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Thomas Dixon Jr.

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Thomas F. Dixon Jr.
Born(1864-01-11)January 11, 1864
Shelby, North Carolina, United States
DiedApril 3, 1946(1946-04-03) (aged 82)
Raleigh, North Carolina, United States
OccupationNovelist, playwright, minister, state legislator, lecturer
NationalityAmerican
GenreFiction
Literary movementAmerican Romanticism

Thomas F. Dixon, Jr. (January 11, 1864 – April 3, 1946) was a Southern Baptist minister, playwright, lecturer, North Carolina state legislator, lawyer, and author, perhaps best known for writing The Clansman — which was to become the inspiration for D. W. Griffith's film, The Birth of a Nation (1915).

Early years

He was born in Shelby, North Carolina, the son of Thomas F. Dixon and Amanda Elvira McAfee.

His father was a farmer and Baptist minister. As a young man, his father inherited a number of slaves from his first wife's father. Dixon, Sr., while not an abolitionist, did not want to own slaves himself. At one point he was offered US $100,000 for his slaves, but he declined the offer, worried that their new owner might mistreat them.[1]

In his adolescence Dixon helped out on the family farm, an experience that he hated, but that he later would say helped him to relate to the plight of the working man.[2] Dixon grew up during Reconstruction following the Civil War. The government confiscation of farm land, the corruption of local politicians, and particularly the vengefulness of Federal troops coupled with the general lawlessness of the time all helped to shape young Dixon into a staunch opponent of what he called one of history's greatest tragedies.[3]

Among Dixon's earliest memories, and perhaps his most important, was a woman who pleaded for his family's help. She was the widow of a Confederate soldier who served under Dixon's uncle, Col. Leroy McAfee. She claimed that a black man had raped her daughter. Public outrage was extremely high with the Civil War still fresh in the minds of most Southerners. That night the Ku Klux Klan hanged and repeatedly shot the alleged rapist in the town square.[4] Dixon's mother commented to him that "The Klan are our people—they're guarding us from harm."[5] It was a moment that etched itself into Dixon's memory; he felt that the Klan's actions were justified, and that desperate times called for desperate measures.

Dixon's father, Thomas Dixon, Sr., and his uncle Leroy McAfee, both joined the Ku Klux Klan early in its history with the aim of "bringing order" to the tumultuous times, and Col. McAfee even attained the rank of Chief of the Klan of the Piedmont area of North Carolina.[5] But, after witnessing the corruption and scandal involved in the Klan they would both dissolve their affiliation with the group and attempt to disband it within their region.[6]

Frontispiece to the first edition of Dixon's The Clansman.

Education

In 1877, Dixon entered the Shelby Academy, where he earned a diploma in only two years. In September 1879 Dixon enrolled at Wake Forest where he studied history and political science. As a student there, Dixon performed remarkably well, and in 1883, after only four years, Dixon earned a masters degree. His record at Wake Forest was outstanding, and he earned the distinction of achieving the highest student honors ever awarded at the university to that date.[7] While a student there, he was a founding member of their chapter of Kappa Alpha Order fraternity.[8] Following his graduation from Wake Forest, Dixon received a scholarship to attend the Johns Hopkins University political science program. Here he met and befriended future President Woodrow Wilson.[9] On January 11, 1884, despite the objections of his friend Woodrow Wilson, Dixon left Johns Hopkins University to pursue an education and a career on the stage.

Dixon headed to New York City and enrolled in the Frobisher School to study drama. As an actor, Dixon's physical appearance became a problem - he was six foot three inches tall but only weighed 150 pounds, making for a very lanky appearance. One producer remarked that because of his appearance Dixon would not succeed as an actor, but he complimented Dixon for his intelligence and attention to detail and recommended that Dixon put his love for the stage into scriptwriting.[10] Despite the compliment, Dixon returned home to North Carolina in shame.

