“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?