 of cholera, when the younger Bickley was only 7 years old. At the time of his death, his father had either recently completed or was close to completing his medical training under a physician in Petersburg, Va.
 
With his mother struggling financially, George left home at age 12 and traveled south. In a letter he wrote in 1863, Bickley said that “at an early age, I was thrown on the world penniless and friendless,” according to a 1972 article by James Hagy in a periodical, “Historical Sketches of Southwest Virginia.”
 
Bickley claimed to have had medical training and to have studied in England, Scotland and France. But historians say there’s no evidence that he ever studied medicine or went to Europe.
 
In 1850, Bickley’s wife of two years died, and he placed their son with another family. Seeking a new life, he moved from Virginia to Cincinnati in 1851. He found a publisher for his book, “History of Settlement and Indian Wars of Tazewell County, Virginia,” and hoodwinked the Eclectic Medical Institute into hiring him to teach physiology.
 
During his years at the institute, the irrepressible Bickley continued his literary efforts.
 
In 1853, he wrote an anti-slavery novel, “Adalaska; or The Strange and Mysterious Family of the Cave of Genreva.” The plot was designed to imitate “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” which Stowe based largely upon what she learned about slavery during her 18 years in Cincinnati.
 
Her book was published in 1852 and enjoyed spectacular commercial success. But the similarities between her novel and Bickley’s ended with the plot outlines. Bickley’s book was a literary and commercial failure.
 
Bickley married a widow in Cincinnati and used her money to help finance his various schemes, according to Frank L. Klement’s “Ohio and the Knights of the Golden Circle: The Evolution of a Civil War Myth,” in the Cincinnati Historical Society Bulletin’s Spring-Summer 1974 issue.
 
Some of his unsuccessful ventures included a literary magazine called “Western American Review,” a conservative newspaper in New York City and land speculation. Bickley’s wife booted him off her farm in Scioto County after he tried to transfer her property to his name.
 
Another Bickley project was the creation of a military drill team that would perform exhibitions all over the world. He bought military uniforms from various nations for his team. But, like his many other ideas, this enterprise quickly died.
 
That led to the hatching of his most audacious scheme of all: the Knights of the Golden Circle. This gave Bickley a way to use the military uniforms he had collected for the drill team.
 
He envisioned establishing Knights of the Golden Circle chapters, or “castles,” as he called them, in cities all over the United States. He appointed himself “president” and “general” of this organization and wrote a 63-page manual detailing the organization’s mission, structure, secret rituals and an oath of secrecy.
 
“His target market was the Southern slave-holders,” Lause said. “He would offer to put his group at their disposal for a price.”
 
Money problems plagued Bickley. He tried to escape his many creditors in Cincinnati by wearing false whiskers and registering in a downtown hotel under the name “General Baez.” But several angry creditors recognized him in the disguise and demanded repayment of their loans.
 
Bickley promised them he would give them the money the next morning. But around midnight, he fled the city.
 
He traveled mostly to Southern cities in an effort to recruit supporters for his Golden Circle. But the two later failed attempts at invading Mexico as well as the onset of the Civil War destroyed what little existed of this secret society.
 
Yet the Knights of the Golden Circle continued to live on in Confederate conspiracy rumors in the North. Some Northern Republicans tried to smear their Democratic opponents by accusing them of being members of the Knights of the Golden Circle, much like McCarthyites of the 1950s used the Communism scare for political purposes.
 
In early 1863, the Confederacy ordered Bickley to report to Gen. Braxton Bragg’s regiment as a surgeon. Bickley deserted in June to live in the backwoods of Tennessee with a woman who had born his child. On July 18, he was arrested in Indiana as a Confederate spy and spent the rest of the war in prison without a trial.
 
Bickley’s health broke down while he was in prison. He died on Aug. 10, 1867, in Virginia at the age of 44.
 
Part of Bickley’s dubious legacy is the Ku Klux Klan. His Knights of the Golden Circle served as a forerunner of the far more dangerous and deadly Klan, Lause said.

http://cincinnati.com/blogs/ourhistory/2011/08/22/secret-society-became-model-for-kkk/

Have an idea for Our History? E-mail skemme@enquirer.comor call 513-768-6040.
 

There is another new blog site for the KGC


There is a new Knights of the Golden Circle Blog located at:
http://knightofthegoldencircle.wordpress.com

You can help by going there and "follow"ing this blog.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Civil War Dispatch July 29 - Secessionist Terrorism

Civil War Dispatch July 29 - Secessionist Terrorism
by Todd Hatton
08-03-2011

 Excerpt: ""the Union men here are now completely overpowered: they are watched with the eyes of hawks and when the seceshers' hear anything they think they will do to tell, they inform the Committee of Thirteen of the K.G.C." The K.G.C. was the Knights of the Golden Circle, a secret pro-Confederate organization."

http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/wkms/news.newsmain/article/1/0/1835934/Local.Features/Civil.War.Dispatch.July.29.-.Secessionist.Terrorism

The Knights of the Golden Circle Research and Historical Archives
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Knights_of_the_Golden_Circle
http://knights-of-the-golden-circle.blogspot.com
http://knightsofthegoldencircle.webs.com