As I have been working to tell the story of the Ku Klux Klan in Queens in the 1920s, one continual challenge has been that the most basic facts about the Klan in New York are mostly impossible to come by. While some members of the Klan, especially their leaders, operated in the open and even spoke out in public in ways that were documented in newspapers, the vast majority were silent and wished to remain hidden. Despite the terroristic iconography that surely appealed to young radical Protestants, most casual members seeking to maintain their status in polite society wore masks so no one would know who they were.
The famously secretive group was so villainous that most people didn’t list membership in the obituaries of loved ones; few kept evidence of participation and now a century has passed. We have scattered reports about Klan activity, but not often do those reports include information about the unit or chapter, sometimes referred to as a klavern.
Besides just making the work of scholars difficult, the lack of evidence as to the nature of the organization, as well as its reach, leads to misunderstandings. When Fred Trump’s association with the Klan was in the news during the 2016 election cycle (reportedly detained by police at the Klan riot in Jamaica in 1927), that his name does not appear in the only surviving membership list from a Queens KKK klavern from 1923 was taken as evidence that he was not a member of the Klan in 1927. In reality, there were several Klan units operating in Queens in 1927, most of which were not in existence in 1923. Besides, not being a member of one is not evidence that he was not a member of another. This confusion stems from the basic lack of information about what the situation was at the time.
The earliest known Klan unit in New York was Albert Pike Klan, No. 1 in New York City, reported to have been chartered in February 1921. There is evidence it was still in existence when the Klan had its corporate status in New York revoked in 1946. At that time, New York State Attorney General Nathaniel Goldstein released a report claiming there had been eight klaverns in Queens in the 1920s. Doing my own research, I found several more than that. Although information becomes scarce by 1936, several units continued operations into the 1940s, including No. 1, Brooklyn No. 2 and others in Queens and Long Island.
Of the more than 200 units listed here, it is not clear how active many of them were. Given the benchmarks required for receiving a charter from Atlanta, even the smallest unit would have had to have been large enough to receive formal authorization to organize under the corporate banner of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, Inc. The larger units in Queens had several hundred members each. One of them likely topped 1000.
But information about most Klan units is likely gone forever. In presenting this list, I make no claims, offer no warranties. I will update this document with information about each klavern as it becomes available, improving the information and its value for others. In all likelihood there are no false positives here. There certainly are errors in this list: errors of omission, to be sure, but other kinds also. In some cases, it is unclear exactly when a certain unit was in operation or given the way the some were named and subsequently identified, there are likely some duplicates.
This list contains provisional units, an issue because provisional Klans — groups that organized under the auspices of the provincial (or district) leadership while waiting for formal charter from Atlanta — often took different numbers upon gaining official recognition. Sometimes provisional Klans are described as such, but perhaps not always? It’s a question. Some, like the provisional unit in North Hempstead, never received a charter and why is part of the story.
Adding to the confusion, popular units in some areas were subdivided to create new ones, while weaker, smaller groups were consolidated. These interventions, usually initiated “from above,” were not always wanted, and that is part of the drama. Of course, there were most assuredly other units, traces of which have yet to be found. Although this list strives towards “definitive” and “clarity,” these ambitions are aspirational, I’m afraid, and so the information presented here needs to be understood in context.
For example, Jamaica had No. 5, which merged with Richmond Hill 30, to create Richmond Hill 83. But Jamaica also had 38 and 41. Richmond Hill had 359, which may have been provisional, and also 235, which was sometimes called Queens County 235. Later there was Queens County 254, also known as Lincoln Klan 254 and also Ridgewood, but it’s not clear if there was any relation to 359 or 235, or if it they met in Richmond Hill or Ridgewood—it’s likely they met in both places during the years it operated. No. 83 turns up in news reports into the 1930s, as does No. 38. Some of the people at the center of the KKK in Queens seem to have associations with all of these units, and that’s part of the story. Jamaica 41 met in Woodhaven and it may be for that reason that AG Goldstein claimed that Woodhaven had been home to a unit.
The information contained in the list cannot adequately represent the dynamic nature of the Klan’s operations in New York in the 20s and 30s—but the long term goal of making this list public and continuing to add to it is to try to represent that dynamism. It is important to remember that not all these units existed at the same time. Some were ephemeral, never got firmly established and disappeared quickly. Others were large and shrank suddenly, as members became disillusioned or were purged. Maine No. 23, for example, lost most of its membership all at once as they unloaded deadbeat members. Klan activity remained strong into the 30s in that part of New York State, but what happened to Maine No. 23 is a mystery.
