Knights of the
Golden Circle
Secret order of Southern sympathizers in the
North during the Civil War. Its members were known as Copperheads. Dr.
George W. L. Bickley, a Virginian who had moved to Ohio, organized the
first castle, or local branch, in Cincinnati in 1854 and soon took the
order to the South, where it was enthusiastically received. Its
principal object was to provide a force to colonize the northern part
of Mexico and thus extend proslavery interests, and the Knights became
especially active in Texas. Secession and the outbreak of the Civil
War prompted a shift in its aims from filibustering in Mexico to
support of the new Southern government. Appealing to the South's
friends in the North, particularly in areas that were suffering
economic dislocation, the order soon spread to Kentucky, Indiana,
Ohio, Illinois, and Missouri. Its membership in these states, where it
became strongest, was largely composed of Peace Democrats, who felt
that the Civil War was a mistake and that the increasing power of the
Federal government was leading toward tyranny. They did not, however,
at this time engage in any treasonable activity. In late 1863 the
Knights of the Golden Circle was reorganized as the Order of American
Knights and again, early in 1864, as the Order of the Sons of Liberty,
with Clement L. Vallandigham, most prominent of the Copperheads, as
its supreme commander. Only a minority of its membership was radical
enoughin some localitiesto discourage enlistments, resist the
draft, and shield deserters. Numerous peace meetings were held. A few
extreme agitators, some of them encouraged by Southern money, talked
of a revolt in the Old Northwest, which, if brought about, would end
the war. Southern newspapers wishfully reported stories of widespread
disaffection, and John Hunt Morgan's raid (1863) into Kentucky,
Indiana, and Ohio was undertaken in the expectation that the
disaffected element would rally to his standard. Gov. Oliver P. Morton
of Indiana and Gen. Henry B. Carrington effectively curbed the Sons of
Liberty in that state in the fall of 1864. With mounting Union
victories late in 1864, the order's agitation for a negotiated peace
lost appeal, and it soon dissolved.
See G. F. Milton, Abraham Lincoln and the Fifth Column (1942,
repr. 1962); R. O. Curry, A House Divided (1964). |