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Ignatius L. Donnelly

Ignatius Loyola Donnelly (November 3, 1831 – January 1, 1901) was an American Congressman, populist writer, and fringe scientist. He is known primarily now for his fringe theories concerning Atlantis, Catastrophism (especially the idea of an ancient impact event affecting ancient civilizations), and Shakespearean authorship. These works are widely regarded as examples of pseudoscience and pseudohistory. Donnelly's work corresponds to the writings of late-19th and early-20th century figures such as Helena Blavatsky, Rudolf Steiner, and James Churchward.

Ignatius L. Donnelly
Donnelly c. 1865
Member of the
Minnesota House of Representatives
In office
1887–1888, 1897–1898
Member of the Minnesota Senate
In office
1874–1878, 1891–1894
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Minnesota's 2nd district
In office
March 4, 1863 – March 3, 1869
Preceded byCyrus Aldrich
Succeeded byEugene McLanahan Wilson
2nd Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota
In office
January 2, 1860 – March 4, 1863
GovernorAlexander Ramsey
Preceded byWilliam Holcombe
Succeeded byHenry Adoniram Swift
Personal details
Born
Ignatius Loyola Donnelly

(1831-11-03)November 3, 1831
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedJanuary 1, 1901(1901-01-01) (aged 69)
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic (before 1857, 1884-1887)
Republican (1857-1884)
Independent (1887-1892)
People's (1892–1901)
Spouses
  • Katherine McCaffrey
    (m. 1855; died 1894)
  • Marian Hanson
    (m. 1898)
Children3
ProfessionAttorney
Author
Signature

Life and career edit

Donnelly was the son of Philip Carrol Donnelly, an immigrant from Fintona, County Tyrone, Ireland who had settled in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His sister was the writer Eleanor C. Donnelly. On June 29, 1826, Philip had married Catherine Gavin, who was the daughter of John Gavin, also an immigrant from Fintona, County Tyrone, Ireland. After starting as a peddler, Philip studied medicine at the Philadelphia College of Medicine.

Catherine provided for her children by operating a pawn shop. Ignatius, her youngest son, was admitted to the prestigious Central High School, the second oldest public high school in the United States. There he studied under the presidency of John S. Hart, excelling primarily in literature.

Donnelly decided to become a lawyer and became a clerk for Benjamin Brewster, who later became Attorney General of the United States. Donnelly was admitted to the bar in 1852. In 1855, he married Katherine McCaffrey, with whom he had three children. In 1855, he resigned his clerkship, entered politics with campaign speeches for Democratic candidates, and participated in communal home building schemes. He fell away from the Catholic Church sometime in the 1850s, and thereafter, never participated in any organized religion.[1]

Donnelly moved to the Minnesota Territory in 1857 amidst rumors of a financial scandal, and there he settled in Dakota County. He initiated a utopian community called Nininger City, together with several partners. However, the Panic of 1857 doomed the attempt at a cooperative farm and community and left Donnelly deeply in debt.

His wife Katherine died in 1894. In 1898, he married his secretary, Marian Hanson.

Donnelly died on January 1, 1901, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, age 69 years. He is buried at Calvary Cemetery in St. Paul, Minnesota. His personal papers are archived at the Minnesota Historical Society.[2]

Political and literary career edit

Donnelly entered politics, this time as a Republican, with two unsuccessful campaigns for the state legislature (1857, 1858). Though he was not elected, Donnelly was recognized as a highly effective political speaker, which led to a successful campaign for lieutenant governor, which he held from 1860 to 1863. He was a Radical Republican[3] Congressman from Minnesota in the 38th, 39th, and 40th congresses, (1863–1869), a state senator from 1874 to 1878 and 1891–1894 and a state representative from 1887 to 1888 and 1897–1898.[4] As a legislator, he advocated extending the powers of the Freedmen's Bureau to provide education for freedmen so that they could protect themselves once the bureau was withdrawn. Donnelly was also an early supporter of women's suffrage. After leaving the Minnesota State Senate in 1878, he returned to his law practice and writing.