Upon his return to Shelby, Dixon quickly realized that he was in the wrong place to begin to cultivate his playwriting skills. After his initial disappointment from his Frobisher rejection Dixon, with the encouragement of his father, enrolled in the Greensboro Law School in Greensboro, North Carolina. An excellent student, Dixon received his law degree in 1885.[11]

Political career

It was during law school that Dixon's father convinced Thomas Jr. to enter politics. After graduation, Dixon ran for the local seat in the North Carolina General Assembly. Despite being only twenty years of age and not even old enough to vote for himself, he won the election by a two-to-one margin, a victory that was attributed to his masterful oratory skills.[12] Dixon retired from politics in 1886 after only one term in the legislature. He said that he was disgusted by the corruption and the back-door deals of the lawmakers, and he is quoted as referring to politicians as "the prostitutes of the masses."[13] However short, Dixon's political career gained him popularity throughout the South for his championing of Confederate veterans' rights.[14]

Following his career in politics, Dixon practiced private law for a short time, but he would find little satisfaction as a lawyer and he would soon leave the profession to become a minister.

Ministry and lecturing

Dixon was ordained as a Baptist minister on October 6, 1886, with his first practice in Greensboro, where he had attended law school.[15] Church records show that in October 1886 Dixon moved to the parsonage at 125 South John Street in Goldsboro, NC to serve as the Pastor of the First Baptist Church. Already a lawyer and fresh out of Wake Forest Seminary, life in Goldsboro must not have been what young Dixon had been expecting for a first preaching assignment. The social upheaval that Dixon portrays in his later works was largely melded through Dixon’s experiences in the crucible that was post-war Wayne County during reconstruction. General Sherman’s army seized the Goldsboro railroad hub at the end of their march through the south, and Union troops occupied it for years after the war. Local author James Monroe Hollowell's Wartime Reminiscences gives detailed accounts of troops committing numerous war crimes against the population. Newly paroled confederates returning to Wayne County became Klansmen to combat the “reign of terror” by the black troops. On April 10, 1887 Dixon moved to the Second Baptist Church in Raleigh, North Carolina. His popularity rose quickly, and before long he was offered a position at the Dudley Street Church in Boston, Massachusetts. As his popularity on the pulpit grew, so did his demand as a lecturer.[15] While preaching in Boston, Dixon was asked to give the commencement address at Wake Forest University. Additionally, he was offered a possible honorary doctorate from the university. Dixon himself rejected the offer, but he sang high praises about a relative unknown who Dixon believed deserved the honor, his old friend Woodrow Wilson.[16] A reporter at Wake Forest who heard Dixon's praises of Wilson put a story on the national wire, giving Wilson his first national exposure.[16]

In August 1889, Dixon accepted a post in New York City, despite the fact that his Boston congregation was willing to double his pay if he would stay.[17] In New York, Dixon would preach at new heights, bumping elbows with the likes of John D. Rockefeller and Theodore Roosevelt (who he helped in a campaign for New York Governor).[17] Sometime in the next five years, however, Dixon became disillusioned with the church, and he began to believe that he could no longer belong to any particular denomination. So, in 1895, Dixon resigned from the Baptist ministry, and started preaching at a nondenominational church. He continued preaching there until 1899 when he began to lecture full-time.

It was on the lecture circuit that Dixon found his niche. He enjoyed the work tremendously, and he was often hailed as the best lecturer in the nation.[18] He gained an immense following throughout the country, and particularly in the South, where he played up his speeches on the plight of the working man, and the horrors of Reconstruction.[19] It was during such a lecture tour that Dixon attended a theatrical version of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin. Dixon could hardly contain his anger and outrage at the play; it is said that he literally "wept at [the play's] misrepresentation of southerners."[20] Dixon vowed that the "true story" of the South should be told. As a direct result of this experience, Dixon wrote his first novel The Leopard's Spots (1902), which employs several characters, including Simon Legree, recycled from Stowe's novel.[18]

Writings

"I thank God that there is not to-day the clang of a single slave's chain in this continent. Slavery may have had its beneficent aspects, but democracy is the destiny of the race, because all men are bound together in the bonds of fraternal equality with common love."

-Thomas Dixon, Jr., 1896 from Protestantism and Its Causes New York[5]

"...no amount of education of any kind, industrial, classical or religious, can make a Negro a white man or bridge the chasm of centuries which separate him from the white man in the evolution of human nature."

-Thomas Dixon, Jr., 1905 from Booker T. Washington and the Negro p. 1, Saturday Evening Post, August 19, 1905[21]

Dixon viewed Southern black America with contempt. Later in his life it is possible to view personalized yet softer contradictory statements in his writings regarding African-Americans.

