back to Wesleyan Church, West Virginia
| Group | Where | Number of Adherents |
% of total pop. |
Number of congreg./ churches/ units |
Number of countries |
Year | Source | Quote/ Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wesleyan Church | Wisconsin | 5,438 | 0.11% | 29 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 1,861. [Listed as 'The Wesleyan Church.'] |
| Wesleyan Church | world | 185,641 | - | - | 19 countries |
1987 | Melton, J. Gordon (ed.) The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books (1991); Chapter: Holiness Family; section: 19th Century Holiness; pg. 216-217. | "Wesleyan Church... Indianapolis, IN [H.Q.]... There were 185,641 members worldwide in 19 countries. " |
| Wesleyan Church | world | 250,000 | - | - | - | 1990 | Mead, Frank S. (revised by Samuel S. Hill), Handbook of Denominations in the United States (9th Ed.), Abingdon Press: Nashville, Tenn. (1990); pg. 249. | "The Wesleyan Church... From a total constituency of 250,000, there are 115,975 members in 1,790 churches in the North American General Conference... " |
| Wesleyan Church | world | - | - | - | 39 countries |
1993 | Bedell, Kenneth (ed.). Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches 1993. Abingdon Press: Nashville, Tenn (1993); pg. 140. | "The Wesleyan Church is now spread across most of the United States and Canada and 37 other countries. " |
| Wesleyan Church | world | 313,000 | - | - | - | 1993 | Mead, Frank S. (revised by Samuel S. Hill), Handbook of Denominations in the United States (10th Ed.), Abingdon Press: Nashville, Tenn. (1995). | - |
| Wesleyan Church | world | - | - | 3,300 units |
40 countries |
1998 | *LINK* official web site of the Wesleyan Church; web page: "Who are the Wesleyans? " (viewed 27 Feb. 1999) | "There are currently about 3,300 Wesleyan churches in over 40 nations worldwide. In the United States and Canada alone, there are over 1,700 local congregations. " |
| Wesleyan Church | world | - | - | 3,000 units |
30 countries |
1998 | *LINK* web site: "Canandaigua Wesleyan Church "; web page: "A Short Description of the Wesleyan Church " (viewed 27 Feb. 1999) | "There are more than 3000 local churches in 30 countries worldwide. " |
| Wesleyan Church | Wyoming | 5,059 | 1.12% | 8 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 414. [Listed as 'The Wesleyan Church.'] |
| Wesleyan Covenant Church | world | - | - | - | 2 countries |
1977 | Melton, J. Gordon (ed.) The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books (1991); Chapter: Holiness Family; section: 20th Century Holiness; pg. 219. | "In 1977 the small Wesleyan Covenant Church, with congregations in Detroit and in Brownsville, Texas, but an extensive Mexican Mission, merged into the Evangelical Church [of North America]. " |
| Wesleyan Holiness | Barbados | - | - | 2 units |
- | 1998 | *LINK* tourism page: "Fun Barbados " | Barbados Religion page: church listing. "Currently there are around 60 Anglican churches that can be found on the island and over the years many other denominations have joined and can be found list below. " |
| Wesleyan Holiness | Saba | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 1999 | *LINK* web site: "Saba Tourist Office "; web page: "General Information " (viewed 11 April 1999). | Table with 3 columns: "Church Name "; "Affiliation " & "Location " and 6 churches listed: "Holy Rosary Church, Roman Catholic, Hell's Gate; Holy Trinity Church, Anglican (1877), Windwardside; Church of St. Paul's Conversion, Roman Catholic, Windwardside; Christ Church, Anglican (18c), The Bottom; Sacred Heart Church, Roman Catholic (1877), The Bottom; Wesleyan Holiness Church, ., The Bottom " |
| Wesleyan Holiness Association of Churches | world | - | - | 40 units |
- | 1980 | Melton, J. Gordon (ed.) The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books (1991); Chapter: Holiness Family; section: Glenn Griffith Movement; pg. 228-229. | "Wesleyan Holiness Association of Churches... Dayton, OH [H.Q.] The Association's... foreign missionaries can be found in Bolivia, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras and New Guinea. Membership: In 1988, the Association reported 40 congregations served by 100 ministers. " |
| Wesleyan Methodist Church | Australia | 3,699 | 0.02% | - | - | 1996 | *LINK* Parliament of Australia web site; page: "Census 96: Religion " (viewed 18 Dec. 1999) | Self-identification, from 1996 govt. census. |
| Wesleyan Methodist Church | USA | 26,720 | - | - | - | 1945 | Ferm, Vergilius (ed). An Encyclopedia of Religion; Westport, CT: Greenwood Press (1976; 1st ed. pub. 1945 by Philosophical Library); pg. 489. | Table: "The following statistical table gives the present approx. membership of the main divisions of world-wide Methodism... " Listed as "The Wesleyan Methodist " |