In 1877, Donnelly spoke at a meeting of 10,000 people where he read his preamble to the conference platform. The document of 12 short paragraphs, as altered slightly for the party's first nominating convention in Omaha that July, was the pithiest and soon became the most widely circulated statement of the Populist credo.[5] Donnelly talked about the corruption of politics and voting, newspapers giving out false and biased material, and how the Populists needed to take back the country that was their own.

In 1882, he published Atlantis: The Antediluvian World, his best-known work. It details theories concerning the mythical lost continent of Atlantis. The book sold well and is widely credited with initiating the theme of Atlantis as an antediluvian civilization that became such a feature of popular literature during the 20th century and contributed to the emergence of Mayanism. Donnelly suggested that Atlantis, whose story was told by Plato in the dialogues of Timaeus and Critias, had been destroyed during the same event remembered in the Bible as the Great Flood. He cited research on the ancient Maya civilization by Charles Étienne Brasseur de Bourbourg and Augustus Le Plongeon, claiming that it had been the place of a common origin of ancient civilizations in Africa, especially ancient Egypt, Europe, and the Americas. He also thought that it had been the original home of an Aryan race whose red-haired, blue-eyed descendants could be found in Ireland. Donnelly wrote that Ireland was the ''Garden of Phoebus'' (Hyperborea) of the Western mythologists.[6][page needed]

A year after Atlantis, he published Ragnarok: The Age of Fire and Gravel, in which he expounded his belief that the Flood, as well as the destruction of Atlantis and the extinction of the mammoth, had been brought about by the near-collision of the earth with a massive comet. This book also sold well, and both books seem to have had an important influence on the development of Immanuel Velikovsky's controversial ideas half a century later.

 
Donnelly c. 1898 by Frederick Gutekunst

In 1888, he published The Great Cryptogram in which he proposed that Shakespeare's plays had been written by Francis Bacon, an idea that was popular during the late 19th and early 20th century. He then traveled to England to arrange the English publication of his book by Sampson Low, speaking at the Oxford (and Cambridge) Union in which his thesis "Resolved, that the works of William Shakespeare were composed by Francis Bacon" was put to an unsuccessful vote. The book was a complete failure, and Donnelly was discredited.

Donnelly also made several other campaigns for public office during the 1880s. He made a losing campaign for Congress, this time as a Democrat, in 1884. In 1887, he successfully campaigned for a seat in the Minnesota State Legislature as an independent. During this period, he was also an organizer of the Minnesota Farmers' Alliance.

In 1892, Donnelly wrote the preamble of the People's Party's Omaha Platform for the presidential campaign of that year. He was nominated for Vice President of the United States in 1900 by the People's Party, also known as the Populist Party. The People's Party was a development of the National Farmers' Alliance, and had a platform that demanded the abandonment of the gold standard and later for the adoption of free silver, the abolition of national banks, a graduated income tax, a direct election of senators, civil service reform, and an eight-hour day. That year, Donnelly also campaigned for governor of Minnesota but was defeated.

The People's Party protested the railroad companies corrupting government and advocated government regulation of the railroads. Donnelly had a key leadership role in this party, yet he received $10,000 from the Lake Superior and Mississippi Railroad Company.[7]

State park edit

During the 1930s, an organization was formed to lobby for the creation of a state park at Donnelly's home at Nininger near Hastings, Minnesota. The house was still standing in 1939, but the effort failed and the house has since been demolished.[8]

Reception edit

Donnelly's writings on Atlantis have been rejected by scholars and scientists.[9] He has been described as a crank and pseudoscience promoter.[10][11]

Gordon Stein has noted that "most of what Donnelly said was highly questionable or downright wrong."[12]

Works edit

His books include:

