Smithsonian.Com How the 19Th-Century Know Nothing Party Reshaped American Politics
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
William Poole - the Real "Bill the Butcher"
William Poole - The Real "Bill The Butcher" William Poole was a Nativist enforcer of The Native American Party, also known as The Know Nothing Party, which was a faction of the American Republican Party. The Know Nothing was a movement created by Nativists whom believed that the overwhelming immigration of German and Irish Catholic immigrants were a threat to republican values and controlled by the Pope in Rome. They were dubbed the Know Nothings by outsiders of their semi-secret organization. This had nothing to do with them knowing anything. It had to do with their reply when asked of the organization's activities, often stating, "I know nothing." Bill the Butcher was a leader of The Bowery Boys and known for his skills as being a good bare knuckle boxer. Poole's trade was that of a butcher, and was infuriated when many butchering licenses were being handed out to Irish immigrants. William Poole was born in Sussex County, New Jersey to parents of English protestant descent. His family moved to New York City in 1832 to open a butcher shop in Washington Market, Manhattan. Bill Poole trained in his father's trade and eventually took over the family store. In the 1840s, he worked with the Howard (Red Rover) Volunteer Fire Engine Company #34, Hudson & Christopher Street. Uunlike in the movie, William "The Butcher" Poole was shot in real life. However, he was shot at Stanwix Hall, a bar on Broadway near Prince. William Poole did not die in a glorious street battle against his Irish enemies. Instead, he died from the gun wound at his home on Christopher Street. -
Leituras Freudianas E Lacanianas Do Espaço Simbólico Hitchcock's Films O
Universidade de Aveiro Departamento de Línguas e Culturas Ano 2017 Mark William Poole Os Filmes de Hitchcock no Sofá: Leituras Freudianas e Lacanianas do Espaço Simbólico Hitchcock’s Films on the Couch: Freudian and Lacanian Readings of Symbolic Space Universidade de Aveiro Departamento de Línguas e Culturas Ano 2017 Mark William Poole Os Filmes de Hitchcock no Sofá: Leituras Freudianas e Lacanianas do Espaço Simbólico Hitchcock’s Films on the Couch: Freudian and Lacanian Readings of Symbolic Space Tese apresentada à Universidade de Aveiro para cumprimento dos requisitos necessários à obtenção do grau de Doutor em Estudos Culturais, realizada sob a orientação científica do Doutor Anthony David Barker, Professor Associado do Departamento de Línguas e Culturas da Universidade de Aveiro o júri Doutor Carlos Manuel da Rocha Borges de Azevedo, Professor Catedrático, Faculdade de Letras, Universidade do Porto. Doutor Mário Carlos Fernandes Avelar, Professor Catedrático, Universidade Aberta, Lisboa. Doutor Anthony David Barker, Professor Associado, Universidade de Aveiro (orientador). Doutor Kenneth David Callahan, Professor Associado, Universidade de Aveiro. Doutor Nelson Troca Zagalo, Professor Auxiliar, Universidade do Minho. presidente Doutor Nuno Miguel Gonçalves Borges de Carvalho, Reitor da Universidade de Aveiro. agradecimentos Primarily, I would like to thank Isabel Pereira, without whose generosity this entire process would not have been possible. She believes in supporting all types of education and I cannot express my gratitude enough. I express equal gratitude to Marta Correia, who has been the Alma Reville of this thesis. She has had the patience to listen to my ideas and offer her invaluable insights, while proofreading and criticising the chapters as this thesis evolved. -
Meet the Gang Bernard Rosenberg
Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Volume 36 | Issue 2 Article 4 1945 Meet the Gang Bernard Rosenberg Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/jclc Part of the Criminal Law Commons, Criminology Commons, and the Criminology and Criminal Justice Commons Recommended Citation Bernard Rosenberg, Meet the Gang, 36 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 98 (1945-1946) This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology by an authorized editor of Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. "'MEEI THE GANG" Bernard Rosenberg The author is a member of the New York Bar, practicing in Brook- lyn. He is a member of the American Bar Association, of the American Society of Public Administration, of the American Parole Association and the American Academy of Political and Social Science. He was formerly Director of the Commission on Economic Problems of the Amer- ican Jewish Congress, Counsel to the Public Administration Alumni As- sociation of New York University and Case Staff member of the New York State Division of Parole. His articles have appeared in popular and technical periodicals.-EDIT. He had been an inmate at Sing Sing Prison for a "stick-up with a gun," and he went by the name of "Pete the Bug." The prison records showed that Pete had an I.Q. of one hundred eighteen-the mark of a person of superior intelligence. Yet, there was his monicker bearing proof that Pete was not com- pletely "right in the head." I asked around, and finally the reason for "Bug's" name fil- tered through by way of his brother. -
