LSU Press to Release Knights of the Golden Circle: Secret Empire, Southern Secession, Civil War (Conflicting Worlds: New Dimensions of the American Civil War)
Book Traces Expansion of Nineteenth-Century Secret
Southern Society
Baton Rouge-Based on years of exhaustive and meticulous
research, David C. Keehn's study provides the first comprehensive analysis of
the Knights of the Golden Circle, a secret southern society that initially
sought to establish a slave-holding empire in the "Golden Circle" region of
Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America. Keehn reveals the origins, rituals,
structure, and complex history of this mysterious group, including its later
involvement in the secession movement. Members supported southern governors in
precipitating disunion, filled the ranks of the nascent Confederate Army, and
organized rearguard actions during the Civil War.
The Knights of the
Golden Circle emerged in 1858 when a secret society formed by a Cincinnati
businessman merged with the pro-expansionist Order of the Lone Star, which
already had 15,000 members. In 1860, during their first attempt to create the
Golden Circle, several thousand Knights assembled in southern Texas to
"colonize" northern Mexico. Due to insufficient resources and organizational
shortfalls, however, that filibuster failed. Later, the Knights shifted their
focus and began pushing for disunion, spearheading pro secession rallies, and
intimidating Unionists in the South.
According to Keehn, the Knights
likely carried out a variety of other clandestine actions before the Civil War,
including attempts by insurgents to take over federal forts in Virginia and
North Carolina, and a planned assassination of Abraham Lincoln as he passed
through Baltimore in early 1861 on the way to his inauguration. Once the
fighting began, the Knights helped build the emerging Confederate Army and
assisted with the pro-Confederate Copperhead movement in northern states. With
the war all but lost, various Knights supported one of their members, John
Wilkes Booth, in his plot to assassinate President Lincoln.
Keehn's
fast-paced, engaging narrative demonstrates that the Knights' influence proved
more substantial than historians have traditionally assumed and provides a new
perspective on southern secession and the outbreak of the Civil
War.
David C. Keehn is an attorney from Allentown, Pennsylvania, with a
history degree from Gettysburg College and a juris doctorate from the University
of Pennsylvania.
April 15, 2013
328 pages, 6 x 9, 41 halftones
ISBN
978-0-8071-5004-7
Cloth $39.95
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