  • The Mourner's Vision: A Poem (1850), a long poem he wrote at the age of 18.
  • Atlantis: The Antediluvian World (1882), in which he attempted to establish that all known ancient civilizations were descended from its high-Neolithic culture.
  • Ragnarok: The Age of Fire and Gravel (1883), in which he proposed that a comet hit the earth in prehistoric times and destroyed a high civilization.
  • The Shakespeare Myth (1887)
  • Essay on the Sonnets of Shakespeare
  • The Great Cryptogram: Francis Bacon's Cipher in Shakespeare's Plays (1888), in which he maintained he had discovered codes in the works of Shakespeare indicating that their true author was Francis Bacon.
  • Caesar's Column (1890), a science fiction novel set during 1988 about a worker revolt against a global oligarchy. (Published under the pseudonym of Edmund Boisgilbert.)
  • Doctor Huguet: A Novel (1891) (Published under the pseudonym of Edmund Boisgilbert.)
  • The Golden Bottle or the Story of Ephraim Benezet of Kansas (1892)
  • The Bryan Campaign for the American People's Money (1896)
  • The Cipher in the Plays, and on the Tombstone (1899)

References edit

  1. ^ Walter H. Conser; Sumner B. Twiss (1997). Religious Diversity and American Religious History: Studies in Traditions and Cultures. University of Georgia Press. p. 185. ISBN 9780820319186.
  2. ^ MnPALS Union Catalog – Basic Search at www.mnpals.net
  3. ^ Howard, Victor B. (2015). Religion and the Radical Republican Movement, 1860–1870. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky. p. 110. ISBN 9780813161440. OCLC 900344655. Retrieved December 20, 2018. The radical Ignatius Donnelly and other spoke in support of the bill.
  4. ^ "Donnelly, Ignatius". Legislators, Past and Present. Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved March 14, 2016.
  5. ^ Kazin, Michael (1995). The Populist Persuasion. eReader. ISBN 978-0801485589.
  6. ^ Donnelly, Ignatius (1882). Atlantis: the antediluvian world. Robarts - University of Toronto. New York : Harper & Brothers.
  7. ^ Lens, Sidney. The Labor Wars: From the Molly Maguires to the Sitdowns. Doubleday & Co.: NY, 1973. 365 pp., p. 36.
  8. ^ A personal reminiscence of a visit to Nininger during the 1930s is available at the Internet Sacred Text Archive|Sacred-Texts website.
  9. ^ Linse, Pat. (2002). Atlantis: The Search for a Lost Continent. In Michael Shermer. The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. ABC-CLIO. pp. 297–307. ISBN 1-57607-654-7
  10. ^ Gardner, Martin. (1957). Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science. Dover Publications. pp. 35–37. ISBN 0-486-20394-8
  11. ^ Floyd, E. Randall. (2005). The Good, the Bad and the Mad: Some Weird People in American History. Fall River Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0760766002
  12. ^ Stein, Gordon. (1993). Encyclopedia of Hoaxes. Gale Group. p. 52. ISBN 0-8103-8414-0

Sources edit

External links edit

  • Ignatius Donnelly: Paranoid progressive in the Gilded Age
  • Ignatius Donnelly in MNopedia, the Minnesota Encyclopedia
  • The Ignatius Donnelly and Family Papers are available for research use at the Minnesota Historical Society
  • Works by Ignatius Donnelly at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Ignatius L. Donnelly at Internet Archive
  • Works by Ignatius L. Donnelly at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Donnelly's influence on 19th-Century Australia
  • Ignatius Donnelly at Library of Congress, with 15 library catalog records
  • Ignatius L. Donnelly at Find a Grave
Political offices
Preceded by Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota
1860–1863
Succeeded by
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by
New district
U.S. Representative from Minnesota's 2nd congressional district
1863–1869
Succeeded by
Party political offices
First Populist Party nominee for Governor of Minnesota
1892
Succeeded by
Sidney M. Owen
Preceded by Populist Party vice presidential candidate
1900 (lost)
Succeeded by