In addition, this list does not include places that were reported to have units, but where no evidence of one can be found. For example, other than Goldstein’s report, I have found no other mention of a Woodhaven unit, even as I have found more than eight, including several in Richmond Hill, Jamaica, Glendale, and so on. Therefore, I have not included Woodhaven on the list, even if hundreds of men from Woodhaven were members of the Klan and even if one unit—Jamaica No. 41—happened to meet in Woodhaven. I have only listed provisional or chartered lodges, or klaverns, not where Klansmen or women were from.
Over the course of my research I have only half-heartedly tracked units of Tri-K Girls and the Junior Klan. Because of that, information about the involvement of youth and children will have to be added later. Sadly, there is plenty of it. These groups existed presumably everywhere the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan Inc. was active. And while references to these groups in Glendale, Queens, and Roosevelt, Long Island, are more considerable, in other places they are mentioned only in passing—hard to add to a list in that case. New York Klanswoman in March 1929 lists Bellmore, Freeport, Valley Stream and Hempstead as having Tri-K Klubs present at a “rally” at Triangle Hall in Hempstead. To ignore them is a mistake, however. In South Ozone Park, the Junior Klan matured and sought a charter as a regular Klan unit, which it received. While documenting these youth groups is awkward, it is a useful if imperfect measure of the strength of the Klan in the areas where they operated. This is also true of the American Krusaders, the organization for “foreign-born” Klan allies. Of course, the women’s units—WKKK—are included here because their organizational work was an integral part of the movement and in some places seems to have outpaced that of men. The large number of WKKK chapters included here is testament to that but it is by no means a complete list.
Also listed is Klanhaven, an orphanage in Mannsville, New York, one of three operated by the KKK (the others were in Texas and Pennsylvania). Mannsville is also listed as the location of a klavern, a separate organization with its own charter. Klanhaven is important because lists giving credit to individuals and klaverns for contributing financial support were a feature included in the NY Klan press, New York Klanswoman especially. The delicious irony!
There are a couple of local lodges listed from the breakaway faction known initially as the Independent Klan of America, based in Muncie, Indiana. For now, this only includes a chapter in Lockport and another in Richmond Hill, Queens, a women’s unit known as Betsy Ross No. 1. Where there is nothing to indicate otherwise, groups listed here were dues paying members of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, based in Atlanta.
This list of the KKK units in New York was assembled using archival sources, newspaper articles, and Klan publications. Despite the relative rarity, there is some information out there to find and it can be uncovered with persistent searching. Local newspapers of the period usually covered the Klan, often with tacit approval, some going so far as to publish advertisements and notices of events. A few research libraries and historical societies hold the fragmentary remnants of particular klaverns. From time to time, evidence appears, whether dumped in the middle of the night or donated with acknowledgement.
I will add source information later (and will gladly provide it upon request) and am considering a variety of means of representing how and where I found what I know. A most important resource for scholars seeking to analyze Klan discourse and culture is Reveal Digital, part of ITHAKA, where they have digitized some of the many Klan and Klan-allied newspapers and magazines. Many of these publications were printed without concern for unintended audiences one hundred years in the future. Most of what I have found came from scouring the pages of New York Klanswoman, the Kourier, and the Fellowship Forum. Most of the work on this list was done last year and I have yet to integrate some information I have found in other publications and archival resources since.
Scholars at Virginia Commonwealth University have created Mapping the Second Ku Klux Klan 1915-1940, an invaluable visualization that pins each klavern on a map of the United States, making plain just just how far and wide the Klan had spread beyond its origins in the deep south. I found the VCU project while I was working on my list and it was an invaluable boost to my work. As I have since found many more units, I offer my work as supplement and addition to theirs, and hope that others will comment or reach out to further the discussion—and the work.
In addition to the stories I’ve discovered and am “writing up,” I have other documents like this in development, including a list of Klan meeting places in New York City, a list of Klan-associated pastors and churches, and more. If you have any questions, any leads or information, corrections or would just like to talk about all this, please let me know.
