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How Thornhill
Decided the American Election of 1832
In 1826, in Batavia, N.Y., William Morgan published
Illustrations of Masonry, an expose of the first three degrees of
Masonry. For his efforts he was imprisoned, allegedly for a two dollar
debt. Someone paid off his debt, and upon his release from prison, he
was seized, gagged and thrust into a yellow carriage. There was a wild
ride, with relays of horses, to the Niagara Frontier. It was commonly
believed he was then murdered and dropped into Lake Ontario.
His disappearance and the obstruction of justice by politically
influential Masons raised popular indignation to a point that a third
party, the Antimasonic Party with William Wirt as its leader and
Presidential candidate, was born.
Just prior to the Presidential election of 1832, a body found near the
mouth of the Niagara River, said to be Morgan's, was claimed by his
family. It turned out to be someone else's, but was said by the
Antimasonic Party to be a "Good enough Morgan 'till after the
election", a statement of political deceit. Andrew Jackson won, in part
because the Antimasonic candidate drew votes Republican Henry Clay.
All this time William Morgan was in Thornhill, operating a distillery
in Brewers Hollow, southeast of this location.
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