The sudden growth of the Klan in the 1920s in Maine followed national trends, but was particularly strong in comparison to Klan activity elsewhere in the Northeast. Partly it revived much older Protestant/Irish-Catholic divisions, but it was mainly fueled by a newer wave of Catholic French-Canadian immigrants who worked mainly in Maine's textile mill cities, such as
Lewiston,
Saco,
Biddeford,
Brunswick, etc., and Italian, Polish, Lithuanians, and other mostly Catholic immigrants who went to work in paper mills in northern Maine cities like
Millinocket and
Rumford. Irish Catholics had also made gains in municipal politics, along with a small urban Jewish community, while rural areas had declined at the expense of a few cities such as
Portland,
Bangor, and
Lewiston. Maine's small African-American communities in Portland and Bangor had formed NAACP chapters in 1920, and the one in Bangor had protested against the third local showing of the Klan-themed film
The Birth of a Nation, successfully negotiating with a local theatre-owner to edit out the most provocative scene. Klanishness was on the mind of the people of
Ellsworth, Maine as early as 1919 when 30 residents staged a surprise party for a friend. The party was all dressed in Klan regalia when they surprised their friends, Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Worden. They unrobed for the party, but dressed back up in their white hoods to walk home, according to the
Ellsworth American. In 1921, a member of the
Boston University baseball team for injured
WWI Veterans,
Harry E Stumcke, was targeted in a nonviolent property crime during his summer camp stay in Ellsworth. The article reads "Six men, signing themselves 'the silent six,' and working along the plans of the Ku Klux Klan, visited the Macomber Estate on Franklin Street on Sunday evening. The party worked quietly and upset completely the room occupied by Harry E. Stumcke, a star of the B.U. nine. None of Mr. Stumcke's property was taken." It is unclear why Mr. Stumcke was targeted as he does not seem to have been Catholic, Jewish, an immigrant, or Black. The King Kleagle (chief recruiter) of the Maine Klan was the charismatic
F. Eugene Farnsworth, a former barber, stage magician (or hypnotist, accounts differ), and failed motion picture studio owner. Farnsworth was born in the eastern Maine town of
Columbia Falls, but traveled widely outside the state, and likely returned to Maine as an employee of the national Klan organization. Beginning in 1922–23 Farnsworth began a statewide speaking tour that drew huge crowds—from 1,000 to even 5,000 at a time—many of whom were afterward inducted into the secret society after paying a $10 membership fee. Farnsworth would usually share the stage with a Protestant minister, and they would rail against what they perceived as growing Catholic political power in Maine. Besides existential targets like the Pope, the Jesuits, and the
Knights of Columbus, they specifically attacked the growth of Maine's Catholic school system, as well as the presence of Catholics (and Jews) on public school boards. They credited this last development with "taking the Bible out of schools", as the Catholic population increasingly objected to the reading of the
King James Bible in state-supported classrooms. ==The Klan and the Portland referendum of 1923==