American Party (1904)

American Party
Founded1904 (1904)
Dissolved1911 (1911)
Split fromRepublican Party
Preceded byLiberal Party
(not legal predecessor)
NewspaperThe Salt Lake Tribune (de facto)
IdeologyAmerican nationalism
Anti-clericalism
Anti-Mormonism
Liberalism
Classical liberalism
Republicanism
Political positionSyncretic

The American Party was a political party in Utah from 1904 to 1911. It was designed to counter the influence of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah politics and is often described as an anti-Mormon party.[1]

Creation

The American Party was founded in 1904 by supporters of Thomas Kearns. Kearns was a U.S. Senator from Utah, mining and railroad magnate, banker and newspaper owner, including the owner of the Salt Lake Tribune; under his ownership, the Tribune became a harsh critic of the LDS Church. In 1904, Utah's junior senator, LDS Church Apostle Reed Smoot, convinced the state legislature to elect George Sutherland to replace Kearns. Kearns was outraged and was convinced that Smoot had orchestrated his removal because of the Tribune's opposition to the LDS Church. Kearns's supporters formed the American Party, which was an attempt to revive Utah's 19th-century anti-Mormon Liberal Party.[2] Though not publicly among the party's organizers, Kearns was influential in the party.[3] As an editor for the Salt Lake Tribune, former United States Senator Frank J. Cannon also played an important promotional role for the party.

Activities

The party attracted a variety of non-Mormon, lapsed Mormon, and ex-Republican politicians and was endorsed by the Salt Lake Tribune. Between 1905 and 1911, the party controlled the municipal governments of Ogden and Salt Lake City.[2] In 1905, party co-founder Ezra Thompson was elected mayor of Salt Lake City, with fellow party members W. Mont Ferry, Arthur J. Davis, Lewis D. Martin, and Martin E. Mulvey elected as city councilors.[3] (Thompson had previously served as a Republican mayor of Salt Lake City from 1900 to 1903.) Thompson resigned in 1907 and he was replaced by new party leader John S. Bransford, who was re-elected in 1907 and was mayor until 1911.[3]

In 1908, the American Party ran John A. Street for governor of Utah.[4] Central platforms of the party were that the leaders of the LDS Church were still participating in plural marriage and had no intention of abiding by the 1890 Manifesto.[4] The party also alleged that the LDS Church monopolized lines of business within Utah and that the state needed a more vigorous enforcement of the separation between church and state.[4]

In 1909, the party opposed a state bill that would have instituted Prohibition in Utah. The LDS Church did not formally support the prohibition bill, but many of its top leaders did.

Disbanding

The party, although reasonably successful for ten years, was disbanded after the 1911 elections in which the party performed disappointingly.[2]

Electoral history

Federal Elections

U.S. Representative
Year Nominee # votes % votes Place
1904 Ogden Hiles 6,796
6.68 / 100
3rd
1906 Thomas Weir 11,411
13.58 / 100
3rd
1908 Charles I. Douglas 13,484
12.10 / 100
3rd
1910 Allen T. Sanford 14,042
13.73 / 100
3rd

