Freeman's Protective Silver Federation

The Freemen's Protective Silver Federation was an American secret society, formed at Spokane, Washington and formalised at Pullman, Washington in 1894, existing for the stated purpose of promoting bimetallism as the monetary policy of the United States of America, or, in their own words, "to unite the friends of silver under one banner, to battle for the white metal, and to wage war against the gold monopoly." The federation was most active in the Pacific Coast states and was reported to have dubiously boasted some 800,000 members at its peak in 1896, subsequently dwindling in membership after the failure of William Jennings Bryan's presidential campaign against William McKinley, who would proceed to institute the Gold Standard Act in the years that followed, and was ultimately being assumed to be defunct by the 1920s.

In addition to the cause of bimetallism, the federation was reported to have taken up other populist causes, including resistance to land seizures brought on by mortgage defaults.

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 * &mdash; on the disappearance of Charles Gloystein, and the newspaper attacks and accusations against the Silver Federation consequent