James Litwin collection (Bowling Green KKK Rally Response)
Collection Overview
Abstract
The topical material in this collection was gathered by James Litwin in his capacity as a member of the Bowling Green Human Relations Commission related to a rally held by the Ku Klux Klan at the Wood County Courthouse in the summer of 1994. The collection consists of about .5 cubic feet of clippings, flyers, correspondence and printed material donated by James Litwin in April 16, 2014.
Dates
- Creation: 1992-1999
Extent
0.46 Cubic Feet (1 legal archives box)
Creator
- Litwin, James (Person)
Scope and Contents
The collection of material, formed by James Litwin in his role of as a member of the Wood County Human Relations Commission, is rather scattered in nature in representing official policy, other than the agenda from one HRC meeting. But it is rich in supporting material that was generated and circulating in the community in the period before the Ku Klux Klan rally at the Wood County Courthouse.
The correspondence material consists mostly of memos and notes sent by Litwin related to information received that he wanted passed to City officials, such as Chief of Police Galen Ash, a note of thanks for literature received from Klanwatch, a letter to BG City Schools Principals outlining the educational options presented in preparation for the Klan visit (including availability of the video “Legacy of Hate”) and a note to Debbie Perooz and Maryann Sandusky summarizing a meeting of the Unity Coalition. The few pieces of incoming correspondence includes a note from the pastor of First Presbyterian Church, David Cook Young, with the text of a sermon he presented on May 29, 1994. One other piece of incoming correspondence in the folder is a photocopy of the original request of Vince Pinette, KKK Grand Titan, requesting the rally, dated March 3, 1994.
Subject files include the material that was in a labeled folder of City Human Relations Commission KKK Rally Response material; a folder gathering all the related Unity Coalition literature; brochures, flyers and signs; material on the position of the National Women’s Rights Organizing Coalition; and a folder of compiled positions/statements of various extremist groups including the KKK, Knights of Freedom, and Nazi Party USA.
Although just a draft version, there is a typed summary report of the events leading up to the rally, the plans and responses, and the aftermath, written by Litwin for an unknown purpose, but probably for the HRC. Although some parts of the text are blank or just consist of handwritten notes, it gives a good overview of the situation.
Printed material assembled by Litwin consists of newspaper clippings dating from February 1994 through the summer providing coverage of KKK activities around the country, community reactions to Klan rallies in other cities, the response and planning in Bowling Green, coverage of the event at the Wood County Courthouse and its aftermath. Most of the clippings are from the Bowling Green Sentinel-Tribune, but there are also articles from the BGSU paper, the BG News and the Toledo Blade among other area papers.
Finally, there are a grouping of photographs taken by Jim Litwin of local preparations, such as an informational table at the Woodland Mall, signs from the Unity Coalition in store windows, security preparations at the Courthouse, community attendance at the Unity Coalition Rally and Candlelight Vigil. Although there is no identification on the photographs, they are generally clear on what the subject of the shot is.
Biographical / Historical
In the spring of 1994 the Wood County Commissioners received a request from Vincent Pinette, representing the Ohio Chapter of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, with a request “to occupy the Wood County Courthouse step on Saturday June 18, 1994” to hold a rally sponsored by the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan national office and by the Realm of Ohio office.
There was immediate concern by the County Commissioners about the potential costs, social impact, legal ramifications, counter-demonstrators, and community image. Since the Courthouse was the responsibility of the County Sheriff, John Kohl, the essential decisions and operations were coordinated by his office.
Local organization was spearheaded by two Bowling Green businesspeople, Mary Ann Sandusky and Deb Pirooz. They were convinced that the best way to counter the potential of confrontation when the Klan were in town was to encourage people not to attend and to stage an alternative rally. They organized under the name Unity Coalition and gained the support of the city government, the schools, the BG Ministerial Association, and the city Human Relations Commission. The HRC, of which Jim Litwin was a member, helped organize a Community Forum to get input from local citizens.
Despite local attempts to keep the reaction to the incoming Klan low-key, there were an outside group, the National Women’s Rights Organizing Committee (NWROC), who intended to come to rally in protest at the Courthouse with the strategy to “shout down” the Klan. This approach was counter to the philosophy of the Unity Coalition, which wanted to discourage direct confrontation and was organizing an alternative rally, a candlelight vigil after the Klan left, and generally tried to make positive statements about the local community.
On the day of the Klan rally the strategy of local law enforcement was to keep the opposing groups physically separated and to get the Klan group in and out of town as expeditiously as possible. Spectators who did enter the observers’ area were subjected to strict searches. The primary group protesting was the NWROC, numbering about 20. When the Klan group was escorted in by the sheriff’s office they numbered about 11. There were incidents of taunting, deliberate baiting of the crowd by the Klan with inflammatory language. The Klan spoke for only about 25-30 minutes and then they were quickly escorted out again. The crowd remained for some time, but soon dispersed, too. For the most part the strategy of the Unity Coalition with support from the County HRC to provide a counter event and discourage participation had been successful.
Conditions Governing Access
No known access restrictions.
Language of Materials
English
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Donated by James Litwin in April 16, 2014.
Processing Information
The finding aid was compiled by Marilyn Levinson, Curator of Manuscripts in May 2014.
- Title
- Guide to the James Litwin collection (Bowling Green KKK Rally Response)
- Author
- Marilyn Levinson, Madeleine Williams
- Date
- May 2014, March 2021
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin