Battle of Hayes Pond

Battle of Hayes Pond
A black-and-white image of a group of Native Americans armed with firearms confronting a group of white people
Lumbee Indians fighting Ku Klux Klansmen during the incident
DateJanuary 18, 1958
Location
Near Maxton, North Carolina, United States

34°43′07″N 79°21′57″W / 34.71862366859941°N 79.36573253796487°W / 34.71862366859941; -79.36573253796487
Caused byKu Klux Klan cross burnings and racist threats against the Lumbee community
Resulted inKlan rally disrupted
Parties
North Carolina Knights
Lumbee civilians
Robeson County Sheriff's Office
North Carolina State Highway Patrol
Lead figures

Malcolm McLeod
Raymond Williams

Number
~50 Klansmen
300–500 Lumbees
16 sheriff's deputies
12 highway patrolmen
Casualties
Injuries4 Klansmen injured by gunfire; 3 journalists and 1 witness injured
Arrested1 Klansman arrested by police
Battle of Hayes Pond is located in North Carolina
Battle of Hayes Pond
Location within North Carolina

The Battle of Hayes Pond, also known as the Battle of Maxton Field or the Maxton Riot, was an armed confrontation between members of a Ku Klux Klan (KKK) organization and Lumbee people at a Klan rally near Maxton, North Carolina, on the night of January 18, 1958. The clash resulted in the disruption of the rally and a significant amount of media coverage praising the Lumbees and condemning the Klansmen.

In 1956, James W. "Catfish" Cole, a KKK member from South Carolina, established the North Carolina Knights, a Klan organization aimed at defending racial segregation. In early 1958 Cole focused his efforts on upholding segregation in Robeson County, North Carolina, which had a triracial population of Native Americans, whites, and blacks. Many of the Native Americans were members of the recently recognized Lumbee Tribe, a group having its origins in other Indigenous peoples but had grown into a single community around the county. Cole oversaw two cross burnings meant to frighten the Lumbees from racial mixing, and scheduled a Klan rally which he hoped would have a large turnout.

Cole and his Klansmen widely advertised their event, driving throughout the county in a truck outfitted with a loudspeaker to broadcast their plans. The announcements infuriated the Lumbee community and some decided to try to disrupt the meeting. Fearing violence, local law enforcement officials pleaded with Cole to suspend his plans, but he refused. On January 18, 1958, Cole and about 50 Klansmen, most of whom were followers of his from South Carolina, gathered in a leased cornfield near Hayes Pond, a place adjacent to the town of Maxton. Several hundred Lumbees, many armed, arrived and encircled the group and jeered at them. After an altercation in which the single light in the field was destroyed, the Lumbees began firing their weapons and most of the Klansmen fled. Cole hid in a swamp while the Lumbees seized Klan regalia and carried them to Pembroke to celebrate. Police restored order on the field and arrested one Klansman.

Afterwards, Cole and the arrested Klansman were indicted and convicted for inciting a riot. The event was widely covered in the local and national press, which blamed the Klan for the disorder and praised the Lumbees for their actions. Cole never organized another public rally in Robeson County after the incident. In 2011 the Lumbee Tribal Council declared January 18 a "Tribal Day of Historical Recognition".