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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

First: February 1828 (February 1828)
Second: 1872 (1872)

First: December 1840 (December 1840)
Second: 1888 (1888)

Anti-Masonic Enquirer
National Observer
Albany Journal

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.

Second Anti-Masonic Party[edit]

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.[74]

William Jackson

John Reed Jr.

The Anti-Masons did not elect anyone to the Senate, but elected several members of the House of Representatives.[75]

candidate for Governor of New York (1828)

Solomon Southwick

New York State Assembly (1829–1831)

Millard Fillmore

New York State Senate (1831–1834)

William H. Seward

Lieutenant Governor of Vermont (1831–1835)

Lebbeus Egerton

Governor of Vermont (1831–1835)

William A. Palmer

candidate for President in 1832

William Wirt

candidate for Vice President in 1832

Amos Ellmaker

Speaker of the Rhode Island House of Representatives (1832–1835)

William Sprague III

Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1833–1835)

Thaddeus Stevens

Vermont State Treasurer (1833–1837)

Augustine Clarke

Governor of Pennsylvania (1835–1839)

Joseph Ritner

Governor of Vermont (1835–1841) and Anti-Mason running with Whig support who later became a Whig

Silas H. Jennison

candidate for Governor of Massachusetts in 1833

John Quincy Adams

Vermont State Treasurer (1837–1838)

Allen Wardner

candidate for president in 1884

Jonathan Blanchard

Freemasonry in the United States

Bemis, Samuel Flagg. John Quincy Adams and the union (1956) vol 2 pp 273-304.

(1966) [1959]. Thaddeus Stevens: Scourge of the South (Norton Library ed.). New York: W.W. Norton & Co., Inc. ISBN 0-393-00331-0.

Brodie, Fawn

Cooper, William J. (2017). The Lost Founding Father: John Quincy Adams and the Transformation of American Politics. Liveright Publishing.  978-1631493898.

ISBN

Formisano, Ronald P. (2008). For the People: American Populist Movements from the Revolution to the 1850s. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.  978-0-8078-3172-4.

ISBN

Formisano, Ronald P.; Kutolowski, Kathleen Smith (1977). "Antimasonry and Masonry: The Genesis of Protest, 1826–1827". American Quarterly. 29 (2): 139–165. :10.2307/2712356. JSTOR 2712356.

doi

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), , College Park, MD: University of Maryland Library.

The Antimasonic Party in Massachusetts, 1826–1835

McCarthy, Charles (1903), , Washington: Government Printing Office, reprinted from Annual Report of the American Historical Association, vol. 1, 1902, pp. 365–574.

The Antimasonic Party: A Study of Political Antimasonry in the United States, 1827–1840

Nathans, Sydney (1973), , Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, ISBN 978-0-8018-1246-0.

Daniel Webster and Jacksonian Democracy

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.  978-1-4391-2118-4.

ISBN

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.  0-8131-1474-8, the standard history.

ISBN

Van Deusen, Glyndon G. Thurlow Weed, Wizard of the Lobby (1947) .

online