Paul Blanshard (born August 27, 1892, Fredericksburg, Ohio, U.S.—died January 27, 1980, St. Petersburg, Florida) was an American writer, polemicist, and lawyer best known for his vitriolic criticism of the Roman Catholic Church.
Blanshard created a national furor with the publication of American Freedom and Catholic Power (1949), the first in a series of controversial books that severely attacked the Roman Catholic Church. For nearly two decades Blanshard plagued the church with such best sellers as Communism, Democracy, and Catholic Power (1951), The Irish and Catholic Power (1953), and Religion and the Schools (1963). The latter’s criticism of the church’s “un-American” involvement in public education was said to have contributed to the establishment of federal bans on prayer in public schools and on aid to religiously affiliated schools. Blanshard, who was a Congregationalist minister before espousing atheism, first voiced his criticism when he became a Vatican correspondent for The Nation. He was the twin brother of Brand Blanshard, a noted philosopher.