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Ark. town known for ties to KKK tries to rebrand


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Updated: 3/27/2012 3:07 pm Published: 3/27/2012 2:59 pm
HARRISON, Ark. (AP) - When a black man supposedly broke into a white man's home in 1905, a mob ran most black people out of town - and instantly gave this community a lasting reputation as being too dangerous for minorities.

More than a century later, only 34 of the nearly 13,000 residents in Harrison are black. But the town desperately wants to overcome its past, hoping a better image will attract more residents and businesses. So leaders are advocating for diversity in a way rarely seen in overwhelmingly white places: creating a task force on race relations, printing posters about the city's ugly history and bringing in a civil rights speaker.

"If your image is out there that you're this little racist enclave set in the hills, who you going to attract? You're going to attract racists," said Layne Ragsdale, a member of the task force.

It's a hard sell. The task force is almost all white. The posters go into storage between events. And the town had to bus in black children to listen to the speaker.

Harrison's tiny black population is actually larger than it used to be. For decades after race riots in 1905 and 1909, fewer than 10 black people lived here or elsewhere in Boone County, a largely rural square of northern Arkansas where residents only recently voted to allow alcohol sales.

The town's history of racial conflict isn't unique in a state where federal troops had to escort a group of black students known as the Little Rock Nine into Central High School during a historic 1957 clash over desegregation.

But Harrison stands out because the town pushed out virtually its entire black population.

"They chose to run their African-American population off," said John Kirk, a history professor at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock who has written about the state's racial past. "How do you reconcile with a population that's not there anymore?"

Before the riots, more than 140 black people lived in the county. Then tensions started brewing as work dried up on the nearby railroad line.

In 1905, the white mob that ran off most of the black population burned down homes and shot out windows. Many black people left, and those who stayed fled in 1909 after a black man was convicted of raping a white woman.

Only one black woman, known as Aunt Vine, stuck around. The task force on race relations named its scholarship for minority students in her honor.

Harrison leaders hope eventually to welcome back descendants of those who fled. And maybe that will show the town isn't so racist anymore.

"Getting the truth out there will do nothing but help us from a business perspective," said Chris Ramsey a member of the task force and sales director for Harrison's convention and visitors bureau.

Businesses that declined to locate in Harrison have not explicitly cited the community's racial history, but it's an issue that has to be addressed whenever a company is courted.

Over the years, the city has attracted enough industry to keep Harrison alive. People here make whiteboards, aluminum parts for barbecue grills and wood floors for tractor-trailers. Tourists stop here, too, especially bikers who ride along the curvy roads of the Ozark Mountains. But they, like nearly everyone else here, are white.

Confederate flags aren't hard to find and, until recently, neither was a moveable barbecue joint called Kracker's. That smoker has since disappeared, unlike the Ku Klux Klan, which reinforced Harrison's racist legacy. The leader of a Klan group called the Knights Party lives outside Harrison and maintains a post office box in the city.

"There are racists in every community," Ragsdale said. "Ours are more vocal than some."

Still, no one has done anything to stop the Klan group from organizing an event that sounds a lot like a rally - "Open to ALL Concerned White Patriots" - later this month.

"What do you want to do, run him out?" asked Mel Chaney, who lives south of Harrison. Chaney, who is white, said he had never seen any signs of racism in town. Neither had Bill Sloss, who is also white.

"How can it be a racist town if there's no blacks here?" Sloss asked.

Others disagree. Rumors of discrimination persist here: a restaurant refusing to serve a black man, racial slurs that roll off people's tongues.

"The reality is that Harrison remains today something of a gathering point for white supremacists," said Mark Potok, a senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center.

That reputation scared some of the black students who came here last month for a nonviolence summit.

Maria Oates had to convince her mother to let her travel to Harrison. Even when her mother consented, Oates was apprehensive about the trip.

"I was nervous up until I actually got there and talked with the people that live there," Oates said. She said she would return for another community service project, but not on her own.

Other students were blunter about their fears.

"They told us they thought they were going to be hung," Ragsdale said.

After the students left, Oates was talking to her dad about a piece on the Klan in the local news.

"After I heard that, I kind of thought, `What if they really didn't want to change?"'


