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Anti-Masonic Party

The Anti-Masonic Party was the earliest third party in the United States.[12] Formally a single-issue party, it strongly opposed Freemasonry in the United States. It was active from the late 1820s, especially in the Northeast, and later attempted to become a major party by expanding its platform to take positions on other issues. It declined quickly after 1832 as most members joined the new Whig Party; it disappeared after 1838.

Anti-Masonic Party
LeaderSolomon Southwick
Thurlow Weed
William Wirt
FoundedFirst: February 1828; 195 years ago (February 1828)
Second: 1872; 151 years ago (1872)
DissolvedFirst: December 1840; 182 years ago (December 1840)
Second: 1888; 135 years ago (1888)
Merged intoWhig Party
HeadquartersAlbany, New York
NewspaperAnti-Masonic Enquirer
National Observer
Albany Journal
IdeologyAmerican School
Anti-elitism (de facto)[1][2][3][4][5]
Anti-Jacksonianism[6][7]
Anti-Masonry[8]
Political positionRight-wing to far-right[9]
ReligionProtestantism[10]
National affiliationNational Republican Party (1828)[7][11]
Colors  Yellow

The party was founded following the disappearance of William Morgan, a former Mason who had become a prominent critic of the Masonic organization. Many believed that Masons had murdered Morgan for speaking out against Masonry and subsequently many churches and other groups condemned Masonry. As many Masons were prominent businessmen and politicians, the backlash against the Masons was also a form of anti-elitism. The Anti-Masons purported that Masons posed a threat to American republicanism by secretly trying to control the government. Furthermore, there was a strong fear that Masonry was hostile to Christianity.

Mass opposition to Masonry eventually coalesced into a political party. Before and during the presidency of John Quincy Adams, there was a period of political realignment. The Anti-Masons emerged as an important third-party alternative to Andrew Jackson's Democrats and Adams' National Republicans. In New York, the Anti-Masons supplanted the National Republicans as the primary opposition to the Democrats.

After experiencing unexpected success in the 1828 elections, the Anti-Masons adopted positions on other issues, most notably support for internal improvements and a protective tariff. Several Anti-Masons, including William A. Palmer and Joseph Ritner, won election to prominent positions. In states such as Pennsylvania and Rhode Island, the party controlled the balance of power in the state legislature and provided crucial support to candidates for the United States Senate. In 1831, the party held the first presidential nominating convention, a practice that was subsequently adopted by all major parties. Delegates chose former U.S. Attorney General William Wirt as their standard bearer in the 1832 presidential election; Wirt won 7.8% of the popular vote and carried Vermont.

As the 1830s progressed, many of the Anti-Masonic Party's supporters joined the Whig Party, which sought to unite those opposed to the policies of President Jackson. The Anti-Masons brought with them an intense distrust of politicians and a rejection of unthinking party loyalty, together with new campaign techniques to whip up excitement among the voters. The Anti-Masonic Party held a national convention in 1835, nominating Whig candidate William Henry Harrison, but a second convention announced that the party would not officially support a candidate. Harrison campaigned as a Whig in the 1836 presidential election and his relative success in the election encouraged further migration of Anti-Masons to the Whig Party. By 1840, the party had ceased to function as a national organization. In subsequent decades, former Anti-Masonic candidates and supporters such as Millard Fillmore, William H. Seward, Thurlow Weed and Thaddeus Stevens became prominent members of the Whig Party.

History

Background

 
William Morgan, whose disappearance and probable death led to creation of the Anti-Masonic Party

The opponents of Freemasonry formed a political movement after the Morgan affair convinced them the Masons were murdering men who spoke out against them.[13] This key episode was the mysterious 1826 disappearance of William Morgan, a Freemason in upstate New York who had turned against the Masons.[14]

Morgan claimed to have been made a member of the Masons while living in Canada[15] and he appears to have briefly attended a lodge in Rochester.[16]: 9  In 1825, Morgan received the Royal Arch degree at Le Roy's Western Star Chapter #33, having declared under oath that he had previously received the six degrees which preceded it.[17][18] Whether he actually received these degrees and if so from where has not been determined for certain.[16]: 9 [17]

Morgan then attempted unsuccessfully to help establish or visit lodges and chapters in Batavia, but was denied participation in Batavia's Masonic activities by members who were uncertain about Morgan's character and claims to Masonic membership.[19] Angered by the rejection, Morgan announced that he was going to publish an exposé titled Illustrations of Masonry,[20] critical of the Freemasons and describing their secret degree ceremonies in detail.[21]

When his intentions became known to the Batavia lodge, an attempt was made to burn down the business of the printer who planned to publish Morgan's book.[22] In September 1826, Morgan was arrested on flimsy allegations of failing to repay a loan and theft of a shirt and tie in an effort to prevent publication of his book by keeping him in jail.[23] The individual who intended to publish Morgan's book paid his bail and he was released from custody.[23] Shortly afterwards, Morgan disappeared.[24]

Some skeptics argued that Morgan had left the Batavia area on his own, either because he had been paid not to publish his book, or to escape Masonic retaliation for attempting to publish the book, or to generate publicity that would boost the book's sales.[25] The generally believed version of events was that Masons killed Morgan by drowning him in the Niagara River.[26][27] Whether he fled or was murdered, Morgan's disappearance led many to believe that Freemasonry was in conflict with good citizenship.[28]

Because judges, businessmen, bankers and politicians were often Masons, ordinary citizens began to think of it as an elitist group.[2] Moreover, many claimed that the lodges' secret oaths bound Masons to favor each other against outsiders in the courts and elsewhere.[3]

Because some trials of alleged Morgan conspirators were mishandled and the Masons resisted further inquiries, many New Yorkers concluded that Masons controlled key offices and used their official authority to promote the goals of the fraternity by ensuring that Morgan's supposed killers escaped punishment.[29] When a member sought to reveal its secrets, so ran the conclusion, the Freemasons had done away with him. Because they controlled the courts and other offices, they were considered capable of obstructing the investigation. True Americans, they said, had to organize and defeat this conspiracy. If good government was to be restored "all Masons must be purged from public office".[30]

