Nathan Bedford Forrest II explained

Nathan Bedford Forrest II
Birth Date:August 1871
Birth Place:Oxford, Mississippi, U.S.
Death Date:March 11, 1931 (aged 59)
Death Place:White Springs, Florida, U.S.
Resting Place:Elmwood Cemetery (Memphis, Tennessee)
Resting Place Coordinates:35.1224°N -90.0296°W
Occupation:Businessman

Sons of Confederate Veterans
Term:1919–1921
Predecessor:Carl W. Hinton
Successor:Edgar Scurry
Spouse:Mattie Patton Forrest
Relatives:Nathan Bedford Forrest (grandfather)

Nathan Bedford Forrest II (August 1871 – March 11, 1931) was an American businessman who served as the 19th Commander-in-Chief of the Sons of Confederate Veterans from 1919 to 1921,[1] [2] [3] and as the Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan for Georgia.[4] Forrest was born in Oxford, Mississippi, in 1871. His grandfather, Nathan Bedford Forrest, was a senior officer of the Confederate States Army who commanded cavalry in the Western Theater of the American Civil War. His only son, Nathan Bedford Forrest III, was a senior officer of the United States Army Air Forces killed in action in the European Theater of World War II.[5]

In the Confederate Veteran, Nathan Bedford Forrest II claimed that he and Tate Brady were making plans together for an "active campaign throughout Oklahoma" as an act of terrorism against the U.S. Government and on behalf of the Sons of Confederate Veterans.[6] He served as Secretary and Business Manager at Lanier University, a college that was sold to the Klan in 1921.[7]

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Notes and References

  1. News: . Nathan Forrest Will Head Sons . . LIL . 117 . Atlanta, Ga. . October 10, 1919 . Two B.
  2. News: . Not to be Candidate . . 102 . 319 . Little Rock . October 10, 1921 . 10.
  3. Book: . Hopkins . Walter Lee . 1926 . Year Book and Minutes of the Thirty-First Annual Convention of the Sons of Confederate Veterans in the City of Birmingham, Ala., May 18–21, 1926 . Richmond, Va. . Dudley Printing Co. . 10.
  4. News: . Grand Dragon of K. K. K. . . 103 . 231 . Little Rock . July 10, 1922 . 1.
  5. News: . Forrest, One of Klan Organizers, Dies . . 90 . 70 . New York City . March 12, 1931 . 1.
  6. Chapman, Lee Roy http://thislandpress.com/09/01/2011/tate-brady-battle-greenwood/, "The Nightmare of Dreamland", This Land, September 2011, accessed September 1, 2011.
  7. https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F50610FF3E5A1B7A93C0A81782D85F458285F9&scp=1&sq=nathan%20bedford%20forrest%20lanier&st=cse