Showing posts with label Universal Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Universal Party. Show all posts

Friday, November 8, 2019

Daniel William Fry



 Fry and Green, 1959




 George Adamski and Fry







Daniel William Fry, July 19, 1908 (Verdon Twp., Minn.) - December 20, 1992 (Alamogordo, NM)

VP candidate for Universal Party (1972)

Running mate with nominee: Gabriel Green (1924-2001)
Popular vote: 220 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

Gabriel Green was back in national politics after a dozen years when he last ran for President from the Outer Space Party in 1960. This time his running mate was another well known fellow UFO contactee named Daniel Fry who was nominated April 9, 1972. Fry easily defeated Arthur Rosenblum, founder of the Aquarian Research Foundation, for the prize.

Fry's life journey had been dramatically altered on July 4, 1949 (sometimes it was given as July 4, 1950) when as an employee of the White Sands Proving Ground in New Mexico he said he encountered a benevolent alien named Alan who flew him around (to NYC in just minutes!) and started a continuing teaching relationship concerning metaphysics, Atlantis, and other topics outside the realm of normal scientific and historical understanding. By 1972 Fry was a well-known author and speaker in the world of UFOlogy. 

At the time of his nomination Fry was a resident of Merlin, Oregon giving us another connection in Pacific Northwest third party VP candidate trivia!

On the campaign trial Fry was quoted, "People are elected to represent us, not to govern us ... There are several million heads in the U.S., and several million heads are better than one." Also, "Its been said that the silent majority isn't silent, but that the government is deaf."

There is some thought that Fry had indirectly formed the Universal Party when people associated with his organization called "Understanding" were later involved with creating the Party.

The Green/Fry ticket was only on the ballot in Iowa, where they finished with 199 votes (0.02% of the state total). They also had a smattering of write-ins from other states. The Quad-City Times in Davenport described the Universal Party platform as being based on "the spiritual concepts of the Golden Rule and the metaphysical theories of reincarnation and the migration of the soul through many lives seeking redemption."

In a quieter election year the Universal Party might have garnered more attention from the press, but in 1972 they were nearly lost in the shuffle. This would be their final national election.

Election history: none

Other occupations: author, lecturer, founder of the Understanding organization, explosives supervisor, rocket worker, poet

Buried: Monte Vista Cemetery (Alamogordo, NM)

Notes:
Orphaned at age 10
Self-educated at college level through using the Pasadena Public Library
Was a volunteer for Ronald Reagan in the 1968 Republican primaries.
Alan, the alien who Fry had contact with, pronounced his name as "A-Lawn," just like the same way
 US President Chester Alan Arthur pronounced his middle name. Pretty cool, eh?


Monday, October 21, 2019

Roscoe B. MacKenna






Roscoe B. MacKenna, September 16, 1908 (Massachusetts) - December 21, 1975 (Chicago, Ill.)

VP candidate for Universal Party (1968)

Running mate with nominee: Kirby James Hensley (1911-1999)
Popular vote: 142 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

The Universal Party, which was a descendant of the 1960 Outer Space Party, once again nominated for President the Universal Life Church founder Kirby J. Hensley of Modesto, Calif. at their convention in Denver in early March 1968. Hensely was rather proud of the fact he could not read but had memorized portions of the Bible. Known as "The mail-order minister" almost anyone could be ordained in his church regardless of their real religious beliefs.

Roscoe B. MacKenna of Chicago was nominated for the VP position. MacKenna was a follower of the I AM movement and a student of metaphysics. The business card Hensely liked to hand out during the campaign identified McKenna as "New Age Scientist - Bell Telephone Company."

The 1968 Universal Party platform expanded a bit from their 1964 version. The addition of the text providing "civil treatment and protection of peoples from other Worlds visiting our Planet Earth in their machines without immediate commitment to our jails" was the portion that drew the most attention from the press.

In this round they actually attained ballot status, in the State of Iowa. Their campaign tactics included placing personal ads in newspapers. On Election Day they finished in last place out of eight in the Hawkeye State garnering 142 votes (0.01%). In 1964 they had 19 votes recorded nationally, so 142 was a huge leap for them.   

Election history: none

Other occupations: draftsman, gardener, telephone company employee?

Buried: Graceland Cemetery (Chicago, Ill.)

Notes:
Buried in the same cemetery as Louis H. Sullivan
His father immigrated to the USA from Canada in 1887



Thursday, September 26, 2019

John Orville Hopkins




John Orville Hopkins, July 19, 1876 (Cummingsville, Minn.) - May 31, 1973 (San Mateo, Calif.)

VP candidate for Universal Party (1964)

Running mate with nominee: Kirby James Hensley (1911-1999)

Popular vote: 19 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

The Universal Party, which was a descendant of the 1960 Outer Space Party, held their convention in Berkeley, Calif. on Aug. 8, 1964. Universal Life Church founder Kirby J. Hensley of Modesto, Calif. was nominated for President. Hensely was rather proud of the fact he could not read but had memorized portions of the Bible. Known as "The mail-order minister" almost anyone could be ordained in his church regardless of their real religious beliefs.

The VP nominee was John O. Hopkins, described as a Des Moines, Iowa farmer by the press. He was also the father of Party chair John Woehler Hopkins (1908-1975). John O. Hopkins was 88 years old, making him-- at least up to 1964-- the oldest candidate ever on a Presidential ticket. John Maxwell (Presidential nominee, American Vegetarian Party, 1948) and Lorenzo Stephen Coffin (VP nominee, United Christian Party, 1908) were both 85 when they ran. So was Greenback Party Presidential candidate Peter Cooper in 1876, the same year Hopkins was born.

In 1964 the Universal Party apparently did not publicize their extraterrestrial policies as much as in other elections. Their platform included an abolition of the following: income tax, Electoral College, the Federal Reserve Board, political lobbying, and political conventions. Although the platform had a strong libertarian theme, they also proposed that a "Congress of Nations" should be established as an international police force to end war.

They failed to obtain ballot status in any state, but were registered write-ins in California, where they tallied a whopping 19 votes.

Election history: none

Other occupations: bicycle dealer, hardware salesman, manager of a sporting goods company, farmer

Buried: Masonic Cemetery (Des Moines, Iowa)

Notes:
Moved to Des Moines, Iowa from Minnesota between 1897-1900 to join his brothers in their sporting
 goods business.
Some sources incorrectly list Roscoe B. MacKenna as the 1964 running mate. MacKenna was the
 1968 VP nominee.