Joel Steven Kuszai
Associate Professor of English
Queensborough Community College
The City University of New York
Contact: http://cuny.is/kuszai
Please note: this document is a work progress.
First posted: January 12, 2023
Last Updated: December 3, 2023
New York State Klan Units 1921-1946
Akron, No. 76
VCU locates No. 76 in Clarence.
Akron, No. 88
WKKK
Albany, No. 108
WKKK
Albany, No. 79
Amityville, Nathan Hale Klan No. 43
Amityville
WKKK
Astoria, No. 401
Active at least in early 1930s; Met at Fessler’s Hall in Astoria.
Auburn, No 7
WKKK
Auburn, No. 88
Aurelius
Described as provisional (Vigilance, 5 July 1924).
Babylon, No. 4
Received charter in early 1924
Babylon
WKKK
Baisley Park
This group bought an ad in a dinner program and that suggests it was a provisional unit in 1927, though no other mentions have been found. Baisley Park was an important location for Klan rallies at the time.
Baldwin
WKKK
Bath, No. 65
Bayshore, No. 248
Bayshore
WKKK
Beacon, No. 202
Beacon, No. 69
Beacon, Unity Klan No. 5
WKKK
Bellaire, No. 118
Leadership from Jamaica, Springfield Gardens and Queens Village.
Bellmore
Provisional? Met at Mohrman’s Hall twice per month late 20s/early 30s.
Binghamton, No. 45
Binghamton, No. 40
WKKK
Bloomingdale, Saranac Lake Klan No. 224
Breesport
Brewster, Lone Eagle Klan No. 109
Bridgewater, No. 97
Bronx, No. 146
WKKK
Brooklyn, No. 2
Said to be one of the largest klaverns among New York Klans. Survived well into the 1940s. Met at the Brooklyn Traffic Court, long after it was a scandal in early 1923.
Brooklyn, No. 35
WKKK
Brooklyn, Kamp No. 5
American Krusaders
Brooklyn, Kamp No. 8
American Krusaders women
Buffalo, Queen City Klan No. 89
WKKK
Buffalo, Austin Klan No. 145
Buffalo, No. 154
Buffalo, No. 194
Buffalo, Allegiance Klan No. 113
Cameron, No. 98
Canastota, No. 13
WKKK
Candor
Said to have had a meeting and initiated members (Vigilance, 5 July 1924)
Canisteo, No. 68
Carthage, No. 50
WKKK
Carthage, Four Square Klan No. 253
Catskill, No. 319
Catskill, Sleepy Hollow Club
WKKK
Catskill, Ever Ready Club
WKKK
Cazenovia, No. 99
Chatham, Friendly Daughters Klan No. 56
WKKK
Chatham, No. 50
Coeymans Hollow No 116
College Point, No. 160
WKKK
Corning, No. 43
Corning, No. 64
Cortland No. 24
Identified as “Kortland Klan No. 24” in Vigilance (Vigilance, 4 April 1924).
Cortland, No. 252
Delanson, Fellowship Klan No. 152
Delmar, No. 473
Deposit, No. 12
DeRuyter, No. 105
Dormansville, No 116
WKKK
Dormansville, No 229
229 was also at times described as from Selkirk, a short drive away. Likely the same unit at different times.
Dryden
Eastport
One of the Klans that contributed to the family of slain Ferdinand Downs (Vigilance, 31 October 1924).
East Quogue
One of the Klans that contributed to the family of slain Ferdinand Downs (Vigilance, 31 October 1924).
Elmira, No 23
Elmira, No. 30
WKKK
Endicott, No 25
WKKK
Endicott, No. 34
Endicott, No. 213
Perhaps provisional. It was reported in Vigilance, an official publication of the New York State Klan in Binghamton that No. 213 made three donations on March 30, one to the Ideal Congregational Church during the evening service and two to “families where the presence of sickness had brought about a dire need of financial assistance” (Vigilance, 4 April 1924).
Fair Haven, Sterling Klan No. 93
Falconer, No. 174
Farmingdale, No. 5
Flatbush, No. 476
Floral Park, No. 124
Floral Park
WKKK
Flushing No. 36
Chartered in 1926 and active for about ten years.
