“Political events exacerbated the anti-Catholicism fanned by these religious controversies. Referring to Winfield Scott’s attempt to woo immigrant voters in the presidential campaign of 1852, a nativist newspaper promised that the Know-Nothings would “teach American Demagogues that the time has come for them to cease their everlasting and stereotype prattle of ‘the rich Irish brogue and sweet German accent’”. Native-born citizens deemed Scott’s remark to be merely the most famous example of an all to common trend.”
Tyler G. Anbinder, “Nativism and Slavery: The Northern Know Nothings and the Politics of the 1850s”, 1994
The anti-Catholicism described in the excerpt most directly reflects which of the following historical developments in the 1850s?
Growing abolitionist beliefs and its opposition to the Fugitive Slave Act
A backlash against the increasing numbers of Irish and German Catholic immigrants
Influence of Jacksonian Democracy on political participation by marginalized groups
Debates surrounding the annexation of Texas and its admission as a slave state
Did this page help you?