Pearson Solutions
Close windowBack to Pearson
From Information Please Back to Fact Monster Home Page
Encyclopedia

Anti-Masonic party

Anti-Masonic party, American political organization that rose after the disappearance in W New York state in 1826 of William Morgan. A former Mason, Morgan had written a book purporting to reveal Masonic secrets. The Masons were said, without proof, to have murdered him, and in reaction local organizations arose to refuse support to Masons for public office. In New York state Thurlow Weed and William H. Seward attempted unsuccessfully to use the movement, which appealed strongly to the poorer classes, to overthrow Martin Van Buren and the Albany Regency. Anti-Masonry spread from New York to neighboring states and influenced many local and state elections. At Baltimore, in 1831, the Anti-Masons held the first national nominating convention of any party and issued the first written party platform—innovations followed by the older parties. The vote for their presidential candidate, William Wirt, mostly hurt Henry Clay. Usually the Anti-Masons in national politics acted with the National Republican party in opposition to Jacksonian democracy, and in 1834 they helped to form the Whig party.

See W. B. Hesseltine, The Rise and Fall of Third Parties (1948); L. Ratner, Antimasonry (1969).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

More on Anti-Masonic party from Fact Monster:

  • William Morgan - Morgan, William: Morgan, William: see Anti-Masonic party.
  • Millard Fillmore - Fillmore, Millard Fillmore, Millard, 1800–1874, 13th President of the United States (July, ...
  • Freemasonry: Opposition to Freemasonry - Opposition to Freemasonry Because of its identification with 19th-century bourgeois liberalism, ...
  • National Republican party - National Republican party National Republican party, in U.S. history, a short-lived political party ...
  • William Wirt - Wirt, William Wirt, William , 1772–1834, U.S. Attorney General and author, b. Bladensburg, ...

See more Encyclopedia articles on: U.S. History

Link to Fact Monster | Add Fact Monster search to your site | Awards and Press
Contact Fact Monster | Advertise with Fact Monster | Rights | Privacy | Terms of Use
Brought to you by: Information Please
© 2000–2007 Pearson Education, publishing as Fact Monster