Crossing the Lines: Long-forgotten secret hate group terrorized Detroit enclave then vanished
WDET is examining Highland Park as part of our Crossing the Lines series.Â
Hidden within the history of the Detroit enclave are the remnants of a secret society based on racism and murder.Â
It was exposed during a trial about a century ago that became a national sensation. Â
And then it seemingly vanished.Â
This is the story of the Black Legion. Â
More vicious than the KlanÂ
 Across a driveway from the Highland Park Fire Department stands a boarded-up, multi-story office building.Â
Author Tom Stanton gazes at the structure, one he says is filled with the echoes of powerful officials and mass killings.Â
âThe old city hall is gone, but this is an administrative building,â he said. âOver time, the fire department was here, the police department was here. It was also home to a court. All of those organizations would have had members in the Black Legion.âÂ
The Black Legion
Itâs a vigilante group built on bigotry, crime and murder.Â
And Stanton knows it well.Â
His book, âTerror in the City of Champions,â follows the hate groupâs movements during a time when Detroit sports teams were all winning titles.Â
He notes the Black Legion was born in Lima, Ohio, from the fading ashes of a Ku Klux Klan the Legionâs founder felt was too tame.Â
âThere was a little bit of animosity because the guy who started the Black Legion had left the Klan. He didnât view it as aggressive enough, the Klan, and he felt there needed to be an organization that was willing to do more,â Stanton said. Â
It was the 1920s and 30s. Jobs were scarce.Â
University of California Santa Cruz Professor Emerita Dana Frank examined those years.Â
She says the era was ripe to create a ready market for Legion recruits.Â
âWorking class white men were looking for an answer and theyâre looking for a scapegoat. And they turn to the Black Legion, an overtly fascist, white supremacist, anti-Catholic, anti-immigrant, anti-Semitic, anti-African American secret organization.âÂ
A haven for hate Â
The white supremacist group spread across Ohio and Michigan.Â
And Stanton says Highland Park became a hotbed of Black Legion activity.Â
The enclaveâs police chief, fire and police commissioners and a city councilman were all members.Â
Even, Stanton says, Highland Parkâs mayor at the time, Ray Markland.Â
âThe publisher of the âHighland Parker,â Art Kingsley, was targeted by the Black Legion because he kept ripping into Mayor Markland. One of the gunmen for the Black Legion moved into Highland Park with the idea of assassinating him. In the end, he didnât. The gunman had infiltrated the American Legion and came to actually like what Kingsley stood for.âÂ
Others were not as fortunate.Â
Legion members dressed in black robes emblazoned with skull-and crossbones symbols, their hoods topped by pirate hats bearing the Jolly Roger.Â
Death was their motif.Â
The Legion committed an estimated 50 murders in Michigan.Â
Historian Dana Frank says the group lured new recruits to parties or barbeques, then suddenly forced them to join the Legion at gunpoint.Â
âIt was even more secret than the Klan had been,â Frank said. âA lot of these Legion people had been in the Klan. They would be wearing black outfits with gold trim and pirate hats. And itâs quite chilling. Who sewed that robe? Somebodyâs wife or daughter or mother.âÂ
Author Tom Stanton adds that ârecruitsâ joining to save their lives, while planning to avoid the hate group afterwards, were in for a shock.Â
âMany of those 50 murders were actually killings of Legion members,â he said. âThey had violated the code or didnât come to meetings or in some ways were an affront to what the Black Legion supposedly stood for.âÂ
The Black Legion unravelsÂ
Yet Stanton says what eventually exposed the Black Legionâs crimes was the killing of federal organizer Charles Poole.Â
And his death stemmed from an age-old motive for murder, jealousy.Â
âA local official of the Black Legion was upset that Poole was married to a woman that he had a crush on years before down south. He hatched this plan to spread the word at meetings that Poole had abused his wife. âWhat are we going to do about this?ââÂ
The answer was to pronounce a death sentence.Â
âThey got a couple of carloads of guys. Poole was taken out to Gulley Road, not too far from the Rouge auto plant, and assassinated.âÂ
Investigators initially didnât realize the murder was connected to the Legion, so no law enforcement officials working with the group could squash the probe.Â