ignatius, donnelly, ignatius, loyola, donnelly, november, 1831, january, 1901, american, congressman, populist, writer, fringe, scientist, known, primarily, fringe, theories, concerning, atlantis, catastrophism, especially, idea, ancient, impact, event, affect. Ignatius Loyola Donnelly November 3 1831 January 1 1901 was an American Congressman populist writer and fringe scientist He is known primarily now for his fringe theories concerning Atlantis Catastrophism especially the idea of an ancient impact event affecting ancient civilizations and Shakespearean authorship These works are widely regarded as examples of pseudoscience and pseudohistory Donnelly s work corresponds to the writings of late 19th and early 20th century figures such as Helena Blavatsky Rudolf Steiner and James Churchward Ignatius L DonnellyDonnelly c 1865Member of the Minnesota House of RepresentativesIn office 1887 1888 1897 1898Member of the Minnesota SenateIn office 1874 1878 1891 1894Member of the U S House of Representatives from Minnesota s 2nd districtIn office March 4 1863 March 3 1869Preceded byCyrus AldrichSucceeded byEugene McLanahan Wilson2nd Lieutenant Governor of MinnesotaIn office January 2 1860 March 4 1863GovernorAlexander RamseyPreceded byWilliam HolcombeSucceeded byHenry Adoniram SwiftPersonal detailsBornIgnatius Loyola Donnelly 1831 11 03 November 3 1831Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S DiedJanuary 1 1901 1901 01 01 aged 69 Minneapolis Minnesota U S Political partyDemocratic before 1857 1884 1887 Republican 1857 1884 Independent 1887 1892 People s 1892 1901 SpousesKatherine McCaffrey m 1855 died 1894 wbr Marian Hanson m 1898 wbr Children3ProfessionAttorneyAuthorSignature Contents 1 Life and career 2 Political and literary career 3 State park 4 Reception 5 Works 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksLife and career editDonnelly was the son of Philip Carrol Donnelly an immigrant from Fintona County Tyrone Ireland who had settled in Philadelphia Pennsylvania His sister was the writer Eleanor C Donnelly On June 29 1826 Philip had married Catherine Gavin who was the daughter of John Gavin also an immigrant from Fintona County Tyrone Ireland After starting as a peddler Philip studied medicine at the Philadelphia College of Medicine Catherine provided for her children by operating a pawn shop Ignatius her youngest son was admitted to the prestigious Central High School the second oldest public high school in the United States There he studied under the presidency of John S Hart excelling primarily in literature Donnelly decided to become a lawyer and became a clerk for Benjamin Brewster who later became Attorney General of the United States Donnelly was admitted to the bar in 1852 In 1855 he married Katherine McCaffrey with whom he had three children In 1855 he resigned his clerkship entered politics with campaign speeches for Democratic candidates and participated in communal home building schemes He fell away from the Catholic Church sometime in the 1850s and thereafter never participated in any organized religion 1 Donnelly moved to the Minnesota Territory in 1857 amidst rumors of a financial scandal and there he settled in Dakota County He initiated a utopian community called Nininger City together with several partners However the Panic of 1857 doomed the attempt at a cooperative farm and community and left Donnelly deeply in debt His wife Katherine died in 1894 In 1898 he married his secretary Marian Hanson Donnelly died on January 1 1901 in Minneapolis Minnesota age 69 years He is buried at Calvary Cemetery in St Paul Minnesota His personal papers are archived at the Minnesota Historical Society 2 Political and literary career editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Donnelly entered politics this time as a Republican with two unsuccessful campaigns for the state legislature 1857 1858 Though he was not elected Donnelly was recognized as a highly effective political speaker which led to a successful campaign for lieutenant governor which he held from 1860 to 1863 He was a Radical Republican 3 Congressman from Minnesota in the 38th 39th and 40th congresses 1863 1869 a state senator from 1874 to 1878 and 1891 1894 and a state representative from 1887 to 1888 and 1897 1898 4 As a legislator he advocated extending the powers of the Freedmen s Bureau to provide education for freedmen so that they could protect themselves once the bureau was withdrawn Donnelly was also an early supporter of women s suffrage After leaving