Community and Politics in Antebellum New York City Irish Gang Subculture James
The Communal Legitimacy of Collective Violence: Community and Politics in Antebellum New York City Irish Gang Subculture by James Peter Phelan A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History Department of History and Classics University of Alberta ©James Phelan, 2014 ii Abstract This thesis examines the influences that New York City‘s Irish-Americans had on the violence, politics, and underground subcultures of the antebellum era. During the Great Famine era of the Irish Diaspora, Irish-Americans in Five Points, New York City, formed strong community bonds, traditions, and a spirit of resistance as an amalgamation of rural Irish and urban American influences. By the middle of the nineteenth century, Irish immigrants and their descendants combined community traditions with concepts of American individualism and upward mobility to become an important part of the antebellum era‘s ―Shirtless Democracy‖ movement. The proto-gang political clubs formed during this era became so powerful that by the late 1850s, clashes with Know Nothing and Republican forces, particularly over New York‘s Police force, resulted in extreme outbursts of violence in June and July, 1857. By tracking the Five Points Irish from famine to riot, this thesis as whole illuminates how communal violence and the riots of 1857 may be understood, moralised, and even legitimised given the community and culture unique to Five Points in the antebellum era. iii Table of Contents Introduction ................................................................................................................................... -
Seize the Time: the Story of the Black Panther Party
Seize The Time: The Story of the Black Panther Party Bobby Seale FOREWORD GROWING UP: BEFORE THE PARTY Who I am I Meet Huey Huey Breaks with the Cultural Nationalists The Soul Students Advisory Council We Hit the Streets Using the Poverty Program Police-Community Relations HUEY: GETTING THE PARTY GOING The Panther Program Why We Are Not Racists Our First Weapons Red Books for Guns Huey Backs the Pigs Down Badge 206 Huey and the Traffic Light A Gun at Huey's Head THE PARTY GROWS, ELDRIDGE JOINS The Paper Panthers Confrontation at Ramparts Eldridge Joins the Panthers The Death of Denzil Dowell PICKING UP THE GUN Niggers with Guns in the State Capitol Sacramento Jail Bailing Out the Brothers The Black Panther Newspaper Huey Digs Bob Dylan Serving Time at Big Greystone THE SHIT COMES DOWN: "FREE HUEY!" Free Huey! A White Lawyer for a Black Revolutionary Coalitions Stokely Comes to Oakland Breaking Down Our Doors Shoot-out: The Pigs Kill Bobby Hutton Getting on the Ballot Huey Is Tried for Murder Pigs, Puritanism, and Racism Eldridge Is Free! Our Minister of Information Bunchy Carter and Bobby Hutton Charles R. Garry: The Lenin of the Courtroom CHICAGO: KIDNAPPED, CHAINED, TRIED, AND GAGGED Kidnapped To Chicago in Chains Cook County Jail My Constitutional Rights Are Denied Gagged, Shackled, and Bound Yippies, Convicts, and Cops PIGS, PROBLEMS, POLITICS, AND PANTHERS Do-Nothing Terrorists and Other Problems Why They Raid Our Offices Jackanapes, Renegades, and Agents Provocateurs Women and the Black Panther Party "Off the Pig," "Motherfucker," and Other Terms Party Programs - Serving the People SEIZE THE TIME Fuck copyright. -
The Crusades Against the Masons, Catholics, and Mormons: Separate Waves of a Common Current
BYU Studies Quarterly Volume 3 Issue 2 Article 5 4-1-1961 The Crusades Against the Masons, Catholics, and Mormons: Separate Waves of a Common Current Mark W. Cannon Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/byusq Recommended Citation Cannon, Mark W. (1961) "The Crusades Against the Masons, Catholics, and Mormons: Separate Waves of a Common Current," BYU Studies Quarterly: Vol. 3 : Iss. 2 , Article 5. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/byusq/vol3/iss2/5 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in BYU Studies Quarterly by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Cannon: The Crusades Against the Masons, Catholics, and Mormons: Separate the crusades against the masons catholics and Morcormonsmormonsmons separate waiveswaves of a common current MARK W CANNON the tradition upsetting election of senator john F kennedy as the first catholic president of the united states provides a remarkable contrast to the crusade against catholics a century ago the theme of this article is that the anti catholic move- ment which reached its zenith in the 1850 s was not unique it reveals common features with the antimasonicanti masonic crusade which flourished in the early 18501830 s and with the anti mormon movement of the 1870 s and 1880 s A comparison of these movements suggests the existence of a subsurface current of american thought which -
Access, Fairness, and Accountability in the Law of Search
