Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 22. Aug. 2015 · The post by D.M. Shea reads as if he/she were smitten by Stephenson during the interview he had given to D.M. Shea in the 1950’s. D.C. Stephenson is/was a con-artist. Of course he would be “personable.” As for “forthcoming,”Stephenson has no credibility. To give the convicted derelict the benefit of a doubt and to describe him as ...

  2. 16. März 2005 · In the summer of 1995 Noblesville, Indiana, site of the sensational 1925 homicide trial of Ku Klux Klan leader D. C. Stephenson, again drew national attention after the discovery of Klan records dating back to the 1920s. In March, Don Roberts, a local building contractor, chanced upon a trunk in the barn of a property he had recently acquired.

  3. INFAMOUS INDIANA: Grand Dragon. D.C. Stephenson. He was "the law" until a girl he raped brought him down from her deathbed. By Michael Jesse. In the 1920s, D.C. Stephenson was the most powerful man in Indiana. He owned politicians, up to and including the governor. He could send hundreds of hooded klansmen marching through the streets.

  4. David Curtis Stephenson was born August 21, 1891 in Houston, Texas. Stephenson was the leader of the Indiana Ku Klux Klan from 1922 to 1925, held the title King Kleagle for most of the Midwest and Grand Dragon (state leader) of the Realm of Indiana from 1923 to 1925. Stephenson broke away from the national Ku Klux Klan in 1924.

  5. 23. Mai 2009 · English: D. C. Stephenson, Grand Wizard of the Klu Klux Klan in Indiana and other northern states during the height of Klan power in the 1920s. Committed the rape and murder of Madge Oberholtzer in 1925 and was arrested and given a life sentence. After his pardon was refused, he outed all the Klan leadership, forcing resignation of nearly half ...

  6. D.C Stephenson, known to his friends as Steve, was born in Houston, Texas on 21 August 1891, and though little is known of his childhood by the age of sixteen he had started work as an apprentice printer not long after joining the Socialist Party but it soon became clear that his interest in politics was personal not ideological for as soon as the Socialist Party’s fortunes began to wane, he ...