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"When Carolina Indians Went on the Warpath": The Media, the Klan, and the Lumbees of North Carolina

"When Carolina Indians Went on the Warpath": The Media, the Klan, and the Lumbees of North Carolina "On a frigid Saturday night in January 1958, Grand Dragon James 'Catfish' Cole and fifty other members of the Ku Klux Klan gathered for a rally in a cornfield near Hayes Pond just outside of Maxton, a small town located in Robeson County in southeastern North Carolina. But before the rally even began, several hundred Lumbees chased the Klansmen from the frozen cornfield." http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Southern Cultures University of North Carolina Press

"When Carolina Indians Went on the Warpath": The Media, the Klan, and the Lumbees of North Carolina

Southern Cultures , Volume 14 (4) – Nov 19, 2008

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Publisher
University of North Carolina Press
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 Center for the Study of the American South.
ISSN
1534-1488

Abstract

"On a frigid Saturday night in January 1958, Grand Dragon James 'Catfish' Cole and fifty other members of the Ku Klux Klan gathered for a rally in a cornfield near Hayes Pond just outside of Maxton, a small town located in Robeson County in southeastern North Carolina. But before the rally even began, several hundred Lumbees chased the Klansmen from the frozen cornfield."

Journal

Southern CulturesUniversity of North Carolina Press

Published: Nov 19, 2008

There are no references for this article.