the Minnesota State Senate in 1878 he returned to his law practice and writing In 1877 Donnelly spoke at a meeting of 10 000 people where he read his preamble to the conference platform The document of 12 short paragraphs as altered slightly for the party s first nominating convention in Omaha that July was the pithiest and soon became the most widely circulated statement of the Populist credo 5 Donnelly talked about the corruption of politics and voting newspapers giving out false and biased material and how the Populists needed to take back the country that was their own In 1882 he published Atlantis The Antediluvian World his best known work It details theories concerning the mythical lost continent of Atlantis The book sold well and is widely credited with initiating the theme of Atlantis as an antediluvian civilization that became such a feature of popular literature during the 20th century and contributed to the emergence of Mayanism Donnelly suggested that Atlantis whose story was told by Plato in the dialogues of Timaeus and Critias had been destroyed during the same event remembered in the Bible as the Great Flood He cited research on the ancient Maya civilization by Charles Etienne Brasseur de Bourbourg and Augustus Le Plongeon claiming that it had been the place of a common origin of ancient civilizations in Africa especially ancient Egypt Europe and the Americas He also thought that it had been the original home of an Aryan race whose red haired blue eyed descendants could be found in Ireland Donnelly wrote that Ireland was the Garden of Phoebus Hyperborea of the Western mythologists 6 page needed A year after Atlantis he published Ragnarok The Age of Fire and Gravel in which he expounded his belief that the Flood as well as the destruction of Atlantis and the extinction of the mammoth had been brought about by the near collision of the earth with a massive comet This book also sold well and both books seem to have had an important influence on the development of Immanuel Velikovsky s controversial ideas half a century later nbsp Donnelly c 1898 by Frederick Gutekunst In 1888 he published The Great Cryptogram in which he proposed that Shakespeare s plays had been written by Francis Bacon an idea that was popular during the late 19th and early 20th century He then traveled to England to arrange the English publication of his book by Sampson Low speaking at the Oxford and Cambridge Union in which his thesis Resolved that the works of William Shakespeare were composed by Francis Bacon was put to an unsuccessful vote The book was a complete failure and Donnelly was discredited Donnelly also made several other campaigns for public office during the 1880s He made a losing campaign for Congress this time as a Democrat in 1884 In 1887 he successfully campaigned for a seat in the Minnesota State Legislature as an independent During this period he was also an organizer of the Minnesota Farmers Alliance In 1892 Donnelly wrote the preamble of the People s Party s Omaha Platform for the presidential campaign of that year He was nominated for Vice President of the United States in 1900 by the People s Party also known as the Populist Party The People s Party was a development of the National Farmers Alliance and had a platform that demanded the abandonment of the gold standard and later for the adoption of free silver the abolition of national banks a graduated income tax a direct election of senators civil service reform and an eight hour day That year Donnelly also campaigned for governor of Minnesota but was defeated The People s Party protested the railroad companies corrupting government and advocated government regulation of the railroads Donnelly had a key leadership role in this party yet he received 10 000 from the Lake Superior and Mississippi Railroad Company 7 State park editDuring the 1930s an organization was formed to lobby for the creation of a state park at Donnelly s home at Nininger near Hastings Minnesota The house was still standing in 1939 but the effort failed and the house has since been demolished 8 Reception editDonnelly s writings on Atlantis have been rejected by scholars and scientists 9 He has been described as a crank and pseudoscience promoter 10 11 Gordon Stein has noted that most of what Donnelly said was highly questionable or downright wrong 12 Works editHis books include The Mourner s Vision A Poem 1850 a long poem he wrote at the age of 18 Atlantis The Antediluvian World 1882 in which he attempted to establish that all known