The first third party in the United States formed to battle the influence of the Freemasons, a club to which many of the wealthy and well connected have belonged since the founding of the United States. Freemasons' rituals and beliefs are not shared with outsiders, but in 1826, when member William Morgan threatened to expose the secrets and then disappeared, resentment of the insider's society coalesced into a political movement opposing the Jacksonian Democrats then in power.
Another first, and lasting, contribution from the Anti-Masonic Party: the nominating convention for a presidential ticket in 1832.
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