Flushing, No. 40
Flushing, No. 46
WKKK
Fredonia
(NY Klanswoman, January 1929; Vigilance, September 26, 1924)
Freeport, No. 10
(SCHS Box 1 folder 9; WC)
Freeport, No. 42
WKKK (NY Klanswoman, October 1930)
Fulton, No. 79
WKKK
Fulton, No. 125
Fulton, Tri-K No. 2
Tri-K clubs for girls were more widespread than this list would suggest.
Geneva, Red Jacket Klan
Geneva, No. 26
WKKK
Glendale/Ridgewood, No. 78
Sometimes referred to as Glenridge.
Glendale/Ridgewood, No. 360
Likely provisional.
Glenfield, No. 126
Greig, NY
Glens Falls, No. 423
Glens Falls, Mohican Klan, No 153
Glens Falls
WKKK
Gloversville, Virginia Dare Klan No. 131
WKKK
Grand Island, No. 3
Great Valley, Salamanca Klan
Greenport, No. 44
If No. 44 was chartered by then, it was the unit from Greenport that contributed to the family of slain Ferdinand Downs (Vigilance, 31 October 1924).
Greenport
WKKK
Groton
Hamburg, No 103
WKKK
Hamilton, No. 127
Hampton Bays
One of the Klans that contributed to the family of slain Ferdinand Downs (Vigilance, 31 October 1924).
Hancock, No 17
Harmony, No. 225 (Met in Jamaica, leadership from Ozone Park and Glendale)*
Harpursville, No 21
Haverstraw, No. 191
Hempstead, No. 36
Described as “Provisional Klan, No. 36 of Hempstead” in Vigilance (22 August 1924). 36 was chartered by Flushing in 1926. This unit likely became 47.
Hempstead, No. 47
AKA Unity Klan No. 47
Hempstead, No. 44
WKKK
Hempstead, Women of Clover Kamp No. 4
American Krusaders women
Herkimer, No. 260
Hicksville, No. 238
Hicksville, No 43
WKKK
Hollis
Provisional; met at the Masonic Temple in Hollis, Queens.
Hornell, No. 17
(likely WKKK) (NY Klanswoman, January 1929; May 1930; October 1930)
Hornell, No. 63
Horseheads, Newton Klan No. 19
Huntington, No. 28
Huntington, No. 45
WKKK
Ilion, No. 138
WKKK
Ilon, No. 179
Ilion, Mohawk Valley Klan No. 246
Inwood, Far Rockaway Klan No. 35
Internal documents from a Klan meeting in Queens in 1923 describe a “Mr. Jones” (possibly early Long Island organizer Pop Jones) from “Inwood #3,” but that number conflicts with info suggesting #3 belonged to Grand Island unit (between Buffalo and Niagara Falls), though that unit was most likely chartered a few years later.
Inwood, No. 53
WKKK
Islip, Kamp No. 7
American Krusaders
Ithaca, Tompkins County Klan, No 161
(NY Klanswoman, October 1930) A report in Vigilance in October 1924 suggests there was a klavern of Klansmen and a klavern of women local to the Varna Methodist Church in Ithaca, where they made a donation and helped fundraise to send Rev. DeWitt Myers to the Methodist Conference. Some references to Tompkins County appear to refer to a larger federation of units.
Jamaica, No. 38
Understood to have had over one thousand members. From 1927 to c. 1930 it was known as Emmett D. Smith Klan No. 38.
Jamaica, No. 41
Sometimes Called Queens County 41, it met at a masonic temple in Woodhaven
Jamaica, No. 5
The low number suggests it was one of the earliest to organize in Queens. Early in 1924 it merged with Richmond Hill No. 30 to become Richmond Hill No. 83.
Jamaica, No. 47
WKKK
Jamaica, Molly Pitcher Club
The Kourier in September 1931 describes them as a WKKK unit from Jamaica, Queens, but earlier references to them in 1926 (Fellowship Forum) and 1928 (Long Island Daily Press). Possible this is the same unit as No. 47 above.
Jamaica, Kamp No. 1
American Krusaders
Jamaica, Martha Washington Kamp. No. 3
American Krusader Women
Jamestown Klan
Jay, Lake Placid Klan No. 230
Johnson City, No. 242
AKA Binghamton, No. 242 and Herbert Hoover Klan No. 242. Distinct from Johnson City No. 242 WKKK.
