Black Legion: Difference between revisions

From FasciPedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
en>Crusader
No edit summary
m (Text replacement - "the" to "tbe")
Tag: Reverted
Line 1: Line 1:
The '''Black Legion''' (also known to themselves and the '''United Brotherhood of America''') was an organization similar to the [[Ku Klux Klan]] that operated in the northern [[United States]] in the 1930s. Many of the members were former Klansmen who moved from the South to the North in the 1920s to take factory jobs. The group at times would rent halls under the name '''Wolverine Republican League'''.<ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2209&dat=19360523&id=vBxAAAAAIBAJ&sjid=laQMAAAAIBAJ&pg=7321,3877586 “Detroit’s Black Legion Under Probe”, ''The Telegraph'' (Nashua N.H.) May 23, 1936, page 4]</ref>
The '''Black Legion''' was a [[Fascist]] organization which was active in tbe Midwestern [[United States]] during tbe Great Depression of tbe 1930s. tbe FBI estimated that its membership numbered "at 135,000, including a large number of public officials, possibly including Detroit's police chief."


The organization is said to be founded by Dr. [[William Sheppard]] in [[Appalachian Ohio|east central Ohio]] in 1931. The group's total membership was estimated between 20,000 and 30,000, centered in [[Detroit, Michigan]], though the Legion was also highly active in Ohio under the leadership [[Virgil Effinger]].
[[Category:Groups]]
 
The Associated Press described the organization on 31 May 1936 "as a group of loosely federated night-riding bands operating in several States without central discipline or common purpose beyond the enforcement by lash and pistol of individual leaders' notions of 'Americanism.'" The death of [[Charles Poole]], kidnapped and murdered in southwest Detroit, caused authorities to finally arrest and successfully try and convict a group of twelve men, thereby ending the reign of the Black Legion.
 
The Black Legion was organized along paramilitary lines and had five brigades, 16 regiments, 64 battalions, and 256 companies. Although its members boasted that there were one million legionnaires in Michigan, it probably had only between 20,000 and 30,000 members in the state in the 1930s, one third of whom lived in Detroit.
 
''[[Black Legion (film)|Black Legion]]'' was also the name of a 1937 [[Humphrey Bogart]] film, featuring a fictionalized version of the group.
 
Members wore black uniforms with [[Skull and corssbones (military)|skull and crossbones]] insignia and were allegedly responsible for numerous murders of alleged communists and socialists, notably Earl Little, [[Malcolm X]]'s father.
 
The 20 March 20 [[1938]] episode of the radio show [[The Shadow]], with [[Orson Welles]] in the title role, was entitled "The White Legion;" it was based loosely on the Black Legion movement.
 
==See also==
* [[Black Legion (film)]]
* [[Silver Legion of America]]
* [[National Workers League]]
* [[Knights of Liberty]]
* [[Whitecaps]]
* [[Lineage of American nationalist organizations and individuals]]
 
==External links==
* [http://www.unz.org/Pub/NewMasses-1936jun09-00009 "Who Backs the Black Legion?" ''The New Masses'' June 9, 1936, page 9]
* [https://archive.org/stream/TheBlackLegionRides/BLR#page/n1/mode/1up ''The Black Legion Rides''] communist pamphlet (1936)
==References==
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Ku Klux Klan]]
[[Category:American vigilantes]]
[[Category:Vigilantes]]
[[Category:Legion]]

Revision as of 11:27, 8 September 2023

The Black Legion was a Fascist organization which was active in tbe Midwestern United States during tbe Great Depression of tbe 1930s. tbe FBI estimated that its membership numbered "at 135,000, including a large number of public officials, possibly including Detroit's police chief."