Party foundation

 
Thurlow Weed, newspaper editor who helped form the Anti-Masonic Party

The Anti-Masonic Party was formed in Upstate New York in February 1828.[31] Anti-Masons were opponents of Freemasonry, believing that it was a corrupt and elitist secret society which was ruling much of the country in defiance of republican principles.[32] Many people regarded the Masonic organization and its adherents involved in government as corrupt.[4][5]

Opposition to Masonry was taken up by some evangelical Protestant churches as a religious cause, particularly in the Burned-over district of upstate New York.[33] Many churches passed resolutions condemning ministers and lay leaders who were Masons and several denominations condemned Freemasonry, including the Presbyterian, Congregational, Methodist and Baptist churches.[34]

 
Solomon Southwick, newspaper publisher and 1828 Anti-Masonic candidate for Governor of New York

Anti-Masonry became a political issue in Western New York, where early in 1827 many mass meetings resolved not to support Masons for public office.[35] In New York, the supporters of President John Quincy Adams, called "Adams men", or Anti-Jacksonians, or National Republicans, were a feeble organization. Adams supporters used the strong anti-Masonic feeling to create a new party in opposition to the rising Jacksonian Democracy nationally and the Albany Regency political organization of Martin Van Buren in New York.[7] In this effort, they were aided by the fact that Andrew Jackson was a high-ranking Mason and frequently spoke in praise of the organization.[36] The alleged remark of Anti-Masonic organizer Thurlow Weed (which Weed denied), that an unidentified corpse found in the Niagara River was "a good enough Morgan" until after the 1828 elections, summarized the value of the Morgan disappearance for the opponents of Jackson.[37]

Political rise

In the elections of 1828, the new party proved unexpectedly strong.[38] Though its candidate for Governor of New York, Solomon Southwick, was defeated, the Anti-Masonic Party became the main opposition party to the Jacksonian Democrats in New York.[39] In 1829, it broadened its issues base when it became a champion of internal improvements and the protective tariff.[40]

Anti-Masonic Party members expanded the use of party-affiliated newspapers for political organizing by publishing over 100, including Southwick's National Observer and Weed's Anti-Masonic Enquirer.[16]: 34–35  By 1829, Weed's Albany Journal had become the preeminent Anti-Masonic paper and it later became the leading Whig newspaper.[41][42][43] The newspapers of the time reveled in partisanship and one brief paragraph in an Albany Journal article opposing Martin Van Buren included the words "dangerous", "demagogue", "corrupt", "degrade", "pervert", "prostitute", "debauch" and "cursed".[44]

Conventions and elections

A national Anti-Masonic organization was planned as early as 1827, when the New York leaders attempted unsuccessfully to persuade Henry Clay to renounce his Masonic membership and head the movement.[38]

By 1830, the Anti-Masonic movement's effort to broaden its appeal enabled it to spread to neighboring states, becoming especially strong in Pennsylvania and Vermont.[38] In 1831, William A. Palmer was elected Governor of Vermont on an Anti-Masonic ticket, an office he held until 1835.[45] Palmer's brother-in-law Augustine Clarke was an Anti-Masonic presidential elector in 1832, served as Vermont state treasurer from 1833 to 1837 and was appointed to the Anti-Masonic National Committee in 1837.[46][47][48] Other Vermont Anti-Masonic electors in 1832 included former governor Ezra Butler and former United States representative William Strong.[49]

The highest elected office held by a member of the Anti-Masonic Party was governor. Besides Palmer in Vermont, Joseph Ritner was the governor of Pennsylvania from 1835 to 1839.[50]

In addition to Palmer and Ritner, Silas H. Jennison, an Anti-Mason, was elected Lieutenant Governor of Vermont with Whig support in 1835. No candidate, including Palmer, received a majority of votes for governor as required by the Vermont Constitution. The contest then moved to the Vermont General Assembly, which could not choose a winner. The General Assembly then opted to allow Jennison to act as governor until the next election. He won election as governor in his own right as a Whig in 1836 and served from 1836 to 1841.[45][51]

 
Former Mason William Wirt won Vermont's Electoral College votes in the 1832 presidential election for the Anti-Masonic Party

Though the Anti-Masonic Party elected no senators and controlled no houses of a state legislature, Anti-Masons in state legislatures sometimes formed coalitions to elect senators and organize their chambers. Examples include: William Wilkins, elected to the Senate in 1830 by a coalition of Democrats and Anti-Masons in the Pennsylvania General Assembly;[52][53] and William Sprague, elected Speaker of the Rhode Island House of Representatives in 1831 by a coalition of Democrats and Anti-Masons.[54]

 
Amos Ellmaker, 1832 Anti-Masonic candidate for Vice President

The Anti-Masonic Party conducted the first presidential nominating convention in the United States history for the 1832 elections, nominating William Wirt (a former Mason) for President and Amos Ellmaker for Vice President in Baltimore. Wirt won 7.78 percent of the popular vote and the seven electoral votes of Vermont.[55] Soon the Democrats and Whigs recognized the convention's value in managing parties and campaigns and began to hold their own.[56]

Following Ritner's election in 1835, a state convention was held in Harrisburg on December 14–17, 1835 to choose presidential electors for the 1836 election.[57] The convention nominated William Henry Harrison for president and Francis Granger for vice president.[58] The Vermont state Anti-Masonic convention followed suit on February 24, 1836.[59] Anti-Masonic leaders were unable to obtain assurance from Harrison that he was not a Mason, so they called a national convention. The second national Anti-Masonic nominating convention was held in Philadelphia on May 4, 1836.[60] The meeting was divisive, but a majority of the delegates officially stated that the party was not sponsoring a national ticket for the presidential election of 1836 and proposed a meeting in 1837 to discuss the future of the party.[61]

