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A Black history mystery in Sandy, 1922

By Heather Lawrence | h.lawrence@mycityjournals.com

“Dressed in white robes and tall hooded caps tipped with red tassels, the group marched silently to the grave site and placed a cross of lilies with a banner that read ‘Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, Salt Lake Chapter No. 1’ upon Stuart’s casket.

“The Klansmen then hurried to the edge of the cemetery where two automobiles with curtained windows and covered license plates whisked them away,” Reeve and Nichols wrote.

The purpose of the eight members of the KKK at the gathering was unclear. They had recently run ads in the newspaper hoping to gain members, so were they there to recruit? Were they showing support for law enforcement? Was Stuart affiliated with them somehow?

“The visit was taken by friends and relatives of Stuart to be a tribute to the officer who lost his life in discharge of his duties and an urging of quick administration of justice to the murderer,” John F. Hall wrote in his Telegram article on April 20, 1922.

Many mourners had bowed their heads in prayer when the Klansmen arrived. They were unaware of their presence until the hooded figures made their way from their cars to the grave site, located near the corner of 700 E. 9000 South. The timing seemed to be intentional.

“(The Klansmen) marched in close formation and very slowly, quickening their step just inside the cemetery entrance when the mourners bowed their heads in prayer,” Hall wrote. After leaving the floral arrangement, they turned to the west and raised their left hands in a salute, then left.

Reeve and Nichols wrote in 1995 that the motives of the Klansmen were never explained.

“It’s uncertain whether Stuart was a fellow Klansman, or if the group just wished to demonstrate their zeal for law and order by paying tribute to a fallen officer. Regardless, the event marked the first of several public appearances by the short-lived Ku Klux Klan of Utah,” they said.

Reeve doesn’t believe that Klan membership or support caught on in Sandy; it seems to have died out of public view within a few years. Black History Month offers the opportunity to shine a light on the mystery of the first public appearance of the KKK in Utah, right here in Sandy. l

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