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John Brown Anti-Klan Committee (JBAKC)

JBAKC was formed in 1978 to combat the growing resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan in the south and elsewhere. The organization took its name from John Brown, the radical abolitionist who led the 1859 armed attack on a government arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia that played an important historical role in the militant anti-slavery movement that preceded the US Civil War. Major efforts of the John Brown Anti-Klan Committee included counter protests at KKK and neo-Nazi protests, such as a 1983 protest against a KKK rally, in solidarity with the Brown Berets. The collection includes several issues of JBAKC’s quarterly publication, Death to the Klan, as well as other publications and demonstration flyers.

John Brown Anti-Klan Committee. (1979). The Dividing Line of the 1980's: Take a Stand Against the Klan (pp. 30–32). New York, NY: Author.

Documents

the old man the old man
Publisher: John Brown Anti-Klan CommitteeFormat: GraphicCollection: John Brown Anti-Klan Committee (JBAKC)
portrait of john brown