| Wesleyan Methodist Connection | USA | 22,000 | - | 565 units |
- | 1945 | Ferm, Vergilius (ed). An Encyclopedia of Religion; Westport, CT: Greenwood Press (1976; 1st ed. pub. 1945 by Philosophical Library); pg. 341. | Table: "...the leading holiness groups in the United States at the present time are as follows: " [Table lists figures for "Churches " and "Members " for 28 groups.] |
| Wesleyan Tabernacle Association | USA | - | - | 26 units |
- | 1975 | Melton, J. Gordon (ed.) The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books (1991); Chapter: Holiness Family; section: 20th Century Holiness; pg. 221. | "Wesleyan Tabernacle Association... Cincinnati, OH [H.Q.]... is a small holiness church. It was formed in 1936... Membership: Not reported. In the 1970s the Association had 26 congregations in the U.S... " |
| West Los Angeles Church of God | world | 6,000 | - | - | - | 1989 | Krantz, Les & Jim McCormick. The Peoplepedia: The Ultimate Reference on the American People, Henry Holt and Company: New York (1996); pg. 183. | "West Los Angeles Church of God accepted 2,000 new members in 1990, for a total of 8,000. " |
| West Los Angeles Church of God | world | 8,000 | - | - | - | 1990 | Krantz, Les & Jim McCormick. The Peoplepedia: The Ultimate Reference on the American People, Henry Holt and Company: New York (1996); pg. 183. | "West Los Angeles Church of God accepted 2,000 new members in 1990, for a total of 8,000. " |
| Western Buddhist Order | United Kingdom: Britain | 1,343 | - | - | - | 1999 | Chryssides, George. Exploring New Religions. London, U.K.: Cassells (1999). [Orig. source: Simon Kelly, FWBO, UK.] | "I have selected the best available [statistics], providing a range where adjudication is impossible... Western Buddhist Order: Britain: 459 ordained members and 884 mitras (1999); World: 780 ordained members (1999) " |
| Western Buddhist Order | world | 660 | - | - | 20 countries |
1996 | *LINK* official web site (1 Jan 1999) | "In 1996 the Order had 660 members in over 20 countries. It includes men and women of all races. Over one thousand people have requested ordination and are working to prepare themselves to be ordained. " |
| Western Buddhist Order | world | 700 | - | - | - | 1999 | *LINK* official web site (1 Jan 1999) | "...members of the Western Buddhist Order - a spiritual community of nearly 700 men and women around the world who have committed their lives to following the Buddhist path. " |
| Western Buddhist Order - ordained | United Kingdom: Britain | 459 | - | - | - | 1999 | Chryssides, George. Exploring New Religions. London, U.K.: Cassells (1999). [Orig. source: Simon Kelly, FWBO, UK.] | "I have selected the best available [statistics], providing a range where adjudication is impossible... Western Buddhist Order: Britain: 459 ordained members and 884 mitras (1999); World: 780 ordained members (1999) " |
| Western Buddhist Order - ordained | world | 780 | - | - | - | 1999 | Chryssides, George. Exploring New Religions. London, U.K.: Cassells (1999). [Orig. source: Simon Kelly, FWBO, UK.] | "I have selected the best available [statistics], providing a range where adjudication is impossible... Western Buddhist Order: Britain: 459 ordained members and 884 mitras (1999); World: 780 ordained members (1999) " |
| Western Buddhist Order, Friends of the | United Kingdom: Britain | 438 | - | - | - | 1987 | Clarke, Peter B. The New Evangelists: Recruitment, Method and Aims of New Religious Movements, London: Ethnographics (1987); pg. 10 to 14. | Table with following columns: Movement; Total Membership; Full-Time Members; P/T Members; Sympathizers.; For this study Clarke "approached researchers & observers in the field of new religions [& org./church reps.] to obtain their opinions & any hard... data " |
| Western Buddhist Order, Friends of the | world | - | - | 70 units |
20 countries |
1999 | *LINK* official web site (1 Jan 1999) | "The FWBO... is in contact with many thousands of people... The FWBO was founded in 1967 by Sangharakshita... There are now nearly 70 FWBO urban Centres & Retreat Centres & activities in over 20 countries. The FWBO is one of the principal Buddhist movements in UK, India and Australasia and is increasingly well-established in Western Europe & the USA " |
