Bath, Maine anti-Catholic riot of 1854

The anti-Catholic riot that occurred in Bath on July, 8, 1854[1][2] was one of a number that took place in coastal Maine in the 1850s, including the tarring and feathering of a Catholic priest, Father John Bapst in 1851 in the town of Ellsworth. The first and most violent anti-Catholic riot in Maine took place in Bangor, Maine in 1834. The resurgence of violence in the 1850s was associated with the rise of the Know-Nothing Party and the passage of the Maine law, America's first state-wide prohibition ordinance.

The Bath mob was gathered and inflamed by a traveling street-preacher named James S. Orr, who called himself "The Angel Gabriel", dressed in white robes, and carried a trumpet.[3] Orr delivered an anti-Catholic sermon on a commercial street, the crowd of spectators eventually swelling to over a thousand and blocking carriage traffic. Some began shouting for the mob to move on the Old South Church, a structure built by the Congregationalists in 1805 but lately abandoned by them and purchased by Irish Catholics. In the late afternoon the crowd marched to the church, began smashing up the pews, hoisted an American flag from the belfry, rang the bell, and set it on fire. After the church was burned, a smaller crowd of at least a hundred roamed through the streets all night. There is no record of attacks upon any Catholic persons. [4]

A year after the riot, on Nov. 18, 1855, the Catholic Bishop of Portland attempted to lay the cornerstone for a new church on the same site, but the congregation was chased away and beaten.[5]

References

  1. ^ History of the church: from its ... - Google Books
  2. ^ Maine Memory Network - Oliver Moses Receipt for Taxes paid, Bath, 1882
  3. ^ Parradis, Wilfrid H. (1998). Upon this Granite: Catholicism in New Hampshire. Peter E. Randall. pp. 66–67. ISBN 0-914339-75-3. 
  4. ^ New York Times, July 11, 1854,p. 4
  5. ^ Henry De Courcy, The Catholic Church in the United States, TW Strong, 1856, p. 522