<p>DENVER — History Colorado has debuted an online archive this week of 1,300 pages of original Ku Klux Klan membership records from 1924 through 1926, previously on public display at the History Colorado Center in downtown Denver.</p>
<p>History Colorado digitized the hate group’s ledgers, which include 30,000 people, to highlight the widespread racism built into the city’s political and cultural history, The Denver Post <a href="https://theknow.denverpost.com/2021/04/23/history-colorado-kkk-membership-ledgers/257193/">reported</a>.</p>
<p>The organization received a $5,000 grant from the Colorado Historical Records Advisory Board to digitize the records, History Colorado Chief Operating Officer Dawn DiPrince said. </p>
<p>The funds went to labor costs, spokesperson John Eding said in a statement.</p>
<p>“Some people honestly are surprised by this history, and I think there’s interest in just coming to terms with these truths,” DiPrince said. “We always like to say there’s a lot to love about Colorado history. But that tends to overshadow some of the darker chapters.”</p>
<p>The Ku Klux Klan is a hate group that was organized in the South after the Civil War to assert white supremacy, often using violence against Black people, Jews and members of the LGBTQ community. The Denverite reported that the number of registered members in Denver in the mid-1920s represented a third of the 107,000 adult white men living in the city at the time. </p>
<p>“Reminding people that this is also part of our history is essential to moving forward,” DiPrince said. “You have to be honest about hard truths, as well as the things we love and celebrate.”</p>
<p>The digitized ledgers include specific locations, people and institutions, including History Colorado, the State Capitol, the city fire department and the state hospital.</p>
<p>“We worked with community advisors to make sure with we weren’t just dropping this into the world,” DiPrince said. “That could be traumatizing, or there could be ways in which is seems like it’s celebrating white supremacy. We were really intentional about about providing a larger context.”</p>
<p>As a result, DiPrince said the archive was posted online with links to stories of people who resisted the KKK at the time, such as Dr. Joseph Westbrook. Westbrook infiltrated the KKK long before Detective Ron Ron Stallworth went undercover to bust them in Colorado Springs in the 1970s. That story that was made into Spike Lee’s Oscar-winning 2018 film “BlacKkKlansman” based on Stallworth’s memoir “Black Klansman.”</p>
<p>The ledgers are now the single largest archival item digitally available from History Colorado.</p>