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Global Heritage Press

London Ontario's Unrepentant Confederates, the Ku Klux Klan and a RENDITION on WELLINGTON STREET

London Ontario's Unrepentant Confederates, the Ku Klux Klan and a RENDITION on WELLINGTON STREET

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BOOK FORMAT

By Ron W. Shaw

This is the story of London Ontario’s refugee Confederates, KKK fugitives and, in particular, of one man for whom even London proved within reach of a U.S. Deputy Marshal.

Immediately following the American Civil War, a wave of unrepentant Confederate families who refused to take the oath of allegiance to the United States Constitution flowed into Canada between 1865 and 1870. Many of those took up residence across southwestern Ontario, including in the city of London. They were joined by men, soon followed by their families, who were fleeing arrest as American President Ulysses S. Grant moved to destroy the Ku Klux Klan. 

Contents include:

  • Acknowledgements
  • Foreword
  • Chapter 1 Dr. James Rufus Bratton
  • Chapter 2 York County, South Carolina
  • Chapter 3 Union League
  • Chapter 4 Ku Klux Klan
  • Chapter 5 Major J. William Avery
  • Chapter 6 Captain Jim Williams
  • Chapter 7 Jim Williams’ Last Muster
  • Chapter 8 Major Lewis Merrill
  • Chapter 9 Marshal Joseph G. Hester
  • Chapter 10 Mazyck and Manigault
  • Chapter 11 The Tecumseh House
  • Chapter 12 Rendition
  • Chapter 13 Diplomatic Storm
  • Chapter 14 Isaac Bell Cornwall
  • Chapter 15 Politics and Pardons
  • Chapter 16 Payback for Merrill
  • Chapter 17 Klansmen to the End
  • Chapter 18 Hester Carries On
  • Chapter 19 Rehabilitation
  • Chapter 20 London Enclave
  • Chapter 21 Respected Citizen
  • Appendix-1 Seeds of Hate
  • Appendix-2 Confederate Gold
  • Selected Sources
  • Illustrations
  • Index (click here to view Index)

Background: Two of the Confederate States’ most prominent families, the Mazycks and Manigaults, fled into exile at London, Ontario, Canada, where their homes soon became the terminus of a new sort of ‘Underground Railroad’. Ku Klux Klan fugitives, wanted for murder and mayhem, arrived at their doors seeking sanctuary under the British flag.

Welcomed by their countrymen and the people of London, these hunted men found employment, established businesses, and passed the next decade undisturbed. That they could do so was the surprising outcome of the rendition of one of the first Klansmen to reach the city.

In June 1872, Dr. James Rufus Bratton was kidnapped in front of his Wellington Street boarding house and transported back to the United States in chains. Within days a firestorm of protest raced from London City Council, to Prime Minister John A. Macdonald, through the British Foreign Office and on to Washington DC. In less than two weeks Bratton was back in London; restored to freedom with all charges of murder, assault and civil rights violations withdrawn.

The ‘Bratton Affair’ demonstrated a long-standing sympathy among Londoners, and Canadians generally, for the Confederate cause. It also revealed the young Dominion’s sensitivity in matters of sovereignty and its continued dependence on the muscle of Great Britain in foreign affairs.

For unrepentant Southerners it confirmed that Canada was a safe haven.

Details:

  • 187 Pages
  • 6 x 9"
  • Index
  • Softcover - Perfect bound
  • Published by Global Heritage Press, Carleton Place, 2018 ISBN 978-1-77240-098-4 (paperback)
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