Brooklyn Law School BrooklynWorks Faculty Scholarship 9-2008 Federal Search Commission - Access, Fairness, and Accountability in the Law of Search Frank Pasquale Oren Bracha Follow this and additional works at: https://brooklynworks.brooklaw.edu/faculty Part of the First Amendment Commons, Internet Law Commons, and the Science and Technology Law Commons FEDERAL SEARCH COMMISSION? ACCESS, FAIRNESS, AND ACCOUNTABILITY IN THE LAW OF SEARCH Oren Bracha & Frank Pasqualet Should search engines be subject to the types of regulation now applied to personal data collectors, cable networks, or phone books? In this Article, we make the case for some regulation of the ability of search engines to ma- nipulate and structure their results. We demonstrate that the First Amend- ment, properly understood, does not prohibit such regulation. Nor will such intervention inevitably lead to the disclosure of important trade secrets. After setting forth normativefoundations for evaluating search engine manipulation, we explain how neither market discipline nor technological advance is likely to stop it. Though savvy users and personalizedsearch may constrain abusive companies to some extent, they have little chance of check- ing untoward behavior by the oligopolists who now dominate the search mar- ket. Arguing against the trend among courts to declare search results unregulable speech, this Article makes a case for an ongoing conversation on search engine regulation. I. SEARCH ENGINES AS POINTS OF CONTROL ................ 1152 A. A New H ope? ...................................... 1152 B. The Intermediaries Strike Back ..................... 1161 1. The New Intermediaries ........................... 1161 2. Search Engine Bias ............................... 1167 II. WHAT IS WRONG WITH SEARCH ENGINE MANIPULATION? .. 1171 III. WHY CAN'T NON-REGULATORY ALTERNATIVES SOLVE THE PROBLEM?................................................ -
August 1969 0 192 Vol
25t IN rulS ISSUE- • NEW GOvr. INS. VIETNAM • BlACK WILDCAT STRIKE • SPEECH BY FRED HAMPTON • LOS SIElE AUGUST 1969 0 192 VOL. 5 NO.7 • 5DS CONVENTION --.......-- .. BULK RATE U.s. POSTAGE PAID Sa" Franclaco, Call'. PermIt No. 8603 THE MOVEMENT PRESS 330 Grove Street ~.!r. & Mrs, Grant Cannon San Francisco, California 94102 4907 I: lat te Road Cincinnati, Ohio 45244 .~;~. } ------------~--"""' LETTER FROM FORT DIX Friends: us standing tall on the inside. We need To introduce myself, I shall only say the publicity and strength you can give that I am one of the prisoners that is us. We want to expose all of this! being charged with the charges that start After the first day of Investigatio: ed taking place in the Ft. Dix stockade about 12 or 13 of us were thrown into on the 5th of June, 1969. I am refering, maximum security cells. The first night of course, to the riot that took place in we were denied matresses, blankets, cell blocks 66,67, and 84. The military sheets or pillows. For two days we were is trying its utmost to keep this hap placed on DS (disciplinary restriction) pening out of the press and away from and were not allowed out to exercise; the eyes of the people by saying that shave or shower, to smoke, to read what happened was only a "minor distur and our visitors were turned away at bance" and that they now have every the gates that Sunday. Also we were not thing well under control. The facts that allowed to attend religious services. -
Access, Fairness, and Accountability in the Law of Search Oren Bracha
Cornell Law Review Volume 93 Article 11 Issue 6 September 2008 Federal Search Commission - Access, Fairness, and Accountability in the Law of Search Oren Bracha Frank Pasquale Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.cornell.edu/clr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Oren Bracha and Frank Pasquale, Federal Search Commission - Access, Fairness, and Accountability in the Law of Search, 93 Cornell L. Rev. 1149 (2008) Available at: http://scholarship.law.cornell.edu/clr/vol93/iss6/11 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Scholarship@Cornell Law: A Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Cornell Law Review by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Cornell Law: A Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FEDERAL SEARCH COMMISSION? ACCESS, FAIRNESS, AND ACCOUNTABILITY IN THE LAW OF SEARCH Oren Bracha & Frank Pasqualet Should search engines be subject to the types of regulation now applied to personal data collectors, cable networks, or phone books? In this Article, we make the case for some regulation of the ability of search engines to ma- nipulate and structure their results. We demonstrate that the First Amend- ment, properly understood, does not prohibit such regulation. Nor will such intervention inevitably lead to the disclosure of important trade secrets. After setting forth normativefoundations for evaluating search engine manipulation, we explain how neither market discipline nor technological advance is likely to stop it. Though savvy users and personalizedsearch may constrain abusive companies to some extent, they have little chance of check- ing untoward behavior by the oligopolists who now dominate the search mar- ket. -
The Know-Nothing Party and the Growth of Sectionalism in East Texas Waymon L
