Background , whose disappearance and probable murder 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. This key episode was the mysterious 1826 disappearance of William Morgan, a Freemason in upstate New York who had turned against the Masons. Morgan claimed to have been made a member of the Masons while living in Canada and he appears to have briefly attended a lodge in Rochester. 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. Whether he actually received these degrees and if so from where has not been determined for certain. Angered by the rejection, Morgan announced that he was going to publish an exposé titled
Illustrations of Masonry, critical of the Freemasons and describing their secret degree ceremonies in detail. 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. 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. The individual who intended to publish Morgan's book paid his bail and he was released from custody. Shortly afterwards, Morgan disappeared. 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. The generally believed version of events was that Masons killed Morgan by drowning him in the
Niagara River. Whether he fled or was murdered, Morgan's disappearance led many to believe that Freemasonry was in conflict with good citizenship. Because judges, businessmen, bankers and politicians were often Masons, ordinary citizens began to think of it as an elitist group. Moreover, many claimed that the lodges' secret oaths bound Masons to favor each other against outsiders in the courts and elsewhere. Out of dozens of indictments for Morgan's disappearance, only ten conspirators were ever convicted, and none were sentenced to greater than three years. Upon sentencing four of the conspirators in 1827, judge and future
Governor of New York,
Enos T. Throop, lamented their light punishment, stating they had "created, in the people of this section of the country, a strong feeling of virtuous indignation." 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. 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".
Party foundation , newspaper editor who helped form the Anti-Masonic Party The Anti-Masonic Party was formed in
Upstate New York in September 1827. 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. Many people regarded the Masonic organization and its adherents involved in government as corrupt. Opposition to Masonry was first taken up by some evangelical Protestant churches as a religious cause, particularly in the
Burned-over district of upstate New York. 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. , newspaper publisher and 1828 Anti-Masonic candidate for Governor of New York Early religious anti-Masonic sentiment sought to avoid political involvement, mostly believing it to be a corruption of Christianity. The Anti-Masonic Party opposed
Jacksonian Democracy, exemplified in New York by the
Bucktails of Senator
Martin Van Buren and the rival Clintonian faction of Governor
DeWitt Clinton. The party also initially opposed the
National Republican Party of President
John Quincy Adams because it included Masons, but by 1830 the Anti-Masons had attracted many National Republicans to the fold, including Adams himself.
Political rise In the
elections of 1828, the new party proved unexpectedly strong, securing three of eight available State Senate seats as well as five seats in the
United States House of Representatives. The party's
candidate for
governor of New York,
Solomon Southwick, was defeated, partially due to attacks on his character by Thurlow Weed. In this effort, they were aided by the fact that president-elect
Andrew Jackson was a high-ranking Mason and frequently spoke in praise of the organization. Having established itself as a major political force, the party broadened its issues base in 1829, when it became a champion of
internal improvements and the protective
tariff. 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. By 1829, Weed's
Albany Journal had become the preeminent Anti-Masonic paper and it later became the leading
Whig newspaper. 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".
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. 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. Other Vermont Anti-Masonic electors in 1832 included former governor
Ezra Butler and former
United States representative William Strong. 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. 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.
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 pro-Adams Democrats and Anti-Masons in the
Pennsylvania General Assembly; and
William Sprague, elected speaker of the
Rhode Island House of Representatives in 1831 by a coalition of pro-Adams Democrats and Anti-Masons. , 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 7.8 percent of the popular vote and the seven electoral votes of Vermont. Soon the Democrats and Whigs recognized the convention's value in managing parties and campaigns and began to hold their own. 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. The convention nominated
William Henry Harrison for president and
Francis Granger for vice president. The Vermont state Anti-Masonic convention followed suit on February 24, 1836. 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. The meeting was divisive, but a majority of the delegates officially stated that the party was not sponsoring a national ticket for 1836 and proposed a meeting in 1837 to discuss the future of the party. 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. By the mid-1830s, other Anti-Jacksonians had coalesced into the
Whig Party. 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. The Anti-Masonic Party held a conference in September 1837 to discuss its situation—one delegate was former president John Quincy Adams. The Anti-Masonic Party held a third national nominating convention at
Temperance Hall in
Philadelphia on November 13–14, 1838. 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. ==Legacy==