Johnson City, No. 242
WKKK
Kingston
400-500 men were reported to have attended a by-invitation organizational meeting in August 1924 (Vigiliance, 22 August 1924).
Kitchiwan Ladies
Possibly Westchester?
Lancaster, Harmony No. 102
WKKK
Lake Grove, No. 29
Lake Grove
WKKK
Liberty, No 12
WKKK
Lindenhurst
Had received charter by March 1924.
Livingston Manor
(Vigilance, 12 September 1924)
Livonia, No. 109
(Vigilance, 9 August 1924)
Lockport
Independent Klan of America
Lock City Klan, No. 18
Lockport?
Lockport, No. 134
Locust Valley
Locust Valley, No 126
WKKK
Long Island City, No. 247
Ludlowville
Lynbrook, No. 8
Lynbrook
WKKK
Lynbrook, No. 14
It was reported by Vigilance that Lynbrook celebrated its charter on July 28, 1924. Vigilance 9 August 1924), But No. 14 was also in Millport. (NY Klanswoman, October 1930) so some confusion there to resolve.
Madison County, United Klan, No 106
Maine, No. 13
Manhasset, No. 211
Mannsville, Adams Klan No. 215
Mannsville, Klanhaven orphanage
Most of what we know about the the NYS Klan is because contributions by individuals and local chapters of KKKK and WKKK to Klanhaven were recorded in Klan publications.
Maspeth, No. 116
Met in Woodside, Elmhurst and also Corona.
Massena, Power City Klan No. 212
Mattituck
According to Klan Kraft, April 8, 1924, a unit from Mattituck was at a rally at Jamesport on March 25.
Mechanicsville
WKKK
Mexico
Middletown, No. 37
WKKK
Middletown, No. 147
Midland, No. 72
Staten Island (AKA “Ridgewood Klan” (see VCU)
Millport, No 14
In a town that was reported to be about 60% membership in the Klan, there were both KKKK and WKKK units. Note that according to Vigilance (August 9, 1924), No. 14 was chartered in Lynbrook. In Vigilance it also says that the Klan in Millport “bought a home for the Sullivan Club, which is named for a prominent Masonic Historian and Soldier” (Vigilance, 29 August 1924). Evidence suggests there was a WKKK unit in Millport, so perhaps 14 is mischeraractized in New York Klanswoman.
Mineola
(maybe North Hempstead)
Monroe, No. 100
Montour Falls
WKKK
Mt. Vernon, No 234
AKA Old Ironsides
Nassau County Krusaders
Newark Valley, No. 42
Newburgh, George Washington Klan, No. 185
Newburgh, Liberty Club No. 34
WKKK
New Rochelle, Huguenot Klan No. 195
New York City, Albert Pike Klan No. 1
Reported to have been chartered in February 1921.
Niagara Falls, No. 37
According to newspaper reports, Lucas V. Preuster was the Kleagle for Niagara Falls.
Niagara Falls, No 91
WKKK
Niagara Falls, Kamp. No. 2
American Krusaders, possibly women.
North Hempstead
Provisional (SCHS)
Northport, No. 6
(Fellowship Forum, August 29, 1925, cited in Mapping the Second Ku Klux Klan)
Noyack
One of the Klans that contributed to the family of slain Ferdinand Downs (Vigilance, 31 October 1924).
Oceanside, No. 216
Some sources say 216 was in nearby Rockville Center.
Oceanside
WKKK
Ogdensburg, No. 207
Oneida, No. 101
Canastota? VCU says Sherill, NY.
Oneonta, No. 121
Oneonta, No. 73
Oneonta
WKKK
Onondaga Klan No. 16
WKKK
Ossining, Washington Irving Klan No. 160
Oswegatchie, No. 231
Oswego, No. 62
WKKK (NY Klanswoman, May 1930)
Oswego, No. 109
Otisville
WKKK
Owego, No. 206
AKA Never Fail Klan No. 206
Oyster Bay, No. 250
Oyster Bay
WKKK
Painted Post, No. 67
Patchogue, No. 11
Some confusion to resolve as Roosevelt also had a unit No. 11.
