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This episode of the 1835 Podcast shares the complex and controversial life of Albert Pike. Pike passed Harvard's exams at 16 but headed west instead—enduring a brutal 1831 trek to Santa Fe before settling in Arkansas in 1832. He taught school, edited newspapers, married well, built a grand Little Rock home, became a leading lawyer for Native tribes, published frontier poetry, fought in the Mexican-American War, and reluctantly joined the Confederacy as a brigadier general—commanding Native troops at the chaotic Battle of Pea Ridge in 1862 before resigning amid controversy. He served 32 years as Sovereign Grand Commander of the Scottish Rite Freemasonry's Southern Jurisdiction, where he revised rituals and wrote the influential Morals and Dogma. Pike died in 1891; his remains rest in D.C.'s House of the Temple. Rumors of KKK leadership lack primary evidence, though his post-war views and secret white societies fueled debate. His 1901 Masonic statue in Washington, D.C.—the only outdoor Confederate general monument there—was toppled and burned in 2020 protests, restored, and reinstalled in late 2025 under federal orders, reigniting national debates. Despite controversy, Pike's Arkansas legacy endures through preserved sites like his home and the Albert Pike Memorial Temple. A tale of ambition, intellect, war, and complexity in 19th-century America.
#Arkansas #History #Podcast
By Nathan Rogers5
55 ratings
This episode of the 1835 Podcast shares the complex and controversial life of Albert Pike. Pike passed Harvard's exams at 16 but headed west instead—enduring a brutal 1831 trek to Santa Fe before settling in Arkansas in 1832. He taught school, edited newspapers, married well, built a grand Little Rock home, became a leading lawyer for Native tribes, published frontier poetry, fought in the Mexican-American War, and reluctantly joined the Confederacy as a brigadier general—commanding Native troops at the chaotic Battle of Pea Ridge in 1862 before resigning amid controversy. He served 32 years as Sovereign Grand Commander of the Scottish Rite Freemasonry's Southern Jurisdiction, where he revised rituals and wrote the influential Morals and Dogma. Pike died in 1891; his remains rest in D.C.'s House of the Temple. Rumors of KKK leadership lack primary evidence, though his post-war views and secret white societies fueled debate. His 1901 Masonic statue in Washington, D.C.—the only outdoor Confederate general monument there—was toppled and burned in 2020 protests, restored, and reinstalled in late 2025 under federal orders, reigniting national debates. Despite controversy, Pike's Arkansas legacy endures through preserved sites like his home and the Albert Pike Memorial Temple. A tale of ambition, intellect, war, and complexity in 19th-century America.
#Arkansas #History #Podcast

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