Follow Jeannie Nuss on Twitter: @JeannieNuss

(Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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lloydwhitty50 - 6/4/2013 1:36 AM
0 Votes
I saw the documentary on a cable news network and I had to laugh. To suggest that the KKK never did all those that history clearly shows is both naive and sad. The history of this organization is written in the blood of Blacks who have died simply because of the color of their skin. What's even more disheartening is the passing of this rhetoric from generation to generation. What people really have to understand is that racism is a learned behavior. You're not born that way despite what others might say. As a Black man born and raised in the South, I was always struck by the absurd notion that there were passages in the Bible that said that the races shouldn't mix. Everyone I challenged couldn't come up with any evidence to support this. What I do know for certain is that the GOD I serve says "Love thy neighbor as thy self." I applaud the mayor of Harrison for having the courage to stand up and say not all in that town feel that way. We aren't living in the 1950's anymore. The best thing that we can do is expose these people for who they are. Racism is alive and well in 2013. The only difference is that with the advent of technology, racists have become more covert in their tactics. I challenge anyone who thinks racism is ok to a debate in this forum. I refrain from saying intellectual debate because I fear that the person who responds to this will be woefully unprepared for my response.

MoPatriot - 3/31/2012 7:46 AM
0 Votes
The Ku Klux Klan has been around since 1865 and it isn't going anywhere. The reason the Klan is hated is because they stand for true Christianity. They stand firm against homosexuality, abortion, and yes race mixing. The truth angers people. They hung my Lord Jesus Christ on a Cross for teaching and preaching the Truth. Before you spout off about an organization you know nothing about except for the propaganda the liberal media has taught you, talk with a Klansman and get the Truth. The Klan is far from being about hate. A good place to get educated on this is www.takkkk.com

powderhorn1 - 3/31/2012 7:22 AM
0 Votes
Danjax, Sounds to me that you should move to a more enlightened area of the country, like maybe Washington D.C., New York, or perhaps L.A., I hear Detroit has lots of available space pretty cheap.

powderhorn1 - 3/31/2012 7:11 AM
0 Votes
Me 501, As I stated in my original post the name was never copy write protected so there are groups out there that claim to be Klan but are not of traditional Klan background. Also in years past there were individuals that involved themselves in criminal activity and were accused of having ties to the Klan, but I guess the news media needed a “boogey man” of sorts to explain the activity. With that being said and to answer your question, No the Klan does not murder, burn down houses, or spread hate. The Klan is a benevolent, non-violent White Christian organization. If you look throughout history you will see that most organizations and or even some religions have had accusations or even a dark past, as an example Catholicism or Masonry come to mind, but today they are both accepted in society. The Klan is no different they are a patriotic family oriented organization involving men and women from all walks of life working together for the common good of communities everywhere. Because of this the organization is attacked relentlessly by the media who continue to push their liberal agenda on society which is destroying the Nations very fabric. I encourage you again to do your own research on the subject outside the History Channel.

danjax - 3/30/2012 2:01 PM
1 Vote
Harrison is the ultimate back-water redneck community. I lived there for three years, while taking care of my mom. It is the most backward, intolerant and bigoted town that I have ever encountered. Why would anyone with one iota of enlightenment want to live there? Leave them be and they will inbreed themselves out of existence.

me501 - 3/30/2012 12:36 PM
0 Votes
powderhorn1-So there not killing,burning down houses or spreading hate anymore huh?lmao @ you wanting people to believe that.

powderhorn1 - 3/29/2012 7:09 AM
0 Votes
City of Harrison I would really check out the statistics of other cities in Arkansas and around the country before you really wish this type of change on your community. There is also way too much misinformation concerning the Ku Klux Klan put out to the public by an uninformed media. The name was never copy write protected so the actions of a few in the past have branded the entire organization as bad, my research has shown that most are very patriotic, hard working Americans who want to protect their heritage, their faith, their family and the Constitution and history of the United States. They are against Illegal immigration, against illegal drugs, they work with law enforcement to help protect their communities against pedophiles and other predators and criminals who wish to do the community harm regardless if it is a minority or white person. They also are proud of and want to protect their race as do many other minority groups. The difference is when you are proud that you are white and stand up for your beliefs you are always labeled a hater and racist. If people would do the research on their own they would see for themselves that most of the hype about the Klan is just liberal propaganda used to push a politically correct agenda.

plumtree - 3/28/2012 2:37 PM
0 Votes
let these people from harrison stay in pine bluff for a few days an then see if they want change !

daphnehitch - 3/28/2012 1:01 PM
1 Vote
I Think it exists everywhere my family is from Hope and some people still think it is slavery time there too. But as a parent when my son asked to go and check out a school up north I was hesistant but I left him go but why on his way out did him, his uncle and some other friends who went were stopped simply because their were too many of them in the car at nite. Needless to say he goes to UCA. A little better.

armygirl - 3/28/2012 11:25 AM
1 Vote
I went to Harrison for a state basketball tournament in 1995. We practiced at an elementary school the day before the game and this kid could not have been older than 4 years old. He walked past our school bus and waved his middle finger at us saying the n word. So sad because I know he had to be taught that at home. I would never ever live anywhere near Harrison. And I even hate that I have to travel through that town to go to Branson.
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