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Know Nothing information


American Party
Other name
  • Native American Party (before 1855)
  • American Party (after 1855)
First LeaderLewis Charles Levin
Founded1844; 180 years ago (1844)
Dissolved1860; 164 years ago (1860)
Merger ofAmerican Republican Party
Preceded by
  • American Republican Party
  • Whig Party
Merged intoRepublican Party (Northern U.S.)
Succeeded by
  • Constitutional Union Party
  • North American Party
HeadquartersNew York City
Secret wingOrder of the Star Spangled Banner
Ideology
  • American nationalism
  • Anti-immigration sentiment
  • Anti-Catholicism
  • Anti-Irish sentiment
  • Anti-German sentiment
  • Cultural assimilation[1]
  • Nativism
  • Populism
  • Republicanism
ReligionProtestantism
Colors  Red   White   Blue
(American flag colors)
Party flag
  • Politics of United States
  • Political parties
  • Elections

The Know Nothings were a nativist political movement in the United States in the 1850s, officially known as the Native American Party before 1855, and afterwards simply the American Party.[a] Members of the movement were required to say "I know nothing" whenever they were asked about its specifics by outsiders, providing the group with its colloquial name.[2]

Supporters of the Know Nothing movement believed that an alleged "Romanist" conspiracy to subvert civil and religious liberty in the United States was being hatched by Catholics. Therefore, they sought to politically organize native-born Protestants in defense of their traditional religious and political values. The Know Nothing movement is remembered for this theme because Protestants feared that Catholic priests and bishops would control a large bloc of voters. In most places, the ideology and influence of the Know Nothing movement lasted only one or two years before it disintegrated due to weak and inexperienced local leaders, a lack of publicly proclaimed national leaders, and a deep split over the issue of slavery. In parts of the South, the party did not emphasize anti-Catholicism as frequently as it emphasized it in the North and it stressed a neutral position on slavery,[3] but it became the main alternative to the dominant Democratic Party.[2]

The Know Nothings supplemented their xenophobic views with populist appeals. At the state level, the party was, in some cases, progressive in its stances on "issues of labor rights and the need for more government spending"[4] and furnished "support for an expansion of the rights of women, the regulation of industry, and support of measures which were designed to improve the status of working people."[5] It was a forerunner of the temperance movement in the United States.[2]

The Know Nothing movement briefly emerged as a major political party in the form of the American Party.[2] The collapse of the Whig Party after the passage of the Kansas–Nebraska Act left an opening for the emergence of a new major political party in opposition to the Democratic Party. The Know Nothing movement managed to elect congressman Nathaniel P. Banks of Massachusetts and several other individuals into office in the 1854 elections, and it subsequently coalesced into a new political party which was known as the American Party. Particularly in the South, the American Party served as a vehicle for politicians who opposed the Democrats. Many of the American Party's members and supporters also hoped that it would stake out a middle ground between the pro-slavery positions of Democratic politicians and the radical anti-slavery positions of the rapidly emerging Republican Party. The American Party nominated former President Millard Fillmore in the 1856 presidential election, but he kept quiet about his membership in it, and he personally refrained from supporting the Know Nothing movement's activities and ideology. Fillmore received 21.5% of the popular vote in the 1856 presidential election, finishing behind the Democratic and Republican nominees.[6] Henry Winter Davis, an active Know-Nothing, was elected on the American Party ticket to Congress from Maryland. He told Congress that "un-American" Irish Catholic immigrants were to blame for the recent election of Democrat James Buchanan as president, stating:[7]

The recent election has developed in an aggravated form every evil against which the American party protested. Foreign allies have decided the government of the country – men naturalized in thousands on the eve of the election. Again in the fierce struggle for supremacy, men have forgotten the ban which the Republic puts on the intrusion of religious influence on the political arena. These influences have brought vast multitudes of foreign-born citizens to the polls, ignorant of American interests, without American feelings, influenced by foreign sympathies, to vote on American affairs; and those votes have, in point of fact, accomplished the present result.

The party entered a period of rapid decline after Fillmore's loss. In 1857 the Dred Scott v. Sandford pro-slavery decision of the Supreme Court of the United States further galvanized opposition to slavery in the North, causing many former Know Nothings to join the Republicans.[8] The remnants of the American Party largely joined the Constitutional Union Party in 1860 and they disappeared during the American Civil War.

  1. ^ Anbinder, Tyler (1992). Nativism and Slavery: The Northern Know Nothings and the Politics of the 1850s. New York, New York: Oxford University Press. p. 121. ISBN 978-0-19-507233-4. OCLC 925224120 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b c d Boissoneault, Lorraine. "How the 19th-Century Know Nothing Party Reshaped American Politics". Smithsonian Magazine. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  3. ^ Farrell, Robert N. (2017). No Foreign Despots on Southern Soil: The American Party in Alabama and South Carolina, 1850-1857 (MA). Hattiesburg, Mississippi: University of Southern Mississippi. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
  4. ^ Kierdorf, Douglas (January 10, 2016). "Getting to know the Know-Nothings". The Boston Globe.
  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference Taylor 2000 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  6. ^ Kemp, Bill (January 17, 2016). "'Know Nothings' Opposed Immigration in Lincoln's Day". The Pantagraph. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  7. ^ McLaughlin, James Fairfax (1885). The Life and Times of John Kelly, Tribune of the People. New York City: The American News Company. pp. 72–73 – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ Anbinder (1992), p. 270.


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