East Texas Historical Journal Volume 14 | Issue 2 Article 8 10-1976 The Know-Nothing Party and the Growth of Sectionalism in East Texas Waymon L. McClellan Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ethj Part of the United States History Commons Tell us how this article helped you. Recommended Citation McClellan, Waymon L. (1976) "The Know-Nothing Party and the Growth of Sectionalism in East Texas," East Texas Historical Journal: Vol. 14: Iss. 2, Article 8. Available at: http://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ethj/vol14/iss2/8 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by SFA ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in East Texas Historical Journal by an authorized administrator of SFA ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 26 EAST TEXAS HISTORICAL SOCIETY THE KNOW·NOTHING PARTY AND THE GROWTH OF SECTIONALISM IN EAST TEXAS by Waymon L. McClellan In 1855 the American (Know-Nothing) Party was a novelty bursting with excitement, the first promising attempt to change Texas' one-party politics_ A mere two years later the party had slipped from lustiness to languor, a broken, leaderless Know-Nothing remnant joining the Sam Houston-led Independent Democrats. 1 But the brief, tumultuous life of the Know-Nothings was not without importance. Historians commonly give most significance to the fact that antagonism against a commonfoe, the Know-Nothings. effectively overrode the bitter factional alignments that had long prevented the organization of the regular (states' rights) Democrats. stressing that Democrats reacted to the Know-Nothing challenge by perfecting party organization and establishing nominations by convention. -
The Origins of US Immigration Regulation in Nineteenth-Century New York
City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works All Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects 5-2015 Protecting the Stranger: The Origins of US Immigration Regulation in Nineteenth-Century New York Brendan P. O'Malley Graduate Center, City University of New York How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/1079 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] PROTECTING THE STRANGER: THE ORIGINS OF US IMMIGRATION REGULATION IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY NEW YORK by BRENDAN P. O’MALLEY A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty in History in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, The City University of New York 2015 i © 2015 BRENDAN P. O’MALLEY All Rights Reserved ii This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in History in satisfaction of the dissertation requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy DAVID NASAW __________________ ________________________________ Date Chair of the Examining Committee HELENA ROSENBLATT __________________ ________________________________ Date Executive Officer THOMAS KESSNER GERALD MARKOWITZ ANNA O. LAW JOHN TORPEY Supervisory Committee THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK iii Abstract PROTECTING THE STRANGER: THE ORIGINS OF US IMMIGRATION REGULATION IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY NEW YORK by BRENDAN P. O’MALLEY From 1847 to 1890, a state authority—not a federal one—oversaw the entry of most immigrants arriving in the United States. The New York State Board of the Commissioners of Emigration supervised the landing of over eight million newcomers in nation’s busiest entry point, the Port of New York, during the second half of the nineteenth century. -
O Parto Sangrento Em Gangues De Nova York Revuelta Y Constituicón
Revista Simbiótica vol.4, n.1, jan.-jun., 2017 Revolta e constituição: o parto sangrento em Gangues de Nova York Revuelta y constituicón: el parto sangriento en Gangs of New York Defiance and constitution: the bloody birth in Gangs of New York 74 Recebido em 28-03-2016 Aceito para publicação 13-01-2017 Arthur Rodrigues Carvalho1 Resumo: O artigo é composto pela análise histórica do filme Gangs of New York, tratando tanto do período no qual o longa se passa, o século XIX, como do século XXI, momento em que o diretor Martin Scorsese o produz. Dessa forma, será estudada a representação do momento em que os Estados Unidos se encontravam em sua fase de consolidação como país, o papel dos imigrantes anglo-saxões na formação desse Estado, assim como a representação fílmica dos conflitos gerados pela presença dos mesmos. Por outro lado, também serão abordados o contexto histórico e o cenário geopolítico do início do presente século, e suas influências sobre as escolhas do diretor. Palavras-chave: Guanges de Nova Yorque; século XIX; história; representação Resumen: El artículo consiste en el análisis histórico de la película Gangs of New York, tratando tanto del período en el que se establece la película, el siglo XIX, tanto como el siglo XXI, momento en el que el director Martin Scorsese produce. Por lo tanto, se estudiará la representación del momento en que Estados Unidos se encontraba en una fase de consolidación como país, el papel de los inmigrantes anglosajones en la formación de dicho Estado, así como la representación fílmica de los conflictos generados por la presencia de los mismos.