Welcome to the CivilWarTalk, a forum for questions
and discussions about the American Civil War!
Discussion in 'Civil War History
KNIGHTS OF THE
GOLDEN CIRCLE.
The Knights of the Golden Circle or K.G.C.
had its beginnings in the formation of Southern Rights Clubs in various southern
cities in the mid-1830s. These clubs were inspired by the philosophies of John
C. Calhoun (1782–1850). Calhoun had an illustrious political career serving as a
congressman from his home state of South Carolina, a state legislator, vice
president under the administrations of both John Quincy Adams and Andrew
Jackson, and a U. S. senator. In addition to the Southern Rights Clubs, which
advocated the re-establishment of the African slave-trade, some of the
inspiration for the Knights may have come from a little-known secret
organization called the Order of the Lone Star, founded in 1834, which helped
orchestrate the successful Texas Revolution resulting in Texas independence from
Mexico in 1836. Even before that, the K.G.C.'s roots went back to the Sons of
Liberty of the American Revolutionary period.
The Knights of the Golden Circle was reorganized in
Lexington, Kentucky, on July 4, 1854, by five men, whose names have been lost to
history, when Virginia-born Gen. George W. L. Bickley (1819–1867) requested they
come together. Strong evidence suggests that Albert Pike (1809–1891) was the
genius behind the influence and power of the Masonic-influenced K.G.C., while
Bickley was the organization's leading promoter and chief organizer for the
K.G.C. lodges, what they called “Castles,” in several states. During his
lifetime, Boston-born Pike was an author, educator, lawyer, Confederate
brigadier general, newspaper editor, poet, and a Thirty-third Degree Mason. From
its earliest roots in the Southern Rights Clubs in 1835, the Knights of the
Golden Circle was to become the most powerful secret and subversive organization
in the history of the United States with members in every state and territory
before the end of the Civil War. The primary economic and political goal of this
organization was to create a prosperous, slave-holding Southern Empire extending
in the shape of a circle from their proposed capital at Havana, Cuba, through
the southern states of the United States, Mexico, the Gulf of Mexico, the
Caribbean, and Central America. The plan also called for the acquisition of
Mexico which was then to be divided into fifteen new slave-holding states which
would shift the balance of power in Congress in favor of slavery. Facing the
Gulf of Mexico, these new states would form a large crescent. The robust economy
the KGC hoped to create would be fueled by cotton, sugar, tobacco, rice, coffee,
indigo, and mining. These seven industries would employ slave
labor.
In early 1860 newspapers across the country
reported that the Knights of the Golden Circle were recruiting troops in
numerous cities to send to Brownsville, Texas, for the planned invasion of
Mexico. History is unclear about what went wrong with this invasion, but most
historians agree that the well-laid plans never materialized and the invasion
never happened. Some say that it failed because George Bickley was unable to
provide adequate troops and supplies, but with a civil war looming on the
horizon, the invasion’s failure may have been caused by the K.G.C. leaders
believing they could not go to war on two fronts simultaneously. They called off
their plans for Mexico and started preparing for war with the
North.
When tensions between the North and South were at a
breaking point and the Civil War had not yet begun, the Knights of the Golden
Circle held their convention in Raleigh, North Carolina, from May 7–11, 1860.
George W. L. Bickley, as president of the K.G.C., presided at this historic
event. The records of this convention have survived until the present day and
provide an excellent view of this order's divisions or degrees, goals,
accomplishments, and size.
The K.G.C.'s first division was described as being
"absolutely a Military Degree." The first division is further divided into two
classes: the Foreign and Home Guards. The Foreign Guards class was the K.G.C.'s
army and was composed of those who wanted "to participate in the wild, glorious
and thrilling adventures of a campaign in Mexico." Those of the second class or
Home Guards had two functions: to provide for the army's needs and "to defend us
from misrepresentation during our absence."
The second division or class was also divided into
two classes which were the Foreign and Home Corps. The Foreign Corps was to
become the order's commercial agents, postmasters, physicians, ministers, and
teachers and to perform the other occupations that were vital to the achievement
of K.G.C. goals. The second class of this degree was the Home Corps. Their job
was to advise and to forward money, arms, ammunition, and other necessary
provisions needed by the organization and its army and to send recruits as
rapidly as possible.
The two classes of the third division or degree
were the Foreign and Home Councils. The third division is described in the
convention's records as being "the political or governing division." The
responsibilities of the Foreign Council were governmental, and it was divided
into ten departments similar to those of the United States federal
government.
One little-known historical fact that is presented
in the records from the 1860 K.G.C. convention is that the Knights had their own
well-organized army in 1860, before the Civil War had even begun, so they were
prepared in the event of war with the North. In May of 1860 the Knights of the
Golden Circle reported a total membership of 48,000 men from the North, who
supported "the constitutional rights of the South," as well as men from the
South, with an army of "less than 14,000 men" and new recruits joining at a
rapid rate.
