Grant's Enforcer
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Grant's Enforcer

Taking Down the Klan

Title Details

Pages: 296

Illustrations: 14 b&w images

Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in

Formats

Hardcover

Pub Date: 04/15/2025

ISBN: 9-780-8203-7336-2

List Price: $32.95

Web PDF

Pub Date: 04/15/2025

ISBN: 9-780-8203-7338-6

List Price: $32.95

EPUB

Pub Date: 04/15/2025

ISBN: 9-780-8203-7337-9

List Price: $32.95

Grant's Enforcer

Taking Down the Klan

A vivid portrait of the Reconstruction South and the attempts to dismantle the KKK

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  • Description
  • Reviews

Grant's Enforcer offers a gripping story of the early years after the Civil War and the campaign led by President Grant’s Attorney General Amos T. Akerman to destroy the Ku Klux Klan. Akerman, a former Georgia slaveholder and the only Southerner to serve in a Reconstruction cabinet, was the first federal lawman to propose using the Fourteenth Amendment to prosecute civil rights violations.

In 1871 Akerman and his allies brought the KKK to trial in South Carolina, choosing York County as their principal target. They believed that if they could break the Ku Klux in one small corner of the former Confederacy, they could break it everywhere. Within six months, the prosecutions and convictions in federal court of key Klan leaders and foot soldiers effectively eradicated the Klan for half a century.

Drawing on a wealth of primary sources, Guy Gugliotta tells the story in real time through the voices of those who bravely resisted the Klan in York County and those who perpetrated its crimes, and through the fierce Congressional debates in Washington, D.C., and Akerman’s efforts to overcome infighting within the Grant Administration. Grant's Enforcer rides with the Ku Klux on its way to a lynching, feels what it’s like to be lied to, beaten, spat at, and betrayed by white neighbors you have known all your life, and exults with York’s black citizens when the tormenters are finally brought to justice.

Gugliotta uses newspapers, documents, and first-person stories, including thousands of pages of testimony under oath taken by a Congressional joint committee tasked in 1871 to study the Ku Klux Klan, a breathtaking compilation of accounts by Ku Klux targets, their attackers, local and national politicians, public officials and private citizens. The result is a vivid portrait of the Reconstruction South through the career of this surprising man.

A terrific read. The narrative is riveting, and Gugliotta’s brisk writing moves the plot, explains complicated political realities in accessible language, and gets the reader into the minds of the many characters swirling around the book’s explosive setting.

—Jane Dailey, author of White Fright: The Sexual Panic at the Heart of America's Racist History

In this meticulously researched, innovatively written book, Guy Gugliotta tells a powerful story about the rise of the KKK and the surprising efforts of a former slaveholder to repress it. Gugliotta’s ’s exhaustive excavation of a dizzying array of stunning sources enables him to reconstruct dialogue between various people from the past, adding an impressive narrative flare to this book. By providing a snapshot of an untold moment in the postwar South, Grant’s Enforcer makes a significant contribution to Civil War-era studies and will appeal to a broader reading public.

—Jim Downs, author of Maladies of Empire: How Colonialism, Slavery, and War Transformed Medicine

A vivid account of one of the more ignoble episodes in American history—the Ku Klux Klan's terrorist campaign aimed at denying recently emancipated slaves the liberty, citizenship, and right to vote supposedly guaranteed
by the Reconstruction constitutional amendments. Gugliotta gives the long-neglected attorney general
Amos T. Akerman his due as a courageous opponent of the Klan, and he gives President Ulysses S. Grant credit for using the power of the federal government to crush—unfortunately temporarily—the Klan. Violent resistance to democratic elections, politicians deploying base racism for partisan gain, refusal to accept the equal citizenship of African Americans—the story told here reminds us of the fragility of our freedoms, a lesson all too relevant in modern-day America.

—Eric Foner, author of The Second Founding: How the Civil War and Reconstruction Remade the Constitution

This is the beguiling story of Georgian Amos Akerman, who pushed back against the rise of the Klan, as white-hooded vigilantes struggled to eliminate black rights and to celebrate the South as solely a white man’s country. With a novelistic eye for detail, Guy Gugliotta leads the reader through the tumultuous Reconstruction era by offering up voices of resistance, by compelling us to reckon with the ‘what might have been’ in history. He captures a wide cast of characters, but none more compelling nor tragic than Akerman and his neglected career. This is a timely tale of heroism in the face of white supremacy and rhetoric laced with violence.

—Catherine Clinton, author of Mrs. Lincoln: A Life

About the Author/Editor

GUY GUGLIOTTA is a prize-winning journalist and author with a long career as a national reporter for the Washington Post and as a foreign correspondent for the Miami Herald. His book Freedom’s Cap: The United States Capitol and the Coming of the Civil War was awarded starred reviews in Kirkus and Publisher’s Weekly and named one of the year’s best books by the Washington Post. He lives in New York City.