Silver Knights of America

The Silver Knights of America was a short-lived Washington, D.C.-based organisation, founded in mid-1895 and reported as defunct by the end of 1896, that campaigned on the issue of free silver, promoting bimetallism as the monetary policy of the United States of America, specifically "to secure in a legal way the free coinage of silver in the United States and to make silver a legal tender for all debts and to collect and spend money for that purpose."

Structure
Local groups of knights were organised through the Supreme Temple of the Silver Knights of America, a chartered stock company with $100,000 in capital stock at $100 a share. The executives of the company included: William Morris Stewart, then Senator from Nevada, president and editor of the Silver Knight; James L. Pait, vice-president; Oliver Corwin Sabin, Bishop of the Evangelical Christian Science Church, secretary and associate editor of the Silver Knight; James A. B. Richard, treasurer; Samuel S. Yoder, former Congressman from Ohio, director general; and M. B. Herlow, legal agent.