Kirk-Holden war

Kirk-Holden war
Part of the Reconstruction Era
Date1870
LocationNorth Carolina
Result Kickback against government leaders.
Belligerents
Ku Klux Klan United States
Commanders and leaders
Unknown

Governor Holden

George Kirk
Strength
Unknown 300 volunteers
Casualties and losses
16 12

The Kirk-Holden War was a struggle against the Ku Klux Klan in the state of North Carolina in 1870. The Klan was preventing recently freed slaves from exercising their right to vote through intimidation. Governor William W. Holden hired Colonel George Washington Kirk, a former Union guerrilla leader, suspended the writ of habeas corpus, and imposed martial law in Caswell and Alamance counties in response.

Background

On February 26, 1870, Wyatt Outlaw, the African American town commissioner of Graham, was lynched in Alamance County by the Klan.[1] On May 21, 1870 John W. Stephens, a white, Confederate, Republican State Senator popular with blacks, was murdered by the Ku Klux Klan in the Caswell County Courthouse.[2][3]

On July 8, 1870, Governor Holden declared the two counties to be in a state of insurrection. Colonel George Kirk was brought in to restore order. Holden suspended the writ of habeas corpus and imposed martial law in Caswell and Alamance counties to help Kirk in his efforts.[3]

The war

Governor Holden ordered Kirk to assemble a force and march on the city of Yanceyville. Kirk gathered some 300 volunteers and marched on the city in early July. Soon thereafter, he began arresting men, including some of the most respected citizens of the county including: ex-Congressman John Kerr, lawyers Jacob Alson Long and James E. Boyd, Captain Joseph F. Mitchell, Sheriff Jesse C. Griffith, Barzillai Graves, Thomas J. Womack, and Yancey Jones.[3] Kirk made about 100 arrests in a matter of weeks.[1]

The Klan retaliated and thirty of its members members marched on the small town of Pittsboro intent on taking it over. Kirk's forces gathered and the Klan pulled back, with Kirk in pursuit. In the forest of Chatham county a bloody battle ensued, though little is known about the events. After several similar skirmishes the war was over.

Aftermath

Governor Holden disbanded Colonel Kirk's militia in September 1870, and in November ended the state of insurrection in both counties. The men Kirk had arrested demanded his own arrest, and wanted him tried on charges of false imprisonment. The United States Marshal for Tennessee arrested Colonel Kirk and took him to Raleigh. However, he was secretly released and returned home to Tennessee.[3]

Governor Holden was impeached, tried, and removed from office in a party-line vote not long after the Democrats took control of the North Carolina Legislature in the August 1870 election. Two additional charges beyond the six that received the 2/3 supermajority required for impeachment, only achieved a majority, but Holden nevertheless became the first governor in the US removed from office.[3]

On April 12, 2011, the North Carolina state Senate voted unanimously to pardon Governor Holden. [4]

See also

References

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