Smithfield Street Named For Klansman Stays Same

In a piece of legislative legerdemain worthy of Houdini the Smithfield Town Council seems to have resolved the controversy surrounding the street named for a notorious Rhode Island Ku Klux Klan leader by changing the name of Domin Avenue to Domin Avenue.

That’s not a typo.

Former Smithfield resident and amateur historian Roger Schenk suggested changing the name after discovering late last summer that the street was named for John Algernon Domin, an Exalted Cyclops of the Roger Williams Klavern in the 1920s. Domin was no rank and file member of the Klan, he was a leader, who in 1928 was called before the General Assembly to testify about his involvement in a Klan lead military coup.  Domin was a terrorist and an insurrectionist.

Surprisingly, the majority of Domin Avenue residents resisted changing the name of the street, citing the onerous and costly process of an address change. Some felt that the Klan history was long over and best forgotten, but a small minority of residents objected to the street name on the grounds that it celebrated, however unintentionally, a man who dedicated at least part of his life to race hatred and terrorism.

According to the Valley Breeze, Smithfield Town manager Dennis Finlay agonized “for months” over the issue, searching for a compromise that would satisfy all the residents. In the meantime, there was an election, and the Smithfield Town Council changed leadership and substituted many members, inheriting the issue from their predecessors.

Finlay’s big idea is that Domin Ave will be from no on named for all members of the Domin family, (except for, I presume, John Algernon Domin) pointing out that lots of streets are named for prominent families, not just individuals. According to the Valley Breeze:

The council’s resolution says the name has been “changed” with “the understanding that it now refers to all families named Domin.”

The resolution passed unanimously. Though it seems unsatisfying, perhaps this is, after all, the only politically viable solution.

Catholic Church Avoids Domin Ave., KKK Issue


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Exalted Cyclops John Algernon Domin

The Catholic Diocese of Providence, under the guidance of Bishop Thomas Tobin, is not afraid to voice its opinion about a wide range of topics.

The church or the bishop has stated its position on everything from marriage equality and women’s reproductive rights to issues as trivial as the holiday/Christmas tree non-controversy and the cross on public land in Woonsocket. The Bishop went on the John DePetro Show to call President Obama’s thoughts concerning gay marriage “creepy and disturbing” and to call the entire RI Congressional Delegation “immoral.”

Given this record of impassioned moral outrage at issues great and small, why is the church silent on the issue of Domin Avenue in Smithfield, Rhode Island?

Domin Avenue, for those new to the story, is named for John Algernon Domin, the Exalted Cyclops of the RI Ku Klux Klan in 1928. Domin was not just some rank and file member of the terrorist organization, he was a leader and spokesman and owned the property where rallies were held and crosses were burned. Under his leadership the Klan attempted to take over 3 armed militias of the National Guard, in expectation of a coming war between Protestants and Catholics.

You see, back then there weren’t so many black people living in Rhode Island, so the Klan vented its hatred on Catholics and immigrants (Not that it neglected the few black people it could find. The Klan was held responsible for “torching an African American school in Scituate, Rhode Island.“) At this point in history the Irish and the Italians and other immigrants were mostly Catholic and just like today, immigrants bear the brunt of the blame for whatever ills the society faces.

Retired Colonel Roger Schenck, the man responsible for discovering the Domin Ave connection to the KKK, wondered why Bishop Tobin and the Providence Diocese, known for its outspoken opinion on a wide range of subjects, (Tobin recently weighed in on the replacement refs in the NFL, for instance) would remain silent on the issue of a street named for an anti-Catholic terrorist hate monger. He wrote a letter to the Bishop and received a short, non-specific reply from the Diocese Director of Communication Michael K. Guilfoyle:

Thank you for writing to Bishop Tobin relative to the matter before the Town Council in Smithfield, Rhode Island. As you know, this particular issue has received a great deal of attention before Smithfield residents and the Town Council. I understand that those on both sides of the matter relative to changing the name of the street in question have stated their concerns before the Council.

Puzzled by the non-response response he received, Schenck wrote:

Thanks for your email. I assume by your answer that the Diocese does not intend to take a stand to support changing the name of a street memorializing John Algernon Domin who headed an evil organization that focused much of its hate against Catholics. The Diocese should be leading the charge to change the name but instead has chosen to remain neutral. I wonder who the Diocese is trying not to offend.

If possible the response from Guilfoyle was even more curt:

Mr. Schenck – Thank you for your reply.  Please know that the diocese does not condone the actions of such organizations.  We are monitoring the matter.

Colonel Schenck’s final email to the Providence Diocese reveals frustration and puzzlement. I will let the Colonel have the last word on the matter:

I don’t get it.  The Catholic Church takes a firm stance on many issues, some of which are very controversial, including abortion, contraception, homosexuality, gay marriage, euthanasia, and the death penalty, but the diocese will not take a stance against the name of a street memorializing Ku Klux Klan Grand Cyclops John Algernon Domin who led an evil organization that focused much of its hatred against Rhode Island’s Catholics.  The Diocese may not condone the actions of such organizations, but remaining silent in this instance, as the Diocese has chosen to do, says the diocese is ambivalent, complacent or just does not care if the Domin Avenue name changes or remains.  You say you are monitoring the matter.  That may sound good to some people, but what good will it do?  It will not matter how many people you have monitoring the matter as it works its way to the town council meeting, if, at that meeting, the council votes to retain the Domin Avenue name.  It will be too late at that point to do anything, but I suppose Rhode Island Catholics will have some consolation in knowing that the diocese monitored the matter.