Although Harrison lost the election to Democratic candidate Martin Van Buren in 1836, his strength throughout the North was hailed by Anti-Masonic leaders because the Anti-Masonic Party was the first to officially place his name in contention.[62] By the mid-1830s, other Anti-Jacksonians had coalesced into the Whig Party, which had a broader issue base than the Anti-Masons. By the late 1830s, many of the Anti-Masonic movement's members were moving to the Whigs, regarding that party as a better alternative to the Jacksonians, by then called Democrats.[63] The Anti-Masonic Party held a conference in September 1837 to discuss its situation—one delegate was former president John Quincy Adams.[64]

The Anti-Masonic Party held a third national nominating convention at Temperance Hall in Philadelphia on November 13–14, 1838.[65] By this time, the party had been almost entirely supplanted by the Whigs. The Anti-Masons unanimously endorsed William Henry Harrison for president and Daniel Webster for vice president in the 1840 election. When the Whig National Convention nominated Harrison with John Tyler as his running mate, the Anti-Masonic Party did not make an alternate nomination and ceased to function, with most adherents being fully absorbed into the Whigs by 1840.[66][67]

Legacy

 
Jonathan Blanchard, 1884 presidential candidate of the Anti-Masonic Party's second incarnation

Anti-Masonry was deeply committed to conspiracy theories, primarily the claim that Masonic elites were trying to secretly control the government.[68] As people became more mobile economically during the Industrial Revolution and began to move west when new states were populated by white settlers and added to the Union, the growth of the Anti-Masonic movement was caused by the political and social unrest resulting from the weakening of longstanding family and community ties.[69] With Freemasonry one of the few institutions that remained stable during this time of change, it became a natural target for protesters.[70] As a result, the Morgan Affair became the highly visible catalyst that turned a popular movement into a political party.[71]

Under the banner of Anti-Masons, able leaders united Anti-Jacksonians and others who were discontented with existing political conditions.[72] The fact that William Wirt, their choice for the presidency in 1832, not only was a former Mason, but also defended Freemasonry in a speech before the convention that nominated him indicates that opposition to Masonry was not the Anti-Masonic movement's sole issue.[67]

The Anti-Masonic movement gave rise to or expanded the use of many innovations which became accepted practice among other parties, including nominating conventions and party newspapers.[56] In contrast to the Democrats, who stressed unwavering loyalty to the party's candidates,[73] Anti-Masonic heritage to the Whigs included a distrust of behind-the-scenes political maneuvering by party bosses.[74] Instead they made direct appeals to the people through gigantic rallies, parades, and rhetorical rabble-rousing.[74] In addition, the Anti-Masons aided in the rise of the Whig Party as the major alternative to the Democrats, with conventions, newspapers and Anti-Masonic positions on issues including internal improvements and tariffs being adopted by the Whigs.[75]

Second Anti-Masonic Party

A later political organization called the Anti-Masonic Party was active from 1872 until 1888. This second group had a more religious basis for its anti-Masonry and was closely associated with Jonathan Blanchard of Wheaton College.[76]

Members of Congress

The Anti-Masons did not elect anyone to the Senate, but elected several members of the House of Representatives.[77]

Massachusetts
New York
Ohio
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
Vermont

Notable office holders and candidates

 
President Millard Fillmore's political career began as an Anti-Masonic member of the New York State Assembly in 1829

Electoral history

Presidential elections

Election Candidate Running mate Votes Vote % Electoral votes +/- Outcome of election
1832  
William Wirt
 
Amos Ellmaker
100,715 7.8
7 / 286
New Lost
1836[a] Not presented
1840[b] Not presented
1880  
John W. Phelps
 
Samuel C. Pomeroy
1,045 0.01
0 / 369
 0 Lost
  1. ^ Endorsed William H. Harrison as President and Francis Granger as Vice President.
  2. ^ Initially endorsed Harrison as President and Daniel Webster as Vice President, it later merged into the Whig Party until election.

Congressional elections

  1. ^ Office left vacant when Calhoun resigned to become Senator on December 28, 1832.

See also

References

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Sources and further reading

  • Bemis, Samuel Flagg. John Quincy Adams and the union (1956) vol 2 pp 273-304.
  • Brodie, Fawn (1966) [1959]. Thaddeus Stevens: Scourge of the South (Norton Library ed.). New York: W.W. Norton & Co., Inc. ISBN 0-393-00331-0.
  • Cooper, William J. (2017). The Lost Founding Father: John Quincy Adams and the Transformation of American Politics. Liveright Publishing. ISBN 9781631493898.
  • Formisano, Ronald P. (2008). For the People: American Populist Movements from the Revolution to the 1850s. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-3172-4.
  • Formisano, Ronald P.; Kutolowski, Kathleen Smith (1977). "Antimasonry and Masonry: The Genesis of Protest, 1826-1827". American Quarterly. 29 (2): 139–165. doi:10.2307/2712356. JSTOR 2712356.
  • Goodman, Paul. Towards a Christian republic: Antimasonry and the great transition in New England 1826-1836 (Oxford University Press, 1988).
  • Holt, Michael F. "The Antimasonic and Know Nothing Parties," in History of U.S. Political Parties, ed. Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. (4 vols., New York, 1973), vol I, 575–620.
  • Jamele, John F. (1991), The Antimasonic Party in Massachusetts, 1826–1835, College Park, MD: University of Maryland Library.
  • McCarthy, Charles (1903), The Antimasonic Party: A Study of Political Antimasonry in the United States, 1827–1840, Washington: Government Printing Office, reprinted from Annual Report of the American Historical Association, vol. 1, 1902, pp. 365–574.
  • Nathans, Sydney (1973), Daniel Webster and Jacksonian Democracy, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, ISBN 978-0-8018-1246-0.
  • Ratcliffe, Donald J. "Antimasonry and Partisanship in Greater New England, 1826-1836." Journal of the Early Republic 15.2 (1995): 199-239.
  • Rayback, Robert J. Millard Fillmore: Biography of a President. Buffalo Historical Society. 1959. online
  • Rupp, Robert O. "Parties and the public good: political Antimasonry in New York reconsidered." Journal of the Early Republic 8.3 (1988): 253-279. online
  • Shade, William. "Review: The Elder Goodman's 'Light on Antimasonry'?" Reviews in American History (1989) 17#1 pp. 58–63 in jstor;
  • Stahr, Walter (2012). Seward : Lincoln's indispensable man. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4391-2118-4.
  • Trefousse, Hans L. Thaddeus Stevens: Nineteenth-Century Egalitarian. University of North Carolina Press. 1997.
  • Vaughn, William Preston (1983) The Antimasonic Party in the United States, 1826–1843. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-1474-8, the standard history.
  • Van Deusen, Glyndon G. Thurlow Weed, Wizard of the Lobby (1947) online.

