With the onset of the
American Civil War, it was difficult for the KGC to garner support for their filibustering schemes, since the South needed to expend its resources on preparing for war with the Union. Several KGC "castles" joined the Confederate Army as a group, and in early 1863 Bickley gave up his leadership of the organization to become a surgeon in a regiment from North Carolina.
Southwest In 1859, future
Confederate States Army brigadier general
Elkanah Greer established KGC castles in East
Texas and
Louisiana. Although a Unionist,
United States Senator Sam Houston introduced a resolution in the U.S. Senate in 1858 for the "United States to declare and maintain an efficient protectorate over the States of Mexico, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, and San Salvador." This measure, which supported the goal of the KGC, failed to be adopted. With the election of
Abraham Lincoln as President of the United States, the Texas KGC changed its emphasis from a plan to expand U.S. territory into Mexico to focus its efforts on providing support for the
Southern States' declared secession from the United States. On February 15, 1861,
Ben McCulloch,
United States Marshal and former
Texas Ranger, began marching toward the U.S. Army arsenal at
San Antonio, Texas, with a
cavalry force of about 550 men, about 150 of whom were Knights of the Golden Circle (KGC) from six castles. As volunteers continued to join McCulloch the following day,
United States Army Brevet Maj. Gen. David E. Twiggs surrendered the arsenal peacefully to the secessionists. Twiggs was appointed a
major general in the Confederate States Army on May 22, 1861. KGC members also figured prominently among those who, in 1861, joined Lt. Col.
John Robert Baylor in his
temporarily successful takeover of southern
New Mexico Territory. In May 1861, members of the KGC and the Confederate Rangers attacked a building that housed a pro-Union newspaper, the
Alamo Express, owned by
J. P. Newcomb, and burned it down. Other KGC members followed
Brig. Gen. Henry Hopkins Sibley on the 1862
New Mexico Campaign, which sought to bring the New Mexico Territory into the Confederate fold. Both Baylor and Trevanion Teel, Sibley's
captain of
artillery, had been among the KGC members who rode with Ben McCulloch.
North In early 1862,
Radical Republicans in the Senate, aided by Secretary of State
William H. Seward, suggested that former president
Franklin Pierce, who was exceedingly critical of the Lincoln administration's war policies, was an active member of the Knights of the Golden Circle. In an angry letter to Seward, Pierce denied that he knew anything about the KGC and demanded that his letter be made public. California Senator
Milton Latham subsequently did so when he entered the entire PierceSeward correspondence into the
Congressional Globe. Appealing to the Confederacy's friends in the North and the border states, the Order spread to
Kentucky and
Tennessee, as well as the southern parts of such Union states as
Indiana,
Ohio,
Illinois, and
Missouri. It became strongest among
Copperheads, who were Democrats who wanted to end the Civil War by a settlement with the South. Some supported slavery, and others were worried about the power of the federal government. In the summer of 1863,
Congress authorized a
military draft, which the administration soon put into operation. Leaders of the Democratic Party opposed to Abraham Lincoln's administration denounced the draft and other wartime measures, such as the arrest of seditious persons and the president's temporary suspension of the writ of
habeas corpus. During the 1863
Gettysburg campaign, scam artists in south-central
Pennsylvania sold
Pennsylvania Dutch farmers $1 (~$ in ) paper tickets purported to be from the Knights of the Golden Circle. Along with a series of secret hand gestures, these tickets were supposed to protect the horses and other possessions of ticket holders from seizure by invading Confederate soldiers. When Confederate Maj. Gen.
Jubal Early's
infantry division passed through
York County, Pennsylvania, they took what they needed anyway. They often paid with
Confederate States dollars or with drafts on the Confederate government. The
Confederate cavalry commander
J. E. B. Stuart also reported the alleged KGC tickets when documenting the campaign. That same year,
Asbury Harpending and
California members of the Knights of the Golden Circle in San Francisco outfitted the schooner
J. M. Chapman as a Confederate
privateer in
San Francisco Bay, with the object of raiding commerce on the Pacific Coast and capturing gold shipments to the East Coast. Their attempt was detected and they were seized on the night of their intended departure.
Reorganization In late 1863, the KGC reorganized as the
Order of American Knights. In 1864, it became the
Order of the Sons of Liberty, with the Ohio politician
Clement L. Vallandigham, the most prominent of the Copperheads, as its supreme commander. In most areas, only a minority of its membership was radical enough to discourage enlistments, resist the draft, and shield deserters. The organization held numerous peace meetings. A few agitators, some encouraged by Southern money, talked of a revolt in the
Old Northwest intending to end the war. In some cases, Sons of Liberty members were imprisoned, deported, or tried by military tribunal and sentenced to death for their activities. Among the many acts of
guerrilla warfare attributed to the Sons of Liberty were the burning of the
Walnut Ridge Friends Meetinghouse in
Rush County, Indiana in 1864 and the
Northwest Conspiracy, which plotted
regime change uprisings aimed at forcibly bringing Iowa, Ohio, Illinois, and Indiana into the Confederacy. ==Influence==