His "Trilogy of Reconstruction" consisted of The Leopard's Spots, The Clansman (1905), and The Traitor (1907). In these best-selling novels, which presented highly imaginative fiction as hard historical fact, Dixon used historical romance to present Negroes as inferior to whites and to glorify the antebellum American South. While he opposed slavery, he believed in racial segregation.[22] Dixon also wrote about the evils of socialism, particularly expressed in his trilogy: The One Woman (1903), Comrades (1909), and The Root of Evil (1911), which also discusses some of the problems involved in modern industrial capitalism. In 1919, the book Comrades was made into a motion picture titled Bolshevism on Trial. In the play, The Sins of the Father, which was produced in 1910-11, Dixon himself played the leading role. His photoplay, The Birth of a Nation, appeared in 1915. Thomas Dixon's writings are often quoted by White Supremacist organizations today.

Dixon was the author of 22 novels; additionally, he wrote many plays, sermons, and works of nonfiction. He also wrote some film scripts. His writing mostly centered around three major themes: (1) the need for racial purity; (2) the evils of socialism; and (3) the necessity of a stable family with a traditional role for the wife/mother.[23] A common theme found in his novels is violence against white woman, mostly, though not always by a Southern black man. These crimes are almost always avenged through the course of the story, the source of which might (citation needed) stem from a belief of Dixon's that his mother was sexually abused as a child.[24] He wrote his last novel, The Flaming Sword, in 1939 and not long after he was crippled by a cerebral hemorrhage.[25]

Attitudes toward revived Klan

While never abandoning his belief in white supremacy, Dixon was not enthusiastic about the revived second era Ku Klux Klan. He felt it was bigoted and in no way resembled the reconstruction Klan. He called antisemitism "idiocy", noting that the mother of Jesus was Jewish and lauded the loyalty and good citizenship of Catholics. He also felt it was the duty of whites to "lift up and help the weaker races".[26]

Family life

Dixon and his first wife Harriet

Dixon married his first wife Harriet Bussey on 3 March 1886. His wife and he were forced to elope to Montgomery, Alabama, after Bussey's father refused to give his consent.[27] Dixon and Harriet Bussey had three children together: Thomas III, Louise, and Gordon. Following a career of major ups and downs that saw Dixon earn and lose millions, Dixon ended his career as a court clerk in Raleigh, North Carolina.[28] Harriet died on 29 December 1937. Fourteen months later, on 26 February 1939 Dixon suffered a crippling cerebral hemorrhage.[29] Less than a month later, from his hospital bed, Dixon married Madelyn Donovan, an actress who had played a role in a film adaptation of one of his novels.[29] Dixon is buried with his second wife Madelyn in Sunset Cemetery in Shelby, North Carolina. His gravestone reads: "Thomas Dixon Jr. 1864-1946 Lawyer-Minister-Author-Orator-Playwright-Actor A Native of Cleveland County and Most Distinguished Son of His Generation. -- He was the author of 28 books dealing with the reconstruction period. The most popular of which were 'The Clansman' and 'The Leopard's Spots,' from which 'The Birth of a Nation' was dramatized. -- His Wife Madelyn Donovan 1894-1975."[30]

His brother, the popular preacher Amzi Clarence Dixon, was famous for helping to edit The Fundamentals, a series of articles (and later volumes) influential in fundamentalist Christianity.

List of works

  • The Leopard's Spots (1902) (Part 1 of the trilogy)
  • The One Woman (1903)
  • The Clansman (1905) (Part 2 of the trilogy)
  • The Life Worth Living (1905)
  • The Traitor (1907) (Part 3 of the trilogy)
  • Comrades (1909)
  • The Root of Evil (1911)
  • The Sins of the Father (1912)
  • The Southerner: A Romance of the Real Lincoln (1913)
  • The Victim: A Romance of the Real Jefferson Davis (1914)
  • The Foolish Virgin (1915)
  • The Fall of a Nation (1916)
  • The Way of a Man (1918)
  • A Man of the People (1920)
  • The Man in Gray (1921)
  • The Flaming Sword (1939)

