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  1. Asa Earl Carter (September 4, 1925 – June 7, 1979) was a 1950s segregationist political activist, Ku Klux Klan organizer, and later Western novelist.

  2. Jan 27, 2021 · In the 1950s and '60s, Asa Earl Carter was a Klansman and a violent white supremacist. But years later, he re-emerged as a "Native American" author. "He just pulled up out of the Choccolocco Valley, tanned himself up, grew a mustache, lost about 20 pounds, and became Forrest Carter."

  3. 3 days ago · Asa Earl Carter, second son of the four children of Ralph and Hermione Carter, was born in Oxford, near Anniston in Calhoun County, on September 4, 1925. He graduated from Calhoun County High School in 1943.

  4. Three decades earlier, in Alabama, Asa Earl Carter was a Ku Klux Klan organizer, a rabid segregationist and a talk show host who expounded on the dangers of integration. In 1963, he drafted an...

  5. The Education of Little Tree is a memoir-style novel written by Asa Earl Carter under the pseudonym Forrest Carter. When first published in 1976 by Delacorte Press, it was promoted as an authentic autobiography recounting Forrest Carter's youth experiences with his Cherokee grandparents in the Appalachian mountains.

  6. www.tshaonline.org › handbook › entriesCarter, Asa Earl - TSHA

    Jun 1, 1995 · Asa Earl Carter was a former politician and speech-writer who became a pseudonymous author of books such as The Education of Little Tree and The Outlaw Josey Wales. He was a controversial figure who advocated segregation and Cherokee heritage in his writings.

  7. Oct 4, 1991 · Asa Carter's celebration of sadomasochistic violence and thinly veiled vigilantism in his westerns of the 1960's and 70's had become a powerful theme of American popular culture.