Originally posted by DanS
There were very, very few catholics in the United States up to that point anyway. Almost none, as a matter of fact (there were only a thousand or so at the turn of the 19th century). So I think that it wouldn't be worthwhile to overemphasize the legal discrimination during that time. Anyway, I would like to see the specifics on the laws that you mention.
My family moved to the States in 1842. It has been passed down orally that there was discrimination against catholics, but the legal system was impartial.
With regard to the Washington Monument, there was a hiatus due to lack of funding. The precipitating characters were the know-nothings, but the stone from the Pope was stolen, and had no bearing on the construction after that (other than the theft stalled momentum on the project).
That was in colonial times! Carroll was a signer of the Declaration of Independence and a Maryland delegate to the constitutional convention, for God's sake! We had a war over freedoms, remember!
Really, there was discrimination, but not by the state, by and large.
There were very, very few catholics in the United States up to that point anyway. Almost none, as a matter of fact (there were only a thousand or so at the turn of the 19th century). So I think that it wouldn't be worthwhile to overemphasize the legal discrimination during that time. Anyway, I would like to see the specifics on the laws that you mention.
My family moved to the States in 1842. It has been passed down orally that there was discrimination against catholics, but the legal system was impartial.
With regard to the Washington Monument, there was a hiatus due to lack of funding. The precipitating characters were the know-nothings, but the stone from the Pope was stolen, and had no bearing on the construction after that (other than the theft stalled momentum on the project).
That was in colonial times! Carroll was a signer of the Declaration of Independence and a Maryland delegate to the constitutional convention, for God's sake! We had a war over freedoms, remember!
Really, there was discrimination, but not by the state, by and large.
Prejudice isn’t determined by the amount of people disenfranchised.
As for Carroll being discriminated against in colonial times- why yes, so he was. And all some states did with their colonial constitutions was to expunge the references to the monarch. So Catholics had to wait a further sixty years for full citizenship. Now as far as you having to see evidence of the anti-Catholic legislation is concerned, could we also see evidence for your assertion of the low number of Catholics too?
I fail to see why I should be the only one to have to come up with facts and figures.
States with anti-Catholic measures in their constitutions, post-independence, included:
South Carolina, whose 1778 constitution restricted office-holding to Protestants, and allowed all churches which endorsed the existence and public worship of one God, rewards and punishments in an afterlife, the truth of Christianity and the Bible and the obligation of all citizens to bear witness to the truth when asked by the government to do so.
Effectively, it established Protestantism, but without offering public support for it.
The 1776 North Carolina constitution restricted office-holding to those who did not deny the ‘truth of the Protestant religion’ nor hold ‘religious principles incompatible with the freedom and safety of the state.’
The constitution of Georgia also limited office-holding to Protestants.
In fact, after independence, the only state other than Virginia to abolish any kind of religious discrimination was Rhode Island, which had in colonial times discriminated against Jews and Catholics.
As for the anti-Catholic, anti-foreigner Know Nothings and the Washington Monument:
The consensus seems to be that Know Nothing control of the scheme to erect the Monument contributed to the decline in public donations and effectively stalled further work on the project. Of course, the Civil War didn’t help.
And although no one knows who disposed of the Pope's stone, or what became of it, I'd venture to say that the Know Nothings might have just known something in that particular instance.
You can check Blackwell's Encyclopaedia of the American Revolution or Daniel J Boorstin's 'The Americans' (publi. Pelican Books 1965), so by all means don't take my word for the information about the states' constitutions.
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