| Western Buddhist Order, Friends of the - full-time | United Kingdom: Britain | 167 | - | - | - | 1987 | Clarke, Peter B. The New Evangelists: Recruitment, Method and Aims of New Religious Movements, London: Ethnographics (1987); pg. 10 to 14. | Table with following columns: Movement; Total Membership; Full-Time Members; P/T Members; Sympathizers.; For this study Clarke "approached researchers & observers in the field of new religions [& org./church reps.] to obtain their opinions & any hard... data "; The movement is listed in table as "Friends of the Western Buddhist Order (FWBO) ", with "Total Membership " of 438, Full-time: 167; Sympathizers: "Many 1,000s "; Part-time: 271. One might think that the full-timers are actually members of Western Buddhist Order, but this is not what is stated, so it is unclear. |
| Western Orthodox Church in America | USA | 100 | - | - | - | 1981 | Melton, J. Gordon (ed.). The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books (1991); pg. 137-138. | "Western Orthodox Church in America... In 1974 Joachim had succeeded Corradi-Scarella as head of the National Catholic Apostolic Church in America. In 1980 he renamed his jurisdiction the Western Church in America... In 1983... Joachim & Luther decided to become independent of each other. Joachim & his following became the Catholic Apostolic Church in America, while Luther retained the name, Western Orthodox Church in America... Membership: In 1981 there were 25 priests & over 100 seminarians studying for the priesthood affiliated with the Servants of the Good Shepherd. Educational facilities:... Duarte Costa School of Religion, Altoona, Pennsylvania. " |
| Wetu Telu | Indonesia: Lombok | - | - | - | - | 1925 | *LINK* Cederroth, Sven. "From Ancestor Worship to Monotheism: Politics of Religion in Lombok " in Temenos 32 (1996), 7-36. (Viewed online, Temenos web site, 30 Jan. 1999). | "In the early decades of the 20th century, waktu lima had spread to most villages in Central Lombok, while the south and the north were still overwhelmingly wetu telu. " |
| Wetu Telu | Indonesia: Lombok | - | - | - | - | 1965 | *LINK* Cederroth, Sven. "From Ancestor Worship to Monotheism: Politics of Religion in Lombok " in Temenos 32 (1996), 7-36. (Viewed online, Temenos web site, 30 Jan. 1999). | "Despite all predictions, wetu telu continued to flourish, mainly in the peripheral parts of the island, in the north and the south, but also in some places in Central Lombok. In the mid-1960s the religion was still well and alive, when suddenly the events of 1967-68... " |
| Wetu Telu | Indonesia: Lombok | - | - | - | - | 1996 | *LINK* Cederroth, Sven. "From Ancestor Worship to Monotheism: Politics of Religion in Lombok " in Temenos 32 (1996), 7-36. (Viewed online, Temenos web site, 30 Jan. 1999). | "The island of Lombok is the home of the Sasak people, most of whom are now orthodox Muslims and as such adherents of the waktu lima sect. However, even today some of the Sasak are still counted as adherents of the wetu telu... the wetu telu practise a religious syncretism in which there are traces not only of Islam, but of Hinduism and pantheistic beliefs as well. " |
| Wetu Telu | Indonesia: Lombok | - | 30.00% | - | - | 1998 | Gall, Timothy L. (ed). Worldmark Encyclopedia of Culture & Daily Life: Vol. 3 - Asia & Oceania. Cleveland, OH: Eastword Publications Development (1998); pg. 672. | "Due to persecution during the upheavals of 1965-66, exact figure for the Wetu Telu population are elusive; they may number as much as 30% of Lombok's inhabitants and are concentrated in the mountainous northern part of the island. " |
| Wetu Telu | Indonesia: Lombok - Sasak | - | 20.00% | - | - | 1965 | *LINK* Cederroth, Sven. "From Ancestor Worship to Monotheism: Politics of Religion in Lombok " in Temenos 32 (1996), 7-36. (Viewed online, Temenos web site, 30 Jan. 1999). | "...conflict between religious sects in Lombok... religious persecution that had taken place a few years earlier and which had intensified the latent conflict. As a result of these events, the centuries-old indigenous wetu telu religion had almost been eradicated and almost all Sasak were now said to be believers of waktu lima, an orthodox Islamic sect. According to A. M. Hartong (1974), in around 1965 some 20% of the Sasak could still be classified as wetu telu, while 2 years later the figure had shrunk to less than 1%... Two years later, in 1967, there were no wetu telu left, at least not officially. " |
| Wetu Telu | Indonesia: Lombok - Sasak | - | 1.00% | - | - | 1967 | *LINK* Cederroth, Sven. "From Ancestor Worship to Monotheism: Politics of Religion in Lombok " in Temenos 32 (1996), 7-36. (Viewed online, Temenos web site, 30 Jan. 1999). | "...conflict between religious sects in Lombok... religious persecution that had taken place a few years earlier and which had intensified the latent conflict. As a result of these events, the centuries-old indigenous wetu telu religion had almost been eradicated and almost all Sasak were now said to be believers of waktu lima, an orthodox Islamic sect. According to A. M. Hartong (1974), in around 1965 some 20% of the Sasak could still be classified as wetu telu, while 2 years later the figure had shrunk to less than 1%... Two years later, in 1967, there were no wetu telu left, at least not officially. " |