Michael Guilfoyle was contacted for this post but did not respond.

Progress Report: Even More Riley Lies; KKK History in Smithfield; Mortgage Gordian Knot; Roger Williams


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Downtown Providence from the Providence River. (Photo by Bob Plain)

First Mike Riley was telling lies about Congressman Jim Langevin in TV commercials. Now, we’re pretty certain he’s telling lies about RI Future to other reporters. Or, it’s just another example of why  Mike “McCarthyism” Riley is totally unfit to represent Rhode Island in Congress (we’ll offer more evidence of as much a little later this morning).

Read Dee DeQuattro’s post about Riley this morning and decide which you think it is.

Riley and Langevin debate, without candidate Abel Collins, on WPRI tonight at 7. The market’s leading TV news station blundered big time in not including Collins in the debate, and exacerbated the mistake by not being forthcoming with their reasoning for doing so. Journalism should err on the side of inclusion and explanation and WPRI did neither with their responsibility to host this particular congressional debate. Such decisions deserve scrutiny and ace reporters Tim White, Ted Nesi and others who work there would be demanding nothing less if the subject wasn’t their employer.

For a man who says he possesses uncommon integrity, the ProJo Politifact team sure does catch Brendan Doherty telling a lot of lies. Today, they refute his accusation that Congressman Cicilline, when mayor of Providence, “espoused a sanctuary city.” Doherty has been poltifacted six times and half of those times he wasn’t telling the truth. He was given a half-true and a mostly true and only once was he said to be telling the full truth. This from a candidate whose campaign is based around his opponent being distrustful.

Admit it, you wish you were too high-brow to pay attention to them but Dan McGowan makes great lists. Today’s list shows which RI communities have the highest rates of unemployment and it looks a lot like lists of the communities with the worst budget situations as well as public school high-stakes testing results. What does that indicate? (Hint: it isn’t the unions fault)

Thanks to Ed Fitzpatrick for joining RI Future in calling for the town of Smithfield to change the name of a local road named after a KKK leader … it seemed like a no-brainder to us, too, and we kept waiting for the rest of the state to join the call. But evidently Rhode Islanders were too busy rallying against civil liberties and looking for frightened voters in attics to care…

The mortgage crisis in Rhode Island, in case you didn’t know, is a Gordian knot – meaning untangling the mess may prove impossible without a special solution. That solution looks like it could be loan modifications.

Is True the Vote committing a criminal conspiracy by suppressing voters rights?

Disappointed with our choices for State House seats? Just be glad you don’t live in Arkansas, where candidates garner headlines like this one: Legislative Candidate Endorses Death Penalty For Rebellious Children In Book

October 9 is a pretty significant day in the history of progressive and/or radical politics:

In 1635, Rhode Island founder Roger Williams is banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

In 1940, John Lennon was born.

In 1967, Che Guevara was executed in Bolivia while trying to foment revolution there.

And in 1969, the National Guard breaks up protests related to the Chicago Eight trial. They were accused of inciting violence at the 1968 DNC Convention.

Progress Report: More Mike Riley Lies; Flu Shots and Libertarians, 10 States with Fierce Pension Politics


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If campaigns were all about which candidate could create the most intellectually dishonest advertisements, Mike Riley would be leading in a landslide. His latest ad blames Jim Langevin for high gas prices. I wouldn’t be surprised if the next one tries to link him to the 38 Studios debacle – or worse, Bobby Valentine!

On a serious note – not that anything about Mike Riley’s campaign should be taken serious – his ads should disturb all Rhode Islanders regardless of where one falls on the political spectrum. They are blatantly either untrue or misleading and often both. One admonished Langevin for accepting a salary. Forget about how politically out-of-touch this ultra-conservative Wall Street apologist is with regular Rhode Islanders, he seems like an all-round bad person too.

Rhode Island is the first and only state in the nation to require health care workers to get flu shots. Can we hear from the local libertarians on this one, or are Rhode Island libertarians only libertarians when it comes to tax policy??

Smithfield might change the name of a local road named after a former KKK leader. Might? If they don’t change the name, it would be interesting to know why…

Progressives could lose a couple General Assembly seats this November, according to a list compiled by Dan McGowan.

LaSalle Bakery is doing a presidential poll … based on whether customers buy a Obama or Romney cookie. We’ve all got our systems.

The AP lists the states with the fiercest pension politics … remember way back when the ProJo did sky-is-falling front page story comparing our pension system to New York state’s? The Associated Press says New York boasts “has one of the healthier state pension systems in the country.”

A great Political Scene column in the ProJo this morning … many interesting tidbits. Same holds true for Ian Donnis’ new Friday feature.

I don’t often have opportunity to write this, but I find myself in agreement with the Journal’s editorial this morning … they are calling for hearings on the 38 Studios debacle.