References

Notes
  1. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon pp. 21-22; Gillespie, Thomas Dixon, Jr., and the Birth of Modern America
  2. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 23; Gillespie, Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America
  3. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon, pp. 22-27
  4. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 23
  5. ^ a b c Roberts, p. 202
  6. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 25; Gillespie, Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America
  7. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon, Pg. 34
  8. ^ History and catalogue of the Kappa Alpha fraternity. Kappa Alpha Order, Chi Chapter: 228. 1891 http://books.google.com/books?id=4eESAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA228&lpg=PA228&dq=thomas+dixon+kappa+alpha+wake+forest&source=bl&ots=V5DqDFrPEQ&sig=wbFuwg56zV3vXu5SlOeBZhHEebk&hl=en&sa=X&ei=BLOvUMK2EuXS2gXQlYCQBQ&ved=0CEoQ6AEwBg#v=onepage&q=thomas%20dixon%20kappa%20alpha%20wake%20forest&f=false. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  9. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon, pg. 34; Gillespie, Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America; Williamson, A Rage for Order: Black-White Relations in the American South Since Emancipation
  10. ^ Gillespie, Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America; Slide, American Racist: The Life and Films of Thomas Dixon
  11. ^ Gillespie, Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America
  12. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 36; Gillespie, Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America
  13. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 38
  14. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 38-39
  15. ^ a b Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 40 Cite error: The named reference "ref13" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  16. ^ a b Cook, Thomas Dixon, pg. 41 Cite error: The named reference "ref15" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  17. ^ a b Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 42
  18. ^ a b Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 51 Cite error: The named reference "ref18" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  19. ^ Slide, American Racist: The Life and Films of Thomas Dixon
  20. ^ Slide, p. 25
  21. ^ Roberts, p. 204
  22. ^ Gillespie, Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America; Slide, American Racist: The Life and Films of Thomas Dixon, p. 27
  23. ^ Cook, Raymond A. Fire from the Flint: The Amazing Careers of Thomas Dixon (1968)
  24. ^ Slide, p. 30
  25. ^ Gillespie, Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America; Davenport, F. Garvin. Journal of Southern History: August 1970
  26. ^ The New, Y. T. (1946, Apr 04). Thomas dixon dies; wrote 'clansman'. New York Times (1923-Current File), pp. 23. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/107437551?accountid=5683
  27. ^ Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 39
  28. ^ Gillespie, Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America; Davenport, Journal of Southern History: August 1970; New York Times, April 17, 1934. p.19, Dixon Penniless; $1,250,000 Gone
  29. ^ a b Cook, Thomas Dixon, p. 128 Cite error: The named reference "ref26" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  30. ^ "Thomas Dixon's headstone at FindAGrave.com". Retrieved 2007-02-07.
Bibliography
  • Cook, Raymond A. Thomas Dixon pp. 21–22, Twayne Publications, Inc., 1974. ISBN 0-8057-0206-7
  • Gilmore, Glenda Elizabeth. Gender and Jim Crow: Women and the Politics of White Supremacy in North Carolina, 1986-1920. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1996. ISBN 0-8078-2287-6
  • Gillespie, Michele K. and Hall, Randal L. Thomas Dixon Jr. and the Birth of Modern America, Louisiana State University Press, 2006. ISBN 0-8071-3130-X
  • Williamson, Joel. A Rage for Order: Black-White Relations in the American South Since Emancipation, Oxford, 1986. ISBN 0-19-504025-2
  • Slide, Anthony American Racist: The Life and Films of Thomas Dixon University Press of Kentucky, 2004. ISBN 0-8131-2328-3
  • Roberts, Samuel K. Kelly Miller and Thomas Dixon, Jr. on Blacks in American Civilization, pp. 202–209, Phlyon, Vol. 41, No. 2 (2nd Quarter 1980)
  • Davenport, F. Garvin, Jr. Thomas Dixon's Mythology of Southern History, pp. 350–367, The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 36, No. 3 (August 1970)
  • McGee, Brian R. Thomas Dixon's The Clansman: Radicals, Reactionaries, and the Anticipated Utopia, pp. 300–317, Southern Communication Journal, Vol. 65 (2000)
  • McGee, Brian R. The Argument from Definition Revised: Race and Definition in the Progressive Era, pp. 141–158, Argumentation and Advocacy, Vol. 35 (1999)


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