anti, masonic, party, earliest, third, party, united, states, formally, single, issue, party, strongly, opposed, freemasonry, united, states, active, from, late, 1820s, especially, northeast, later, attempted, become, major, party, expanding, platform, take, p. The Anti Masonic Party was the earliest third party in the United States 12 Formally a single issue party it strongly opposed Freemasonry in the United States It was active from the late 1820s especially in the Northeast and later attempted to become a major party by expanding its platform to take positions on other issues It declined quickly after 1832 as most members joined the new Whig Party it disappeared after 1838 Anti Masonic PartyLeaderSolomon SouthwickThurlow WeedWilliam WirtFoundedFirst February 1828 195 years ago February 1828 Second 1872 151 years ago 1872 DissolvedFirst December 1840 182 years ago December 1840 Second 1888 135 years ago 1888 Merged intoWhig PartyHeadquartersAlbany New YorkNewspaperAnti Masonic EnquirerNational ObserverAlbany JournalIdeologyAmerican SchoolAnti elitism de facto 1 2 3 4 5 Anti Jacksonianism 6 7 Anti Masonry 8 Political positionRight wing to far right 9 ReligionProtestantism 10 National affiliationNational Republican Party 1828 7 11 Colors YellowPolitics of United StatesPolitical partiesElectionsThe party was founded following the disappearance of William Morgan a former Mason who had become a prominent critic of the Masonic organization Many believed that Masons had murdered Morgan for speaking out against Masonry and subsequently many churches and other groups condemned Masonry As many Masons were prominent businessmen and politicians the backlash against the Masons was also a form of anti elitism The Anti Masons purported that Masons posed a threat to American republicanism by secretly trying to control the government Furthermore there was a strong fear that Masonry was hostile to Christianity Mass opposition to Masonry eventually coalesced into a political party Before and during the presidency of John Quincy Adams there was a period of political realignment The Anti Masons emerged as an important third party alternative to Andrew Jackson s Democrats and Adams National Republicans In New York the Anti Masons supplanted the National Republicans as the primary opposition to the Democrats After experiencing unexpected success in the 1828 elections the Anti Masons adopted positions on other issues most notably support for internal improvements and a protective tariff Several Anti Masons including William A Palmer and Joseph Ritner won election to prominent positions In states such as Pennsylvania and Rhode Island the party controlled the balance of power in the state legislature and provided crucial support to candidates for the United States Senate In 1831 the party held the first presidential nominating convention a practice that was subsequently adopted by all major parties Delegates chose former U S Attorney General William Wirt as their standard bearer in the 1832 presidential election Wirt won 7 8 of the popular vote and carried Vermont As the 1830s progressed many of the Anti Masonic Party s supporters joined the Whig Party which sought to unite those opposed to the policies of President Jackson The Anti Masons brought with them an intense distrust of politicians and a rejection of unthinking party loyalty together with new campaign techniques to whip up excitement among the voters The Anti Masonic Party held a national convention in 1835 nominating Whig candidate William Henry Harrison but a second convention announced that the party would not officially support a candidate Harrison campaigned as a Whig in the 1836 presidential election and his relative success in the election encouraged further migration of Anti Masons to the Whig Party By 1840 the party had ceased to function as a national organization In subsequent decades former Anti Masonic candidates and supporters such as Millard Fillmore William H Seward Thurlow Weed and Thaddeus Stevens became prominent members of the Whig Party Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Party foundation 1 3 Political rise 1 4 Conventions and elections 2 Legacy 3 Second Anti Masonic Party 4 Members of Congress 5 Notable office holders and candidates 6 Electoral history 6 1 Presidential elections 6 2 Congressional elections 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources and further readingHistory EditBackground Edit William Morgan whose disappearance and probable death led to creation of the Anti Masonic Party The opponents of Freemasonry formed a political movement after the Morgan affair convinced them the Masons were murdering men who spoke out against them 13 This key episode was the mysterious 1826 disappearance of William Morgan a Freemason in upstate New York who had turned against the Masons 14 Morgan claimed to have been made a member of the Masons while living in Canada 15 and he appears to have briefly attended a lodge in Rochester 16 9 In 1825 Morgan received the Royal Arch degree at Le Roy s Western Star Chapter 33 having declared under oath that he had previously received the six degrees which preceded it 17 18 Whether he actually received these degrees and if so from where has not been determined for certain 16 9 17 Morgan then attempted unsuccessfully to help establish or visit lodges and chapters in Batavia but was denied participation in Batavia s Masonic activities by members who were uncertain about Morgan s character and claims to Masonic membership 19 Angered by the rejection Morgan announced that he was going to publish an expose titled Illustrations of Masonry 20 critical of the Freemasons and describing their secret degree ceremonies in detail 21 When his intentions became known to the Batavia lodge an attempt was made to burn down the business of the printer who planned to publish Morgan s book 22 In September 1826 Morgan was arrested on flimsy allegations of failing to repay a loan and theft of a shirt and tie in an effort to prevent publication of his book by keeping him in jail 23 The individual who intended to publish Morgan s book paid his bail and he was released from custody 23 Shortly afterwards Morgan disappeared 24 Some skeptics argued that Morgan had left the Batavia area on his own either because he had been paid not to publish his book or to escape Masonic retaliation for attempting to publish the book or to generate