Shelby is to witness one its most colorful events Thursday night, June 17, if plans announced by local Ku Klux Klan members are carried through successfully.
On that evening robbed and hooded klansmen from about 15 towns and cities in North and South Carolina will parade the streets of Shelby in full regalia. Coinciding with the mammoth parade of the invisible empire will be a public speaking at the courthouse and a K.K.K. film at the Princess Theatre.
History Revived
The program as related by klan officials will push back the hand on the clock of Time in Shelby and bring back colorful memories of the old South, as is said. Years ago Tom Dixon, famous author, made the old klan immortal through his stories of their workings—stories that were based about the historic court square of Shelby in the days when the white-robed knights of old assembled there. And around that square Thursday night several hundred klansmen will march and later enter the building for a public speech by a klan speaker.
The klan here has issued an announcement saying that a picture, “The Toll of Justice,” telling of the workings of the klan, will be on from 2 in the afternoon until 11:30 at night at the Princess Theatre. At 8 o’clock in the evening, J.W. Alford of Wilmington will speak in the courthouse and the public generally is invited to attend. Although it cannot be definitely learned it is reported the robed parade will start from the city park at 8 o’clock and will follow a line of march around the court square and main business section of the town.
Two Carolinas In
A klan official of Shelby states that the parade should be one of the largest ever staged in the two Carolinas. Invitations, he says, have been mailed out to klans over both states and indications are that representatives from all klans will take part in the ceremonies and march. Some of the towns and cities listed to send delegations are:
Marion, Rutherfordton, Asheville, Hendersonville, Forest City, Morganton, Hickory, Newton, Gaffney, Lincolnton, Kings Mountain, Blacksburg and Spartanburg.
The last klan parade staged in Shelby attracted throngs to the court square vicinity of Shelby and the gathering was considered one of the largest ever assembled in the town. With the likelihood of a still great parade Thursday night, an equally large crowd is expected to witness the unusual event.
From the front page of the Cleveland Star, Shelby, N.C., Monday, June 14, 1926
newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn97064509/1926-06-14/ed-1/seq-1/