| Whilkut | North America - Pacific Coast | 500 | - | - | - | 1400 C.E. | Terrell, John Upton. American Indian Almanac. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co. (1974); pg. 430-431. | Table: "The Pacific Coast: Earliest Population Estimates " (mainly relying on James Mooney, John R. Swanson, & A. L. Kroeber); "Whilkut (aboriginal): 500 "; [Exact year not given] |
| Whilkut | world | 500 | - | - | - | 1400 C.E. | Terrell, John Upton. American Indian Almanac. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co. (1974); pg. 430-431. | Table: "The Pacific Coast: Earliest Population Estimates " (mainly relying on James Mooney, John R. Swanson, & A. L. Kroeber); "Whilkut (aboriginal): 500 "; [Exact year not given] |
| Whirling Dervishes | Turkey | - | - | - | - | 1273 C.E. | Sheehan, Sean. Turkey (series: Cultures of the World). New York: Marshall Cavendish Corp. (1993); pg. 75. | "At the time of Ataturk's reforms, the Order of Dervishes came under attack as a typical example of the outmoded religious beliefs that were seen to hold back the development of a new and modern Turkey... Today, a performance of the dance is officially allowed in Konya during the annual Mevlana Festival... The festival commemorates the anniversary of the death of the well-known Sufi poet Celaleddin ar-Rumi on December 17, 1273. Better known as the Mevlana, ar-Rumi founded the sect of the Whirling Dervishes. " |
| Whirling Dervishes | Turkey | - | - | - | - | 1992 | Ovendale, Ritchie. The Longman Companion to The Middle East since 1914. London & New York: Longman (1992); pg. 216. | "Dervish Orders: A form of Muslim mysticism, Sufism, the aim of which is to approach God... and attain spiritual absorption in the divinity... Some branches like the Whirling Dervishers (Mevlevis) in Konya, Turkey, achieve this through dancing. " |
| Whirling Dervishes | world | - | - | - | - | 1981 | Crim, Keith (ed.). The Perennial Dictionary of World Religions. San Francisco: Harper Collins (1989). Reprint; originally pub. as Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions, 1981; pg. 216. | "'Dervish' entered the English language from association with the 'Whirling Dervishes,' a name derived from the frenzied yet orderly dance which they performed during musical assemblies. The real name of this group is the Mawlawis... " |
| White Aryan Resistance | USA | - | - | - | - | 1990 | Lang, Susan S. Extremist Groups in America. New York: Franklin Watts (1990); pg. 86. | "White Aryan Resistance. Leader Tom Metzger, a television repairman, was a member of the John Birth Socity in the 1960s and the Cristian Identity Movement. In the 1970s he joined the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and worked his way up to become the Grand Dragon of California. In 1983, Metzger formed his own hate club called the White Aryan Resistance (WAR) and he's been busy every since getting his hate messages out thoruhg all kinds of media channels, including his newspaper WAR, his cable TV show 'Race and Reason,' recorded telephone messages, and even coputer bulliten boards. His flair for getting on national TV talk shows has made him one of the most recognized racists in the country... " |
| White Aryan Resistance | USA | 100,000 | - | - | - | 1995 | Able, Deborah. Hate Groups (series: "Issues in Focus "). Springfield, N.J.: Enslow Publishers, Inc. (1995); pg. 58. | "Estimates of how many Americans support Tom Metzger and W.A.R. [White Aryan Resistance] range from fewer than 20,000 to more than 100,000. Certainly W.A.R. is one of the largest, most successful hate groups in the West. Although he is based in California, Metzger reaches a large number of people throughout the country via his television program 'Race and Reason,' which is telecast in at least 50 markets on public access television. " |
| White Aryan Resistance | world | 5,000 | - | - | - | 1993 | Landau, Elaine. The White Power Movement: America's Racist Hate Groups. Brookfield, CT: Milbrook Press (1993); pg. 49. | "...would-be Nazis have aligned themselves with an organization called the Whte Aryan Resistance (W.A.R.) run by Tom Metzger... the leader of this white-supremacist organization which has claimed to have over five thousand members... " |