publicity that would boost the book s sales 25 The generally believed version of events was that Masons killed Morgan by drowning him in the Niagara River 26 27 Whether he fled or was murdered Morgan s disappearance led many to believe that Freemasonry was in conflict with good citizenship 28 Because judges businessmen bankers and politicians were often Masons ordinary citizens began to think of it as an elitist group 2 Moreover many claimed that the lodges secret oaths bound Masons to favor each other against outsiders in the courts and elsewhere 3 Because some trials of alleged Morgan conspirators were mishandled and the Masons resisted further inquiries many New Yorkers concluded that Masons controlled key offices and used their official authority to promote the goals of the fraternity by ensuring that Morgan s supposed killers escaped punishment 29 When a member sought to reveal its secrets so ran the conclusion the Freemasons had done away with him Because they controlled the courts and other offices they were considered capable of obstructing the investigation True Americans they said had to organize and defeat this conspiracy If good government was to be restored all Masons must be purged from public office 30 Party foundation Edit Thurlow Weed newspaper editor who helped form the Anti Masonic Party The Anti Masonic Party was formed in Upstate New York in February 1828 31 Anti Masons were opponents of Freemasonry believing that it was a corrupt and elitist secret society which was ruling much of the country in defiance of republican principles 32 Many people regarded the Masonic organization and its adherents involved in government as corrupt 4 5 Opposition to Masonry was taken up by some evangelical Protestant churches as a religious cause particularly in the Burned over district of upstate New York 33 Many churches passed resolutions condemning ministers and lay leaders who were Masons and several denominations condemned Freemasonry including the Presbyterian Congregational Methodist and Baptist churches 34 Solomon Southwick newspaper publisher and 1828 Anti Masonic candidate for Governor of New York Anti Masonry became a political issue in Western New York where early in 1827 many mass meetings resolved not to support Masons for public office 35 In New York the supporters of President John Quincy Adams called Adams men or Anti Jacksonians or National Republicans were a feeble organization Adams supporters used the strong anti Masonic feeling to create a new party in opposition to the rising Jacksonian Democracy nationally and the Albany Regency political organization of Martin Van Buren in New York 7 In this effort they were aided by the fact that Andrew Jackson was a high ranking Mason and frequently spoke in praise of the organization 36 The alleged remark of Anti Masonic organizer Thurlow Weed which Weed denied that an unidentified corpse found in the Niagara River was a good enough Morgan until after the 1828 elections summarized the value of the Morgan disappearance for the opponents of Jackson 37 Political rise Edit In the elections of 1828 the new party proved unexpectedly strong 38 Though its candidate for Governor of New York Solomon Southwick was defeated the Anti Masonic Party became the main opposition party to the Jacksonian Democrats in New York 39 In 1829 it broadened its issues base when it became a champion of internal improvements and the protective tariff 40 Anti Masonic Party members expanded the use of party affiliated newspapers for political organizing by publishing over 100 including Southwick s National Observer and Weed s Anti Masonic Enquirer 16 34 35 By 1829 Weed s Albany Journal had become the preeminent Anti Masonic paper and it later became the leading Whig newspaper 41 42 43 The newspapers of the time reveled in partisanship and one brief paragraph in an Albany Journal article opposing Martin Van Buren included the words dangerous demagogue corrupt degrade pervert prostitute debauch and cursed 44 Conventions and elections Edit A national Anti Masonic organization was planned as early as 1827 when the New York leaders attempted unsuccessfully to persuade Henry Clay to renounce his Masonic membership and head the movement 38 By 1830 the Anti Masonic movement s effort to broaden its appeal enabled it to spread to neighboring states becoming especially strong in Pennsylvania and Vermont 38 In 1831 William A Palmer was elected Governor of Vermont on an Anti Masonic ticket an office he held until 1835 45 Palmer s brother in law Augustine Clarke was an Anti Masonic presidential elector in 1832 served as Vermont state treasurer from 1833 to 1837 and was appointed to the Anti Masonic National Committee in 1837 46 47 48 Other Vermont Anti Masonic electors in 1832 included former governor Ezra Butler and former United States representative William Strong 49 The highest elected office held by a member of the Anti Masonic Party was governor Besides Palmer in Vermont Joseph Ritner was the governor of Pennsylvania from 1835 to 1839 50 In addition to Palmer and Ritner Silas H Jennison an Anti Mason was elected Lieutenant Governor of Vermont with Whig support in 1835 No candidate including Palmer received a majority of votes for governor as required by the Vermont Constitution The contest then moved to the Vermont General Assembly which could not choose a winner The General Assembly then opted to allow Jennison to act as governor until the next election He won election as governor in his own right as a Whig in 1836 and served from 1836 to 1841 45 51 Former Mason William Wirt won Vermont s Electoral College votes in the 1832 presidential election for the Anti Masonic Party Though the Anti Masonic Party elected no senators and controlled no houses of a state legislature Anti Masons in state legislatures sometimes formed coalitions to elect senators and organize their chambers Examples include William Wilkins elected to the Senate in 1830 by a coalition of Democrats and Anti Masons in the Pennsylvania General Assembly 52 53 and William Sprague elected Speaker of the Rhode Island House of Representatives in 1831 by a coalition of Democrats and Anti Masons 54 Amos Ellmaker 1832 Anti Masonic candidate for Vice President The Anti Masonic Party conducted the first presidential nominating convention in the United States history for the 1832 elections nominating William Wirt a former Mason for President and Amos Ellmaker