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Lot 152

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Estimate
$500 - 700
Price Realized
$313
Sold prices are inclusive of Buyer’s Premium

Lot Description

[POLITICS IN AMERICA -- ANTI-MASONIC PARTY]. A pair of broadsides supporting the Anti-Masonic Party, 1830s. 


ANDERTON, Samuel G. A Disclosure. [Boston]: [Anti-Masonic Christian Herald], 1830. 10 13/16 x 14 7/16 in. broadside (toned, short tears and creasing at edges, old folds).

The Anti-Masonic Party, considered America's first third party, was first founded in response to the Morgan Affair of 1826. Captain William Morgan was murdered, the suspects being local Masons who were enraged by Morgan's supposed betrayal of Masonic secrets. This broadside claims a similar story: "On Monday last, [the 15th of March,] Mr. Samuel G. Anderton, of Boston, a Knight Templar, voluntarily...made a solemn oath...disclosing a most barbarous MURDER, of which he was an eye witness, in a ☞Royal Arch Chapter of Freemasons!☜" The tale was proved "wholly untrue" as early as 1832, and Cummings describes the tale as a "palpable falsehood." Regardless of veracity, the broadside is representative of the widespread anti-Mason sentiments that led to the success of the party in the late 1820s and early 1830s. RARE: more common in the 8-page pamphlet under the title Masonry the Same All Over the World. Another broadside printing uses this title. 
 
[With:] Supplement to the Watchman and State Gazette. [Montpelier, VT]: The Watchman and State Gazette, 1835. 10 13/16 x 15 3/8 in. letterpress broadside (old creases, some spotting). 

A broadside issued to announce the Anti-Masonic party's meeting in which they have laid out their political stances: "these views are well known; and would, under ordinary circumstances need no reiteration. But, inasmuch as the time approaches when the Antimasons of Vermont will be called on to act in an election deeply involving the welfare of the whole country, and in which their attachment to the principles they have avowed will be put to a severe trial, it would seem to be fitting that they should re-examine those principles, and decide whether they will, with the firmness and constancy of Antimasons." Following are the 17 state principles with the Chairman of the party, Silas H. Jenison, signing in print. Jenison was elected Lieutenant Governor of Vermont in 1835, with Whig support. No candidate received a majority, and the General Assembly opted to allow him to act as governor until the next election, which he duly won under the Whig ticket. Vermont was a stronghold of the Anti-Masonic Party, electing Wilmer A. Palmer in 1831 on an Anti-Masonic ticket. In 1832, William Wirt, himself a former Mason, ran for president on the ticket, carrying Vermont and gaining 7.8% of the vote.


Collection of Tom Charles Huston

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