They eventually traced the killing back to a hitman for the hate group.Â
Stanton says the self-described âexecutionerâ Dayton Dean, then committed the Legionâs cardinal sin.Â
He confessed to the crime. And to the existence of the secret society he was part of.Â
Stanton said, âDayton Dean wasnât the brightest guy and he was easily manipulated by investigators. They promised him cigars and special treatment in his prison cell. He loved the attention and he was willing to talk. He just couldnât resist it.âÂ
Dean also unveiled the bloody secrets of the Black Legion in court.Â
Historian Dana Frank says evidence later showed the Wayne County prosecutor in the case, Duncan McCrea, had been part of the Legion himself, though he vehemently denied it.Â
â(McCrea) chose to prosecute in 1936. And thatâs what really broke the story. The membership basically crawled back into the woodwork. That doesnât mean that they changed their ideas. But the risk of being part of the Black Legion had become much greater.âÂ
Court cases capture a national audienceÂ
There was a second trial involving the hate group months later, this time for the murder of Silas Coleman, who had been killed prior to Pooleâs death.Â
Coleman was shot by a Legion member who wanted to know âhow it felt to kill a Black man.âÂ
The cases resulted in multiple convictions and national headlines.Â
Within a year Hollywood had already made two movies based on the events.Â
One featured a young Humphrey Bogart as a fictional version of the groupâs hitman.Â
In a desperate, terrified voice, Bogie said, âTheyâll kill me for telling you. Them Black Legion guys donât fool. I canât get out. Nobody ever lived to get out of the Legion.âÂ
But author Tom Stanton says the trials raised concerns about who actually was in the hate group.Â
âWives and children were discovering that their fathers were members of the Black Legion. It was a secret society, even from your spouse. People were wondering, âIs my neighbor a member? Public officials?â It was this great mystery, like the stuff of a radio serial at the time.â Â
In fact, a popular radio show created an episode loosely based on the trials, where the renamed âWhite Legionâ was brought down by the hero of the series.Â
âI am the one they call The Shadow,â boomed a voice over the airwaves. âThe White Legion is about to be exposed!â  Â
The secret society disappearsÂ
But in real life, historian Dana Frank says FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover knew all about the Black Legion and its ties to the Klan.Â
Yet no other members were ever charged.Â
Frank says some researchers believe they know why.Â
 âJ. Edgar Hoover didnât go after the Black Legion because Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was president at the time, didnât want him to. There were Ku Klux Klan members and racists in Congress, particularly in the Senate, and the New Deal coalition was dependent on the votes of those Southern Democrats. And they would not want him to touch the Black Legion.â Â
Frank says the FBI director argued the hate group had not violated federal law, despite Michigan officialsâ assertion that the Legionâs activities had crossed state lines.Â
âHoover immediately shut down any investigation. He told all his agents not to do any further investigation of the Legion without his explicit permission,â Frank said.Â
The U.S. was then hurtling towards World War II.Â
And the Black Legion seemingly vanished from the national consciousness. Â
Author Tom Stanton says those associated with the group had a stake in erasing it from history.Â
âMost people didnât want to tout their involvement. They wanted to bury it,â he said. âThe black gowns were discovered in swamps. Some were burning them. It wasnât something to be proud of.âÂ
Stanton says scrubbing the memory of the Legion extended through generations.Â
âDecades on, you donât want to be bragging about your great grandfather who was a member of a hate organization. And great grandpa probably didnât want anybody to know about it either, other than the guys who were at the meeting.âÂ
After almost a century, historians agree few people recall the Black Legionâs atrocities or its role in Michigan and especially Highland Park.Â
Ironically, the hate group that secretly inspired terror has regained one of its most cherished goals.Â
Anonymity.Â
Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.
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