I have just finished reading Kenneth C Davis'
A Nation Rising and found within an interesting passage. When describing John C. Frémont's 1856 presidential campaign, Davis writes the following:
Quote:
Coming out of the gate, Frémont had two serious problems, as far as most Americans were concerned: he was for abolition ... ; and his heritage was questionable." Opponents claimed that he wasn't American but had been born in Canada. (These opponents were nineteenth-century precursors of the "birther movement," which professed that Barack Obama was really born in Kenya.")
Davis goes on to report other myths spread by Frémont's Know-Nothing opponents including allegations of criminal misconduct and claims that he was a Catholic.