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History of conservatism in the United States

There has never been a national political party in the United States called the Conservative Party. All major American political parties support republicanism and the basic classical liberal ideals on which the country was founded in 1776, emphasizing liberty, the pursuit of happiness, the rule of law, the consent of the governed, opposition to aristocracy and fear of corruption, coupled with equal rights before the law.[1] Political divisions inside the United States often seemed minor or trivial to Europeans, where the divide between the Left and the Right led to violent political polarization, starting with the French Revolution.[2]

No American party has advocated European ideals of conservatism such as a monarchy, an established church, or a hereditary aristocracy. American conservatism is best characterized as opposition to utopian ideas of progress.[3] Historian Patrick Allitt expresses the difference between conservative and liberal in terms not of policy but of attitude.[4]


Unlike Canada and the United Kingdom, there has never been a major national political party named the Conservative Party in the United States.[5] The Conservative Party of Virginia, founded in 1867, elected members to the House of Representatives from two other states (Maryland and North Carolina). Since 1962, there has been a small Conservative Party of New York State. During Reconstruction in the late 1860s, the former Whigs formed a Conservative Party in several Southern states, but they soon merged into the state Democratic parties.[6]

Founding[edit]

Colonial era[edit]

The conservatism that prevailed in the Thirteen Colonies before 1776 was of a very different character than the conservatism that emerged based on revolutionary principles. This old conservatism centered on a landed elite and on an urban merchant class that was Loyalist during the Revolution. In Virginia, the largest, richest and most influential of the American colonies, conservatives held full control of the colonial and local governments. At the local level, Church of England parishes handled many local affairs, and they in turn were controlled not by the minister, but rather by a closed circle of rich landowners who comprised the parish vestry. Ronald L. Heinemann emphasizes the ideological conservatism of Virginia, while noting there were also religious dissenters who were gaining strength by the 1760s:

Timeline of modern American conservatism

Allitt, Patrick. The Conservatives: Ideas and Personalities Throughout American History (2010) .

excerpt and text search

Continetti, Matthew. The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism (2022)

excerpt

Critchlow, Donald T. The Conservative Ascendancy: How the Republican Right Rose to Power in Modern America (2nd ed. 2011)

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Critchlow, Donald T. and Nancy MacLean. (2009)

Debating the American Conservative Movement: 1945 to the Present

Farber, David. (2012).

The Rise and Fall of Modern American Conservatism: A Short History

Filler, Louis. Dictionary of American Conservatism (, 1987) online

Philosophical Library

Frohnen, Bruce et al. eds. American Conservatism: An Encyclopedia (2006)  1-932236-44-9, the most detailed reference.

ISBN

Guttman, Allan. The Conservative Tradition in America Oxford University Press, 1967.

. The Conservative Mind. Regnery Publishing; 7th edition (2001): a famous history.

Kirk, Russell

Lichtman, Allan J. White Protestant Nation: The Rise of the American Conservative Movement (2008) detailed history from a liberal standpoint.  978-0-87113-984-9

ISBN

Lora, Ronald. The Conservative Press in Twentieth-Century America (Greenwood Press, 1999) Archived 2005-04-24 at the Wayback Machine.

online edition

Lora, Ronald, and William Henry Longton eds. The Conservative Press in Eighteenth-and Nineteenth-Century America (1999) .

online edition

Miner, Brad. The Concise Conservative Encyclopedia: 200 of the Most Important Ideas, Individuals, Incitements, and Institutions that Have Shaped the Movement (1996) .

excerpt

Morgan, Iwan. Reagan: American Icon (IB Tauris, 2016).

Nash, George. The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America Since 1945 (2006; 1st ed. 1978) influential history by a conservative scholar.

online

Nickerson, Michelle M. Mothers of Conservatism: Women and the Postwar Right (Princeton UP, 2012), 248 pp.

Patterson, James. Congressional Conservatism and the New Deal: The Growth of the Conservative Coalition in Congress, 1933–39 (1967).

Perlstein, Rick. Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus (2004) on 1964 campaign.

Rossiter, Clinton. Conservatism in America. (1955; 2nd ed. Harvard UP, 1982), a famous history.

Schneider, Gregory. The Conservative Century: From Reaction to Revolution (2009).

Thorne, Melvin J. American Conservative Thought since World War II: The Core Ideas (1990) .

online edition

Viereck, Peter. Conservatism: from John Adams to Churchill (2nd ed. 1978).

Buckley, William F., Jr., ed. Did You Ever See a Dream Walking? American Conservative Thought in the 20th Century Bobbs-Merrill (1970).

Gregory L. Schneider, ed. Conservatism in America Since 1930: A Reader (2003).

Wolfe, Gregory. Right Minds: A Sourcebook of American Conservative Thought. Regnery (1987).