for Vice President in Baltimore Wirt won 7 78 percent of the popular vote and the seven electoral votes of Vermont 55 Soon the Democrats and Whigs recognized the convention s value in managing parties and campaigns and began to hold their own 56 Following Ritner s election in 1835 a state convention was held in Harrisburg on December 14 17 1835 to choose presidential electors for the 1836 election 57 The convention nominated William Henry Harrison for president and Francis Granger for vice president 58 The Vermont state Anti Masonic convention followed suit on February 24 1836 59 Anti Masonic leaders were unable to obtain assurance from Harrison that he was not a Mason so they called a national convention The second national Anti Masonic nominating convention was held in Philadelphia on May 4 1836 60 The meeting was divisive but a majority of the delegates officially stated that the party was not sponsoring a national ticket for the presidential election of 1836 and proposed a meeting in 1837 to discuss the future of the party 61 Although Harrison lost the election to Democratic candidate Martin Van Buren in 1836 his strength throughout the North was hailed by Anti Masonic leaders because the Anti Masonic Party was the first to officially place his name in contention 62 By the mid 1830s other Anti Jacksonians had coalesced into the Whig Party which had a broader issue base than the Anti Masons By the late 1830s many of the Anti Masonic movement s members were moving to the Whigs regarding that party as a better alternative to the Jacksonians by then called Democrats 63 The Anti Masonic Party held a conference in September 1837 to discuss its situation one delegate was former president John Quincy Adams 64 The Anti Masonic Party held a third national nominating convention at Temperance Hall in Philadelphia on November 13 14 1838 65 By this time the party had been almost entirely supplanted by the Whigs The Anti Masons unanimously endorsed William Henry Harrison for president and Daniel Webster for vice president in the 1840 election When the Whig National Convention nominated Harrison with John Tyler as his running mate the Anti Masonic Party did not make an alternate nomination and ceased to function with most adherents being fully absorbed into the Whigs by 1840 66 67 Legacy Edit Jonathan Blanchard 1884 presidential candidate of the Anti Masonic Party s second incarnation Anti Masonry was deeply committed to conspiracy theories primarily the claim that Masonic elites were trying to secretly control the government 68 As people became more mobile economically during the Industrial Revolution and began to move west when new states were populated by white settlers and added to the Union the growth of the Anti Masonic movement was caused by the political and social unrest resulting from the weakening of longstanding family and community ties 69 With Freemasonry one of the few institutions that remained stable during this time of change it became a natural target for protesters 70 As a result the Morgan Affair became the highly visible catalyst that turned a popular movement into a political party 71 Under the banner of Anti Masons able leaders united Anti Jacksonians and others who were discontented with existing political conditions 72 The fact that William Wirt their choice for the presidency in 1832 not only was a former Mason but also defended Freemasonry in a speech before the convention that nominated him indicates that opposition to Masonry was not the Anti Masonic movement s sole issue 67 The Anti Masonic movement gave rise to or expanded the use of many innovations which became accepted practice among other parties including nominating conventions and party newspapers 56 In contrast to the Democrats who stressed unwavering loyalty to the party s candidates 73 Anti Masonic heritage to the Whigs included a distrust of behind the scenes political maneuvering by party bosses 74 Instead they made direct appeals to the people through gigantic rallies parades and rhetorical rabble rousing 74 In addition the Anti Masons aided in the rise of the Whig Party as the major alternative to the Democrats with conventions newspapers and Anti Masonic positions on issues including internal improvements and tariffs being adopted by the Whigs 75 Second Anti Masonic Party EditA later political organization called the Anti Masonic Party was active from 1872 until 1888 This second group had a more religious basis for its anti Masonry and was closely associated with Jonathan Blanchard of Wheaton College 76 Members of Congress Edit Grattan H Wheeler Anti Masonic congressman from New York The Anti Masons did not elect anyone to the Senate but elected several members of the House of Representatives 77 MassachusettsWilliam Jackson John Reed Jr New YorkWilliam Babcock Gamaliel H Barstow Timothy Childs John A Collier Bates Cooke John Dickson Philo C Fuller Gideon Hard Abner Hazeltine George W Lay Henry C Martindale Robert S Rose Phineas L Tracy Grattan H Wheeler Frederick WhittleseyOhioJonathan SloanePennsylvaniaRobert Allison John Banks Charles Augustus Barnitz Richard Biddle George Chambers William Clark Edward Darlington Edward Davies Harmar Denny John Edwards Thomas Henry William Hiester Francis James Thomas McKean Charles Ogle David Potts Jr Andrew StewartRhode IslandDutee Jerauld PearceVermontWilliam Cahoon Benjamin F Deming Henry Fisk Janes William SladeNotable office holders and candidates EditMain page Category Anti Masonic Party politicians President Millard Fillmore s political career began as an Anti Masonic member of the New York State Assembly in 1829 Solomon Southwick candidate for Governor of New York 1828 Millard Fillmore New York State Assembly 1829 1831 William H Seward New York State Senate 1831 1834 Lebbeus Egerton Lieutenant Governor of Vermont 1831 1835 William A Palmer Governor of Vermont 1831 1835 William Wirt candidate for President in 1832 Amos Ellmaker candidate for Vice President in 1832 William Sprague III Speaker of the Rhode Island House of Representatives 1832 1835 Thaddeus Stevens Pennsylvania House of Representatives 1833 1835 Augustine Clarke Vermont State Treasurer 1833 1837 Joseph Ritner Governor of Pennsylvania 1835 1839 Silas H Jennison Governor of Vermont 1835 1841 and Anti Mason running with Whig support who later became a Whig John Quincy Adams candidate for Governor of Massachusetts in 1833 Allen Wardner