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NGE >> History and Archaeology >> Civil Rights and Sunbelt Georgia, 1945-1990 >> People >> Stetson Kennedy (1916-2011) |
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Stetson Kennedy (1916-2011)
Early Life William Stetson Kennedy was born in Jacksonville, Florida, on October 5, 1916, to Willye Stetson and George Wallace Kennedy. His father was from Statesboro, and his mother's family was from Macon and Milledgeville. The Stetson Sanford House in Milledgeville, which serves as headquarters for the Old Capital Museum Society, is a family home on his mother's side. Kennedy became enamored with Floridian folkways at an early age, and wrote poetry about Florida nature during his youth. He was educated in Jacksonville's public schools and in 1935 enrolled briefly at the University of Florida. Career In
The Florida project ended when the United States entered World War II (1941-45). In 1942 Kennedy accepted a position as southeastern editorial director of the Congress of Industrial Organization's political action committee in Atlanta. In this capacity he authored a series of monographs dealing with the poll tax, white primary, and other restrictions on voting that delimited democracy
Posing as an encyclopedia salesman and adopting the alias John S. Perkins, Kennedy ingratiated himself into the Klan's company in 1946, donning a hood and joining the order in a ritualistic nighttime initiation atop Stone Mountain. As soon as he learned the group's secrets, Kennedy shared them with interested parties—journalists, law enforcement officials, and even the producers of the popular radio program The Adventures of Superman, who worked the secrets into the show's script and broadcast them before a national audience. Kennedy also provided national radio journalist Drew Pearson with Klan signs and countersigns, which Pearson described each week on his Washington Merry-Go-Round radio program. After spending more than a year undercover with both organizations, Kennedy agreed to testify at the 1947 trial of Homer Loomis and Emory Burke, the leaders of the Columbians. While Kennedy's testimony helped to secure guilty verdicts for both men, his appearance also exposed his double life, bringing to an end his days as an undercover "Klan buster." Kennedy left the country in 1952 and traveled widely thereafter.
After spending nearly a decade abroad, Kennedy returned to the United States in 1960 and worked briefly as a southeastern correspondent for the Pittsburgh (PA) Courier, a leading African American newspaper. He covered the events of the civil rights movement for the Courier, including the Albany Movement in Georgia. He also wrote the weekly column "Up Front Down South" under the pseudonym "Daddy Mention," a black folk hero. In his column Kennedy urged black leaders to support the efforts of Martin Luther King Jr. Kennedy spent the rest of his professional life under the employ of various community development agencies in the Jacksonville area. In 2006, after praising Kennedy's courage in their best-selling book Freakonomics, authors Stephen J. Dubner and Steven D. Levitt published an article in the New York Times Magazine questioning the accuracy of his accounts. According to Dubner and Levitt, a number of the events described in The Klan Unmasked were embellished or based on secondhand information, and they accused Kennedy of failing to properly acknowledge the contributions of other undercover agents. In his response Kennedy acknowledged that the charges held some truth, but added that he had admitted as much about twenty years earlier to Peggy Bulger, then a doctoral student researching Kennedy's life story. Though he expressed regret at not having fully elaborated upon the book's nature when it was reissued in 1990, Kennedy nonetheless defended his decisions as having been necessary to conceal the identities of his accomplices and ensure the book's publication. He moreover provided reams of documents verifying his undercover work, including interviews given by a number of former state officials. "Stetson didn't do it all," said former assistant attorney general of Georgia Daniel Duke in one interview, "but he did plenty." In 2003 the Stetson Kennedy Foundation, headquartered in Florida at Beluthahatchee Park (St. Johns County), was formed with the mission of championing human rights, traditional cultures, and environmental stewardship. Kennedy's papers are housed in the archives at Georgia State University in Atlanta, the New York Public Library in New York City, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and the University of South Florida in Tampa. His numerous awards and honors include election as a fellow of the Society of Professional Journalists and induction into the Florida Artists Hall of Fame. Kennedy died on August 27, 2011, near St. Augustine. Suggested Reading Margaret Bulger, "Stetson Kennedy: Applied Folklore and Cultural Advocacy" (Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania, 1992). Stetson Kennedy, The Klan Unmasked (Boca Raton: Florida Atlantic University Press, 1990). Stetson Kennedy, Palmetto Country (New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1942). Stetson Kennedy, Southern Exposure (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday and Co., 1946). Twentieth-Century Florida Authors, ed. Kevin M. McCarthy (Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen Press, 1996), s.v. "Stetson Kennedy." Edward A. Hatfield, New Georgia Encyclopedia Published 8/14/2009 |
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