ancient civilizations were descended from its high Neolithic culture Ragnarok The Age of Fire and Gravel 1883 in which he proposed that a comet hit the earth in prehistoric times and destroyed a high civilization The Shakespeare Myth 1887 Essay on the Sonnets of Shakespeare The Great Cryptogram Francis Bacon s Cipher in Shakespeare s Plays 1888 in which he maintained he had discovered codes in the works of Shakespeare indicating that their true author was Francis Bacon Caesar s Column 1890 a science fiction novel set during 1988 about a worker revolt against a global oligarchy Published under the pseudonym of Edmund Boisgilbert Doctor Huguet A Novel 1891 Published under the pseudonym of Edmund Boisgilbert The Golden Bottle or the Story of Ephraim Benezet of Kansas 1892 The Bryan Campaign for the American People s Money 1896 The Cipher in the Plays and on the Tombstone 1899 References edit Walter H Conser Sumner B Twiss 1997 Religious Diversity and American Religious History Studies in Traditions and Cultures University of Georgia Press p 185 ISBN 9780820319186 MnPALS Union Catalog Basic Search at www mnpals net Howard Victor B 2015 Religion and the Radical Republican Movement 1860 1870 Lexington The University Press of Kentucky p 110 ISBN 9780813161440 OCLC 900344655 Retrieved December 20 2018 The radical Ignatius Donnelly and other spoke in support of the bill Donnelly Ignatius Legislators Past and Present Minnesota Legislative Reference Library Retrieved March 14 2016 Kazin Michael 1995 The Populist Persuasion eReader ISBN 978 0801485589 Donnelly Ignatius 1882 Atlantis the antediluvian world Robarts University of Toronto New York Harper amp Brothers Lens Sidney The Labor Wars From the Molly Maguires to the Sitdowns Doubleday amp Co NY 1973 365 pp p 36 A personal reminiscence of a visit to Nininger during the 1930s is available at the Internet Sacred Text Archive Sacred Texts website Linse Pat 2002 Atlantis The Search for a Lost Continent In Michael Shermer The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience ABC CLIO pp 297 307 ISBN 1 57607 654 7 Gardner Martin 1957 Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science Dover Publications pp 35 37 ISBN 0 486 20394 8 Floyd E Randall 2005 The Good the Bad and the Mad Some Weird People in American History Fall River Press p 52 ISBN 978 0760766002 Stein Gordon 1993 Encyclopedia of Hoaxes Gale Group p 52 ISBN 0 8103 8414 0Sources editBovee John 1969 Doctor Huguet Donnelly on Being Black Minnesota History vol 41 no 6 pp 286 94 William Friedman and Elizebeth Friedman The Shakespearean ciphers examined Cambridge University Press 1957 Chapter III Hicks John D 1921 The Political Career of Ignatius Donnelly Mississippi Valley Historical Review 8 1 2 80 132 Ridge M 1962 Ignatius Donnelly The Portrait of a Politician Chicago University of Chicago Press reprinted 1991 by Minnesota Historical Society Press United States Congress DONNELLY Ignatius id D000417 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress in the Biographical Directory of the United States CongressExternal links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Ignatius L Donnelly nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ignatius Donnelly Ignatius Donnelly Paranoid progressive in the Gilded Age Ignatius Donnelly in MNopedia the Minnesota Encyclopedia The Ignatius Donnelly and Family Papers are available for research use at the Minnesota Historical Society Works by Ignatius Donnelly at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Ignatius L Donnelly at Internet Archive Works by Ignatius L Donnelly at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Donnelly s influence on 19th Century Australia Ignatius Donnelly at Library of Congress with 15 library catalog records Ignatius L Donnelly at Find a Grave Political offices Preceded byWilliam Holcombe Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota1860 1863 Succeeded byHenry Adoniram Swift U S House of Representatives Preceded byNew district U S Representative from Minnesota s 2nd congressional district1863 1869 Succeeded byEugene McLanahan Wilson Party political offices First Populist Party nominee for Governor of Minnesota1892 Succeeded bySidney M Owen Preceded byThomas E Watson Populist Party vice presidential candidate1900 lost Succeeded byThomas Tibbles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ignatius L Donnelly amp oldid 1220032894, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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