Shortly before the Civil War began, the state of
Texas was the greatest source of this organization's strength. Texas was home
for at least thirty-two K.G.C. castles in twenty-seven counties, including the
towns of San Antonio, Marshall, Canton, and Castroville. Evidence suggests that
San Antonio may have served as the organization’s national headquarters for a
time.
The South began to secede from the Union in January
1861, and in February of that year, seven seceding states ratified the
Confederate Constitution and named Jefferson Davis as provisional president. The
Knights of the Golden Circle became the first and most powerful ally of the
newly-created Confederate States of America.
Before the Civil War officially started on April
12, 1861, when shots were fired on Fort Sumter, South Carolina, and before Texas
had held its election on the secession referendum on February 23, 1861, Texas
volunteer forces, which included 150 K.G.C. soldiers under the command of Col.
Ben McCulloch, forced the surrender of the federal arsenal at San Antonio that
was under the command of Bvt. Maj. Gen. David E. Twiggs on February 15, 1861.
Knights of the Golden Circle who were involved in this mission included Capt.
Trevanion Teel, Sgt. R. H. Williams, John Robert Baylor, and Sgt. Morgan Wolfe
Merrick. Following this quick victory, volunteers who were mostly from K.G.C.
companies, forced the surrender of all federal posts between San Antonio and El
Paso.
Perhaps the best documentation as to the power and
influence of the Knights of the Golden Circle during the Civil War is The
Private Journal and Diary of John H. Surratt, The Conspirator which was written
by John Harrison Surratt and later edited by Dion Haco and published by Frederic
A. Brady of New York in 1866. In this journal, Surratt goes into great detail
when describing how he was introduced to the K.G.C. in the summer of 1860 by
another Knight, John Wilkes Booth, and inducted into this mysterious
organization on July 2, 1860, at a castle in Baltimore, Maryland. Surratt
describes the elaborate and secret induction ceremony and its rituals and tells
that cabinet members, congressmen, judges, actors, and other politicians were in
attendance. Maybe the most significant revelation of Surratt's diary is that the
Knights of the Golden Circle began plotting to kidnap Abraham Lincoln in 1860,
before Lincoln was even inaugurated in 1861, and continued throughout the Civil
War, resulting in President Lincoln's assassination by fellow Knight Booth on
April 14, 1865.
After trying unsuccessfully to peacefully resolve
the conflicts between North and South, the Knights of the Golden Circle threw
its full support behind the newly-created Confederate States of America and
added its trained military men to the Confederate States Army. Several
Confederate military groups during the Civil War were composed either totally or
in large part of members of the Knights of the Golden Circle. One notable
example of K.G.C. military participation in the Civil War included the
Confederate's Western Expansion Movement of 1861 and 1862 led by Lt. Col. John
Robert Baylor and Gen. Henry Hopkins Sibley.
In 1861 Albert Pike travelled to Indian Territory
and negotiated an alliance with Cherokee Chief Stand Watie. Prior to the
beginning of hostilities, Pike helped Watie to become a Thirty-second Degree
Scottish Rite Mason. Watie was also in the K.G.C., and he was later commissioned
a colonel in command of the First Regiment of Cherokee Mounted Rifles. In May
1864 Chief Watie was promoted to the rank of brigadier general in the
Confederate States Army making him the only Native American of this rank in the
Confederate Army. Watie's command was to serve under CSA officers Albert Pike,
Benjamin McCulloch, Thomas Hindman, and Sterling Price. They fought in
engagements in Indian Territory, Kansas, Arkansas, Texas, and
Missouri.
One of the most feared organizations of all
Confederates, whose members were in large part Knights of the Golden Circle, was
what was called Quantrill's Guerrillas or Quantrill's Raiders. The
Missouri-based band was formed in December 1861 by William Clark Quantrill and
originally consisted of only ten men who were determined to right the wrongs
done to Missourians by Union occupational soldiers. Their mortal enemies were
the Kansas Jayhawkers and the Red Legs who were the plague of Missouri. As the
war raged on in Missouri and neighboring states, Quantrill's band attracted
hundreds more men into its ranks. Quantrill's Guerrillas became an official arm
of the Confederate Army after May 1862, when the Confederate Congress approved
the Partisan Ranger Act. Other leaders of Quantrill's Guerrillas included
William C. “Bloody Bill” Anderson, David Pool, William Gregg, and George Todd.
