'' clipping Nov. 28, 1915, describing the Klan re-establishment atop Stone Mountain While recovering in 1915 after being hit by a car, Simmons decided to rebuild the Klan which he had seen depicted in the newly released film
The Birth of a Nation directed by
D. W. Griffith. He obtained a copy of the
Reconstruction Klan's "Prescript" and used it to write his own prospectus for a reincarnation of the organization. As the nucleus of his revived Klan, Simmons organized a group of friends, in addition to two elderly men who had been members of the original Klan. On Thanksgiving eve, November 25, 1915, they climbed
Stone Mountain to burn a cross and inaugurate the new group, with fifteen
charter members. The signature white robes of this new Klan also likely come from Dixon via
Birth of a Nation. In the first years of the new Klan, a few thousand members enrolled, although many more later pledged
allegiance, particularly in industrial cities of the Midwest. Initially portraying itself as another fraternal organization, the group was opposed to the new immigrants from southern and eastern Europe—who were mostly
Jews and
Roman Catholics—and anybody else who was not a native-born
Anglo-Saxon or Celtic Protestant. Simmons toured with
Roy Elonzo Davis during the 1920s during klan rallies; Davis claimed to be second in command of the Klan under Simmons. After Simmons was ousted as KKK leader by
Hiram W. Evans in 1923, he and Davis worked together to start a new
white supremacist organization called Knights of the Flaming Sword, where Simmons resumed his role as Imperial Wizard. Davis, as a high ranking Klan leader, played a key role in encouraging members to abandon Evans and remain loyal to Simmons in their new order. Traveling across the south, Davis successfully retained the loyalty of at least 60,000 Klan recruits and had secured over $150,000 ($2.3 million in 2021 dollars) ==Later life and death==