Vermont State Treasurer 1837 1838 Jonathan Blanchard candidate for president in 1884Electoral history EditPresidential elections Edit Election Candidate Running mate Votes Vote Electoral votes Outcome of election1832 William Wirt Amos Ellmaker 100 715 7 8 7 286 New Lost1836 a Not presented1840 b Not presented1880 John W Phelps Samuel C Pomeroy 1 045 0 01 0 369 0 Lost Endorsed William H Harrison as President and Francis Granger as Vice President Initially endorsed Harrison as President and Daniel Webster as Vice President it later merged into the Whig Party until election Congressional elections Edit United StatesHouse of Representatives Election year No ofoverall seats won House Speaker1828 5 213 New Andrew Stevenson1830 17 213 121832 25 240 81834 16 242 9 James K Polk1836 7 242 91838 6 242 1 John W Jones United StatesSenate Election year No ofoverall seats won Senate President1828 1829 0 48 New John C Calhoun1830 1831 0 48 01832 1833 0 48 0 Vacant a 1834 1835 0 48 0 Martin Van Buren1836 1837 0 52 01838 1839 0 52 0 Richard M Johnson Office left vacant when Calhoun resigned to become Senator on December 28 1832 See also EditFreemasonry in the United StatesReferences Edit Cooper 2017 pp 280 283 a b Chip Berlet Matthew Nemiroff Lyons Right wing Populism in America Too Close for Comfort 2000 page 38 a b Sydney Nathans Daniel Webster and Jacksonian Democracy 1973 page 88 a b Formisano Ronald P 2008 For the People American Populist Movements from the Revolution to the 1850s Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press p 126 ISBN 978 0 8078 3172 4 a b Ronald P Formisano and Kathleen Smith Kutolowski Antimasonry and Masonry The Genesis of Protest 1826 1827 American Quarterly 29 2 1977 139 165 Brodie pp 38 39 a b c Anne Marie Taylor Young Charles Sumner and the Legacy of the American Enlightenment 1811 1851 2001 page 40 Anti Masonic Movement Encyclopaedia Britannica July 20 1998 Retrieved September 9 2017 Michael George 2014 A New American Populist Coalition The Relationship between the Tea Party and the Far Right In de la Torre Carlos ed The Promise and Perils of Populism Global Perspectives Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky p 266 ISBN 978 0 8131 4687 4 Alexander Piatigorsky January 31 2013 Freemasonry A Study of the Phenomenon Random House p 166 ISBN 9781860462658 Stahr 2012 pp 24 26 Richard B Morris Encyclopedia of American History revised edition amp Row New York 1961 pp 170 171 Ulm Aaron Hardy February 14 1920 Third Parties We Have Known Collier s San Francisco CA P F Collier amp Son Company 18 Third Parties We Have Known p 18 Ellis Edward Sylvester 1920 Low Twelve By Their Deeds Ye Shall Know Them New York NY Macoy Publishing and Masonic Supply Co p 234 a b c Bentley A P 1874 History of the Abduction of William Morgan Mt Pleasant IA Van Cise amp Throop a b Tillotson Lee S 1920 Ancient Craft Masonry in Vermont Montpelier VT Capital City Press p 79 rochester Morris Robert 1884 William Morgan Or Political Anti Masonry Its Rise Growth and Decadence New York NY Robert Macoy Masonic Publisher p 61 Ross Peter 1899 A Standard History of Freemasonry in the State of New York Volume 1 New York NY Lewis Publishing Company p 310 Morgan William 1827 Illustrations of Masonry by One of the Fraternity Who has Devoted Thirty Years to the Subject God said Let There be Light and There was light Batavia N Y David C Miller Stokes Jerry 2007 Changing World Religions Cults amp Occult Menlo Park CA p 285 Jasper Ridley The Freemasons A History of the World s Most Powerful Secret Society 2013 unknown page number a b Morris 1884 p 106 Peck William F 1908 History of Rochester and Monroe county New York The Pioneer publishing company p 63 Retrieved 2009 05 02 The Skeptic s Dictionary Freemasons retrieved September 9 2014 Pool William 1897 Landmarks of Niagara County New York D Mason amp Company p 69 Cornog Evan 1998 The Birth of Empire DeWitt Clinton and the American Experience 1769 1828 Oxford University Press p 167 ISBN 9780195353204 Josephus Nelson Larned The New Larned History for Ready Reference Reading and Research Volume 1 1922 page 374 Henry Dana Ward The Anti Masonic Review Volume 1 1828 page 290 Rayback 1959 pp 18 19 William Preston Vaughn The Antimasonic Party in the United States 1826 1843 1983 pp 21 34 Massachusetts Antimasonic Republican Convention 1834 Antimasonic Republican Convention for Massachusetts Held at Boston Sept 10 and 11 1834 Boston MA Leonard W Kimball p 34 35 via Google Books David G Hackett That Religion in Which All Men Agree Freemasonry in American Culture 2014 page 118 McKinley Erik March 1 1921 The Anti Masonic Party The Builder A Journal for the Masonic Student Anamosa Iowa National Masonic Research Society 7 72 Michael Kazin Rebecca Edwards Adam Rothman editors The Princeton Encyclopedia of American Political History Volume 1 2010 page 39 Neeley Philip P 1846 Masonic Tribute to the Late General Andrew Jackson The Freemason s Monthly Magazine Boston MA Tuttle amp Dennett 5 83 Weed Thurlow 1877 A Good Enough Morgan Selections from the Newspaper Articles of Thurlow Weed Albany NY Weed Parsons and Company 51 61 a b c One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Anti Masonic Party Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 127 Mark Stein American Panic A History of Who Scares Us and Why 2014 page 45 Edward S Mihalkanin editor American Statesmen Secretaries of State from John Jay to Colin Powell 2004 page 451 Jeffrey D Schultz John G West Iain S MacLean editors Encyclopedia of Religion in American Politics 1999 page 18 Charles Elliott Fitch Encyclopedia of Biography of New York Volume 1 1916 page 318 Benson John Lossing The Empire State A Compendious History of the Commonwealth of New York 1888 page 447 John G Gasaway Tippecanoe and the Party Press Too Mass Communication Politics Culture and the Fabled Presidential Election of 1840 1999 page 228 a b Wells Frederic Palmer 1902 History of Newbury Vermont The Caledonian Company p 340 Retrieved September 19 2014 william a palmer governor vermont anti masonic Bouton Nathaniel 1856 The History of Concord Vermont McFarland amp Jenks p 697 Retrieved September 19 2014 Niles William Ogden September 30 1837 National Antimasonic Convention Niles National Register Vol 53 p 68 Hemenway Abby Maria 1882 The History of the Town of Montpelier Including that of the Town of East Montpelier A M Hemenway p 273 Retrieved September 19 2014 augustine clark