Some of the major engagements this deadly guerrilla force participated in
included the Lawrence, Kansas, raid on August 21, 1863, the battle near Baxter
Springs, Kansas, in October 1863, and two battles at and near Centralia in
Missouri in September of 1864. The bulk of Quantrill's band wintered in Grayson
County, Texas, from 1861 through 1864.
The K.G.C. played the major role in what is
referred to as the Northwest Conspiracy. The Confederate plan was to use the
great numbers of Knights in the Northern states to foster a revolution that
would spread across Indiana, Illinois, New York, Ohio, and any other state in
the North where it was feasible. The Baker-Turner Papers, part of the U.S. War
Department’s conspiracy files, revealed much of the history of this widespread
movement but were kept sealed for ninety years. James D. Horan, the first person
ever allowed access to the U.S. War Department's Civil War conspiracy files and
the Baker-Turner Papers in the early 1950s, published Confederate Agent: A
Discovery in History in 1954, which details the Northwest Conspiracy. His work
used these previously-sealed documents and information gathered by numerous
investigators, including the private papers of Capt. Thomas H. Hines, C.S.A., of
Kentucky, who was the mastermind behind the huge conspiracy.
Throughout the Civil War, one of the Knights of the
Golden Circle's most important roles came in its infiltration of Union forces.
Nowhere in the country was this influence more apparent than in the state of
Missouri where K.G.C. members filled the ranks of the Enrolled Missouri Militia
which was commonly known as the Paw Paw Militia. A newspaper article from the
Daily Times of Leavenworth, Kansas, July 29, 1864, serves as a good example in
their interview with a member of the Paw Paw named Andrew E. Smith. Smith
said:
I am 22 years old and live in Platte county, about
two miles west of Platte City I was a member of Captain Johnston's company of
Pawpaw militia, under Major Clark, and served about six months.... I am a member
of the Knights of the Golden Circle. I joined them at Platte City, and was sworn
in by David Jenkins of that place. All of the Pawpaw militia, so far as I know,
belong to them....
Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered his Army
of Northern Virginia at Appomattox on April 9, 1865. Most historians accept this
date of surrender as the official end of the Civil War. The Knights of the
Golden Circle as an organization, however, continued to work to achieve their
goals, which included a prosperous South, for many decades after the Civil War.
What had been a secret society adapted to changing conditions and, after the
war, became even more secretive than ever before.
In October 1864 U. S. Judge Advocate Joseph Holt
submitted a detailed warning to Secretary of War Edwin Stanton about the dangers
posed by the Knights of the Golden Circle that was, by that time, operating
under various aliases. This document is commonly called the Holt Report, but its
real title is A Western Conspiracy in aid of the Southern
Rebellion.
After the war's end, the K.G.C. went underground
and used many aliases to hide their activities which included making
preparations for a second civil war should that option be necessary. Some K.G.C.
members accompanied Confederate Gen. Joseph O. Shelby to Mexico. Some soldiers
returned to their homes, while others relocated to more remote frontier areas
like West Texas where they could help build towns and cities that conformed to
their ideals. Some Knights like Jesse Woodson James, older brother Frank James,
and Cole Younger turned to robbing Northern-owned railroads, businesses, and
banks after the Civil War.
The Knights of the Golden Circle, according to most
authorities, ceased its operations in 1916 for two primary reasons. The United
States had entered World War I, and by that time most of the old Knights of the
Golden Circle had died.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: An Authentic Exposition of the
“K.G.C.” “Knights of the Golden Circle,” or, A History of Secession from 1834 to
1861, by A Member of the Order (Indianapolis, Indiana: C. O. Perrine, Publisher,
1861). Donald S. Frazier, Blood & Treasure: Confederate Empire in the
Southwest (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1996). Warren Getler
and Bob Brewer, Rebel Gold: One Man’s Quest to Crack the Code Behind the Secret
Treasure of the Confederacy (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2004). Dion Haco,
ed., The Private Journal and Diary of John H. Surratt, The Conspirator (New
York: Frederic A. Brady, Publisher, 1866). Joseph Holt, Report of the Judge
Advocate General on “The Order of American Knights,” alias “The Sons of
Liberty.” A Western Conspiracy in aid of the Southern Rebellion (Washington,
D.C.: Union Congressional Committee, 1864). James D. Horan, Confederate Agent: A
Discovery in History (New York: Crown Publishers, Inc., 1954). Jesse Lee James,
Jesse James and the Lost Cause (New York: Pageant Press, 1961). K.G.C., Records
of the KGC Convention, 1860, Raleigh, N.C. (http://gunshowonthenet/AfterTheFact/KGC/KGC0571860.html),
accessed May 5, 2010. Dr. Roy William Roush, The Mysterious and Secret Order of
the Knights of the Golden Circle (Front Line Press, 2005).
Jay Longley and Colin Eby