Anti-immigrant violence

A story by Matthew Jude Barker from 1755

Matthew Jude Barker

Prejudice and discrimination in Maine against immigrants dates back to at least the mid-1700s, when Pope's or Pope Day (Guy Fawkes Day in Britain) was celebrated in Portland. Effigies of the Pope and the Devil were carried around town to loud cheers and slurs. Protestants had been taught since birth to hate Roman Catholicism. After all, French Catholics had been their enemy since the 1690s during the Colonial Wars.

When large numbers of Irish Catholics started to immigrate to the U.S. beginning in the 1820s, Protestant anti-Catholic, anti-immigrant, and anti-Irish groups were formed all over, including Maine. The large influx of Irish people who came during and after the Great Hunger (the Great Irish Potato Famine, 1845-51) only accelerated the formation of these groups, culminating with the Know Nothings, a secret anti-Irish, anti-Catholic party that gained political power throughout the United States in 1854-55. Their poster child in Portland was Mayor Neal Dow.

In Maine, the Know Nothings burned down three Catholic churches—in Bath, Lewiston, and Ellsworth. In 1854, they tarred and feathered Father John Bapst, a Swiss Jesuit, in Ellsworth. The issue of slavery, as well as their excesses, finally doomed the Know Nothings and they disappeared.

But the hate and suspicion of foreigners resurfaced again in the 1870s and in the 1890s, when the American Protective Association was in their heyday. This group was, of course, followed by the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s.

First phase, burning of the Old South Church, Bath, 1854

First phase, burning of the Old South Church, Bath, 1854

Item Contributed by
Maine Historical Society

Third phase, burning of Old South Church, Bath, 1854

Third phase, burning of Old South Church, Bath, 1854

Item Contributed by
Maine Historical Society

John Bapst, Bangor, ca. 1860

John Bapst, Bangor, ca. 1860

Item Contributed by
John Bapst Memorial High School


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