While there is no direct organizational tie between John Wilkes Booth and the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), both share a connection through their involvement in the context of white supremacy and racial violence in the post-Civil War United States. Booth, a Confederate sympathizer, assassinated President Abraham Lincoln in 1865, aiming to disrupt the Union and its policies towards Reconstruction and African American rights. The KKK, founded in the late 1860s, emerged as a response to Reconstruction, promoting white supremacy and racial terror. Both reflect the broader societal tensions surrounding race and power during that era.
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