State Elections

Governor Secretary of Stae
Year Nominee # votes % votes Place Year Nominee # votes % votes Place
1904 William M. Ferry Jr. 7,959
7.82 / 100
3rd 1904 Walter James 7,801
7.69 / 100
3rd
1908 John A. Street 11,472
10.26 / 100
3rd 1904 E.A. Littlefield 13,960
12.48 / 100
3rd
Attorney General State Auditor
Year Nominee # votes % votes Place Year Nominee # votes % votes Place
1904 Samuel McDowall 7,336
7.22 / 100
3rd 1904 Lewis B. Rogers 7,656
7.55 / 100
3rd
1908 J. Walcott Thompson 13,784
12.32 / 100
3rd 1908 George W. Parks 14,071
12.58 / 100
3rd
Treasurer Superintendent of Public Instruction
Year Nominee # votes % votes Place Year Nominee # votes % votes Place
1904 W.M. Armstrong 7,880
7.76 / 100
3rd 1904 F.R. Christensen 7,529
7.41 / 100
3rd
1908 Henry Welsh 14,112
12.63 / 100
3rd 1908 George B. Sweazey 14,900
13.25 / 100
3rd
Utah Senate Utah House of Representatives
Election Leader Votes Seats Control Election Leader Votes Seats Control
No. Share No. ± No. Share No. ±
1904 N/A 6,480[1] 9.60%[a][2]
0 / 29
Republican 1904 N/A 6,573[3] 6.45%[b][4]
0 / 75
Republican
Candidate Performance
  • 6th District Geo. L. Nye - 6,480 votes - (19.91%)
  •                   G. Jay Gibson - 6,410 votes - (19.70%)
  •                   H.D. Niles - 6,359 votes - (19.54%)
Candidate Performance
  • Salt Lake N.D. Corser - 6,573 votes - (20.22%)
  •                 John J. Stewart - 6,557 votes - (20.17%)
  •                 F.M. Benedict - 6,553 votes - (20.16%)
  •                 J.E. Darmer - 6,535 votes - (20.10%)
  •                 W.J. Barrette - 6,526 votes - (20.07%)
  •                 A.V. Taylor - 6,523 votes - (20.06%)
  •                 J.W. Cahoon - 6,468 votes - (19.89%)
  •                 K.H.P. Nordberg - 6,456 votes - (19.86%)
  •                 R.G. Sleater - 6,445 votes - (19.82%)
  •                 L.N. Lightfoot - 6,444 votes - (19.82%)
1906 N/A 10,458[5] 16.22%[c][6]
0 / 29
Republican 1906 N/A 10,450[7] 12.50%[d][8]
0 / 75
Republican
Candidate Performance
  • 6th District Allen T. Sanford - 10,458 votes - (34.97%)
  •                   James W. Cahoon - 10,408 votes - (34.80%)
Candidate Performance
  • Salt Lake M.H. Wilson - 10,450 votes - (34.50%)
  •                 George M. Sullivan - 10,436 votes - (34.94%)
  •                 Thomas Watkins - 10,436 votes - (34.94%)
  •                 Arthur A. Sweet - 10,432 votes - (34.93%)
  •                 Douglas Rodeback - 10,419 votes - (34.88%)
  •                 J.N. Spalding - 10,417 votes - (34.88%)
  •                 Tony Jacobson - 10,416 votes - (34.87%)
  •                 B.B. Heywood - 10,411 - (34.86%)
  •                 R.G. Sleater - 10,377 votes - (34.74%)
  •                 A.J. Charon - 10,344 votes - (34.63%)
1908 N/A 14,112[9] 18.80%[e][10]
0 / 29
Republican 1908 N/A 13,805[11] 12.37%[f][12]
0 / 75
Republican
Candidate Performance
  • 4th District J.H. Knaus - 257 votes - (6.06%)
  • 5th District W.D. Sutton - 284 votes - (5.33%)
  • 6th District George J. Gibson - 13,198 votes - (33.62%)
  •                   Ed. B. Critchlow - 13,171 votes - (33.55%)
  •                   Wm. W. Armstrong - 13,132 votes - (33.45%)
Candidate Performance
  • Salt Lake Albert S. Martin - 13,249 votes - (33.73%)
  •                 Henry Catrow - 13,207 votes - (33.62%)
  •                 Harlen S. McCann - 13,200 votes - (33.60%)
  •                 J.N. Spalding - 13,198 votes - (33.60%)
  •                 James McKinney - 13,192 votes - (33.58%)
  •                 Eugene W. Kelly - 13,191 votes - (33.58%)
  •                 Arthur A. Sweet - 13,189 votes - (33.57%)
  •                 Walter W. Little - 13,185 votes - (33.56%)
  •                 Norman D. Corser - 13,160 votes - (33.50%)
  •                 Clifford J. Crabtree - 13,155 votes - (33.49%)
  • Summit    David Baxter - 262 votes - (8.27%)
  • Weber      Albert F. Richey - 294 votes - (2.81%)
  •                 B.G. Knoth - 289 votes - (2.76%)
  •                 W.W. Davis - 275 votes - (2.63%)
  •                 F.A. Shiells - 265 votes - (2.53%)
1.^ As some Electoral Districts elected multiple candidates, and the total number of ballots cast within the District was not recorded within presently used sources, the vote displayed here is inferred.

Municipal Elections

Mayoralties
Year Municipality Nominee # votes % votes Place
1905 Salt Lake City, UT Ezra Thompson 8,733[5]
40.42 / 100
Elected
1907 Salt Lake City, UT John S. Bransford 11,774[6]
48.45 / 100
Re-elected
1909 Salt Lake City, UT John S. Bransford 13,773[7]
51.76 / 100
Re-elected
1911 Salt Lake City, UT John S. Bransford 10,915[8]
42.02 / 100
2nd

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Nancy Capace, Encyclopedia of Utah (Somerset Publishers, 2001) p. 120
  2. ^ a b c Dean L. May (1987). Utah: A People's History (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, ISBN 978-0-87480-284-9) p. 162.
  3. ^ a b c Jeffrey D. Nichols (2002). Prostitution, Polygamy, and Power: Salt Lake City, 1847–1918 (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, ISBN 978-0-252-02768-0) pp. 137–138.
  4. ^ a b c "Anti-Mormon State Ticket: American Party Charges that Polygamy is Still Practiced", The New York Times, 1908-09-30.
  5. ^ "1905 Salt Lake City Municipal Election Results". The Salt Lake Herald. November 8, 1905.
  6. ^ "1907 Salt Lake City Municipal Election Results". The Salt Lake Herald. November 13, 1905.
  7. ^ "1909 Salt Lake City Municipal Election Results". The Salt Lake Tribune. November 9, 1905.
  8. ^ "1911 Salt Lake City Municipal Election Results". The Salt Lake Tribune. November 8, 1905.
  1. ^ Of 67,472 votes
  2. ^ Of 101,905 votes
  3. ^ Of 64,482 votes
  4. ^ Of 83,606 votes
  5. ^ Of 75,060 votes
  6. ^ Of 111,570 votes