Patchogue, Acirema Club
WKKK
Patchogue, No. 30
Pawling, Harlem Valley No. 87
(Poughquag)
Pearl River, No. 193
Peekskill, No. 3
Peekskill, No. 33
WKKK
Peekskill, No. 46
AKA Lincoln Klan
Penn Yan, No. 14
WKKK
Plattsburgh, No. 156
WKKK
Plattsburgh, Wm. J. Ross Klan
Pleasantville, No. 65
Poughkeepsie, No. 48
Poughkeepsie, No. 2
Perhaps WKKK
Poughkeepsie, No. 237
On July 4, 1924, as part of the Klolero held in Binghamton, the Degree Team of No. 237 performed ceremonial “degree work” (Klolero program, Binghamton, July 1924)
Port Chester, Victory Klan No. 203
Port Chester, No 100
WKKK
Port Jefferson, No. 25
AKA Suwasset Klan No. 25
Port Jefferson
WKKK
Port Jervis, No. 22
Port Washington, No. 374
AKA Fidelity Club of Port Washington
Port Washington, No 43
WKKK
Port Crane, No. 45
Potsdam, No. 20
Prattsville
Queens County, No. 359
AKA Richmond Hill, No. 359
Queens Village, No. 358
Queens Village, Molly Pitcher Club
Presumably a women’s unit active at least from 1926 (Fellowship Forum) to 1928 (Long Island Daily Press). The Kourier in September 1931 describes them as from Jamaica, Queens.
Rhinebeck, No. 70
Richmond Hill, Betsy Ross No. 1
Independent Klan of America
Richmond Hill, No. 30
Provisional: merged with Jamaica No. 5 in early 1924.
Richmond Hill, No. 83
This unit was known as the Neophytes of Comus.
Richmond Hill, No. 152
WKKK
Richmond Hill, No. 249
Ridgewood No. 254
Sometimes called “Lincoln Klan” chartered in 1931
Riverhead, No. 31
Assuming No. 31 was in operation as such by then, its members contributed to the family of slain Ferdinand Downs (Vigilance, 31 October 1924).
Riverhead, No. 112
WKKK
Rochester, No 87
AKA Lindbergh Klan No. 87 WKKK
Rochester, No. 192
AKA Monroe No. 192
Rochester, Criterion Klan No. 172
(Kourier, April 1932)
Rochester, No. 86
WKKK
Rochester
AKA Monroe, No. 151 WKKK
Rochester, Monroe Klan, No. 392
Roosevelt, No. 0
Roosevelt, No. 11
Patchogue also No. 11?
Roosevelt
WKKK
Rossie, Brasie Corners Klan No. 214
Sanborn, No. 136
(Vigilance, 29 August 1924)
Sag HarborOne of the Klans that contributed to the family of slain Ferdinand Downs (Vigilance, 31 October 1924).
Sayville
WKKK
Salem No. 136
likely WKKK
Salem, No. 176
Schenectady, No. 23
WKKK
Schenectady, No. 84
Schenectady, No. 102
AKA U.S. Grant Klan No. 102
Selkirk, Captain Andrew Hannay Klan No. 229
Chartered in 1928, 229 was at times described as located in Dormansville.
Seneca Falls, Seneca Klan No. 149
Seneca Falls, No. 120
WKKK
Smithtown, Nacirema Klan No. 71
WKKK
Smithtown, Nissequoque No. 32
Southampton, No. 26
South Ozone Park, No. 256
Springfield Gardens, Steadfast No. 177
Springfield, No. 362
Likely provisional (same leadership as 177)
Springwater, No 105
WKKK
Stapleton, No. 39
WKKK
Staten Island, No. 39
Staten Island Kamp No. 1
American Krusaders
Suffolk County Krusaders
Syracuse Klan No. 120
Syracuse, No. 16
WKKK
Trumansburg
Valley Stream, No. 9
“Pioneer Klan, No. 9”
Valley Stream
WKKK
Walden, No. 15
WKKK
Wanakena No. 86
Washington Heights, No. 255
AKA Prosperity Klan; Part of Province 3 and associated with Westchester units.
Waterloo, No. 120
WKKK
Water Mill
One of the Klans that contributed to the family of slain Ferdinand Downs (Vigilance, 31 October 1924).
Watertown, Thomas Jefferson Klan No. 163
Waverly, No 187
Williamsburg, No. 37
Williamston Park
Possibly North Hempstead klan.
Yonkers, No. 150, Charles Lindbergh Klan No. 150
Yonkers, True Blue Klan No. 97
WKKK