treasurer Vermont Secretary of State 1902 Vermont Legislative Directory Vermont Watchman Co p 199 Retrieved September 19 2014 Pennsylvania Bureau of Statistics 1875 Annual Report of the Bureau of Statistics of Pennsylvania Volume 2 B F Meyers State Printer p 17 Retrieved September 19 2014 Duffy John J et al 2003 The Vermont Encyclopedia University of Vermont Press p 171 ISBN 9781584650867 Retrieved September 19 2014 Polk James K 1996 Cutler Wayne ed Correspondence of James K Polk Volume IX January June 1845 University of Tennessee Press p 39 ISBN 9780870499470 Retrieved September 21 2014 A History of the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives U S Government Printing Office 1956 p 508 ISBN 9780160845789 Retrieved September 21 2014 American Historical Association 1903 Annual Report Volume I U S Government Printing Office p 551 Retrieved September 21 2014 Haynes Stan M 2012 The First American Political Conventions Transforming Presidential Nominations 1832 1872 McFarland amp Company Inc p 27 ISBN 9780786490301 Retrieved September 19 2014 a b Goldwag Arthur 2012 The New Hate A History of Fear and Loathing on the Populist Right p 172 ISBN 9780307742513 Retrieved September 19 2014 PA US President AM Convention Race Dec 14 1835 Our Campaigns 2008 03 27 Retrieved 2014 02 21 Harrisburg Conventions Richmond Enquirer Richmond VA December 22 1835 p 2 via Newspapers com VT US President AM Convention Race Feb 24 1836 Our Campaigns 2008 03 27 Retrieved 2014 02 21 US President AM Convention Race May 04 1836 Our Campaigns 2008 03 27 Retrieved 2014 02 21 Trefousse Hans Louis 1997 Thaddeus Stevens Nineteenth century Egalitarian University of North Carolina Press p 45 ISBN 9780807823354 Retrieved September 19 2014 Mueller Richard Mueller 1922 The Whig Party in Pennsylvania Columbia University p 276 Retrieved September 19 2014 anti masonic harrison 1836 Adams Sean Patrick 2013 A Companion to the Era of Andrew Jackson Blackwell Publishing p 343 ISBN 9781118290828 Retrieved September 19 2014 Haywood H L ed 1921 The Builder A Journal for the Masonic Student Vol 7 National Masonic Research Society p 77 Retrieved September 19 2014 US President AM Convention Race Nov 13 1838 Our Campaigns 2009 05 23 Retrieved 2014 02 21 Remini Robert Vincent 1991 Henry Clay Statesman for the Union W W Norton amp Company Inc p 528 ISBN 9780393310887 Retrieved September 19 2014 a b McLaughlin Andrew Cunningham 1914 Cyclopedia of American Government Volume 1 D Appleton and Company p 49 Retrieved September 19 2014 Cheathem Mark R April 11 2019 Conspiracy Theories Abounded in 19th Century American Politics Smithsonian Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Keller Morton 2007 America s Three Regimes A New Political History New York NY Oxford University Press p 77 ISBN 978 0 19 532502 7 Lipson Dorothy Ann 1977 Freemasonry in Federalist Connecticut 1789 1835 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 9 ISBN 9781400870080 Vaughn The Anti Masonic Party in the United States 1826 1843 pp 21 34 Scarry Robert J 2001 Millard Fillmore McFarland amp Company Inc p 34 ISBN 9780786450763 Retrieved September 19 2014 Lesson 23a The Era of Good Feelings and the Two Party System US History org Philadelphia PA Independence Hall Association Retrieved June 22 2022 a b Sean Wilentz The Politicians and the Egalitarians The Hidden History of American Politics 2017 p 141 Mihalkanin Edward S ed 2004 American Statesmen Secretaries of State from John Jay to Colin Powell Greenwood Press p 451 ISBN 9780313308284 Retrieved September 19 2014 Volo James M 2012 The Boston Tea Party The Foundations of Revolution ABC CLIO LLC p 21 ISBN 9780313398759 Retrieved September 19 2014 Office of the Historian U S House of Representatives List of Anti Masonic Party Members of Congress Retrieved June 17 2014 Sources and further reading EditBemis Samuel Flagg John Quincy Adams and the union 1956 vol 2 pp 273 304 Brodie Fawn 1966 1959 Thaddeus Stevens Scourge of the South Norton Library ed New York W W Norton amp Co Inc ISBN 0 393 00331 0 Cooper William J 2017 The Lost Founding Father John Quincy Adams and the Transformation of American Politics Liveright Publishing ISBN 9781631493898 Formisano Ronald P 2008 For the People American Populist Movements from the Revolution to the 1850s Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 3172 4 Formisano Ronald P Kutolowski Kathleen Smith 1977 Antimasonry and Masonry The Genesis of Protest 1826 1827 American Quarterly 29 2 139 165 doi 10 2307 2712356 JSTOR 2712356 Goodman Paul Towards a Christian republic Antimasonry and the great transition in New England 1826 1836 Oxford University Press 1988 Holt Michael F The Antimasonic and Know Nothing Parties in History of U S Political Parties ed Arthur M Schlesinger Jr 4 vols New York 1973 vol I 575 620 Jamele John F 1991 The Antimasonic Party in Massachusetts 1826 1835 College Park MD University of Maryland Library McCarthy Charles 1903 The Antimasonic Party A Study of Political Antimasonry in the United States 1827 1840 Washington Government Printing Office reprinted from Annual Report of the American Historical Association vol 1 1902 pp 365 574 Nathans Sydney 1973 Daniel Webster and Jacksonian Democracy Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 1246 0 Ratcliffe Donald J Antimasonry and Partisanship in Greater New England 1826 1836 Journal of the Early Republic 15 2 1995 199 239 Rayback Robert J Millard Fillmore Biography of a President Buffalo Historical Society 1959 online Rupp Robert O Parties and the public good political Antimasonry in New York reconsidered Journal of the Early Republic 8 3 1988 253 279 online Shade William Review The Elder Goodman s Light on Antimasonry Reviews in American History 1989 17 1 pp 58 63 in jstor Stahr Walter 2012 Seward Lincoln s indispensable man New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4391 2118 4 Trefousse Hans L Thaddeus Stevens Nineteenth Century Egalitarian University of North Carolina Press 1997 Vaughn William Preston 1983 The Antimasonic Party in the United States 1826 1843 University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 1474 8 the standard history Van Deusen Glyndon G Thurlow Weed Wizard of the Lobby 1947 online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anti Masonic Party amp oldid 1139942216, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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