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Two American figures born on this date left marks of starkly different kinds. Nathan Bedford Forrest rose to become one of the Civil War's most tactically formidable Confederate generals, yet his legacy is inseparable from his role as an early leader of the Ku Klux Klan and his command at Fort Pillow, where surrendering Union soldiers — many of them Black — were massacred. More than a century later, Genene Jones worked as a pediatric nurse in Texas, where investigations linked her to the deaths and near-deaths of multiple infant patients in her care. Separated by era and circumstance, both figures are studies in the corruption of positions that carried substantial power over vulnerable people.

July 13, 1950 - Genene Jones

A pediatric nurse working in hospital and clinic settings in Texas, Jones used her professional access to harm the infants in her care — the precise patients most dependent on protection. The full count of her victims remains uncertain; investigators have linked her to a pattern of infant deaths across multiple facilities, and legal proceedings extended decades beyond her initial conviction as prosecutors worked to prevent her release under an overcrowding statute.

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July 13, 1821 - Nathan Bedford Forrest

His career traced a consistent arc from slave trader to Confederate general to Klan leader, each role reinforcing the others in ways that made him a central figure in both the Civil War and the violent resistance to Reconstruction. The massacre at Fort Pillow — where Union soldiers, disproportionately Black, were killed after resistance had effectively ended — remains the most scrutinized episode of his military command, with historians still debating the degree of his direct culpability. His later position as the Klan's first Grand Wizard placed him at the head of an organization that used systematic terror to undermine Black civil and political life in the postwar South.

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