| White Lotus Buddhism | China | - | - | - | - | 1279 C.E. | Crim, Keith (ed.). The Perennial Dictionary of World Religions. San Francisco: Harper Collins (1989). Reprint; originally published as Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions, 1981; pg. 804. | "White Lotus Society. Chinese religious sect which developed out of Pure Land Buddhist lay associations in the southern Sung dynasty (A.D. 1127-1279), but which departed from its orthodox antecedents by instituting married clergy and full-time vegetarianism. By the late thirteenth century this movement had developed its own rituals and temples, and had incorporated a variety of folk practices and beliefs from Taoism. " |
| White Lotus Buddhism | China | - | - | - | - | 1350 C.E. | Crim, Keith (ed.). The Perennial Dictionary of World Religions. San Francisco: Harper Collins (1989). Reprint; originally published as Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions, 1981; pg. 804. | "In the mid-fourteenth century several White Lotus groups rebelled against Mongol rule in the name of both Maitreya and the Manichean King of Light. " |
| White Lotus Buddhism | China | - | - | - | - | 1400 C.E. | Fischer-Schreiber, Ingrid, et al. The Encyclopedia of Eastern Philosophy & Religion: Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism, Zen. Shambhala: Boston (English: pub. 1994; orig. German: 1986); pg. 414-415. | "White Lotus school - (Chin., Pai-lien-tsung); a school of Pure Land Buddhism, founded by Mao Tzu-yuan in the 12th century. The White Lotus school was an association of monks, nuns, and laypersons, whose objective was by regularly invoking the Buddha Amitabha... This school... was soon discredited as being linked with demons, and it was banned several times; nevertheless it survived. Later on Maitreya... was venerated along with Amitabha... the White Lotus school became a secret society and played an important role in the rebellions and peasant insurrections of the 13th-15th centuries... " |
| White Lotus Buddhism | China | - | - | - | - | 1805 | Crim, Keith (ed.). The Perennial Dictionary of World Religions. San Francisco: Harper Collins (1989). Reprint; originally published as Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions, 1981; pg. 804. | "In the sixteenth century popular sects of the White Lotus type developed a new form of scripture texts called pao-chuan ('precious books')... Some of them organized eschatological uprisings against the government, the most famous of which took place between 1795-1805, the so-called 'White-Lotus rebellion.' " |
| White Lotus Buddhism | Taiwan | - | - | - | - | 1981 | Crim, Keith (ed.). The Perennial Dictionary of World Religions. San Francisco: Harper Collins (1989). Reprint; originally published as Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions, 1981; pg. 804. | "In the sixteenth century popular sects of the White Lotus type... characterized by charismatic leadership, hierarchical orgaization, membership rituals, and congregational worship... Similar sects still flourish in Taiwan. " |
| white supremacist groups | Alabama | - | - | 12 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Arizona | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Arkansas | - | - | 2 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | California | - | - | 22 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Colorado | - | - | 2 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Connecticut | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Delaware | - | - | 3 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Florida | - | - | 15 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Georgia, USA | - | - | 30 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Idaho | - | - | 5 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Illinois | - | - | 9 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Indiana | - | - | 3 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Iowa | - | - | 3 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Kansas | - | - | - | - | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Kentucky | - | - | 4 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Louisiana | - | - | 2 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Maine | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Maryland | - | - | 8 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
| white supremacist groups | Massachusetts | - | - | 3 units |
- | 1992 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994). [Source: Klanwatch]; pg. 30. | Map: "White Supremacist Groups in the U.S. in 1992 " Klan, Nazi, Skinheads and/or Other. |
white supremacist groups, continued ![]()