Temperance/prohibition

An important theme throughout
American history has been the use and misuse of alcohol.
Of course other addictive or consciousness-altering drugs have enjoyed their
turn in the spotlight in terms of changing history, but booze seems to have been
a constant since the colonial times and continuing right up into the present.
When our summer interns in 2013 suggested that we
ought to take a subject-matter cut at our catalog in addition to a geographic
one, alcohol, its abuse, and attempts at its control was one of the themes that
almost immediately stuck out as
worthy of a separate category. Hence this page.
Let it suffice to say that we were surprised at
how much material we already published on alcohol-related subjects when we began
this page.
Please check back frequently to see what new
material we have added and to see links to material elsewhere in our catalog
that relates to this topic.
Temperance/Prohibition themed material currently
available from Between the Lakes Group:
The full title of this publication is
Two Decades: A History of the First Twenty Years Work by
the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union in the State of New York 1874 –
1894. Your publisher, when we began
the project of digitizing this volume, viewed it as a document that
would fit nicely in our Americana section along with the articles on
speakeasy cards and “tonics” but came away from the project rather
impressed with what these women (who did not yet have the right to vote)
accomplished in their first 20 years. Let it be clear that this is a
history of a state WCTU organization, not a polemic, and while the
authors assume a friendly audience, their discussion of tactics and
their implementation are potentially useful to any disenfranchised
group.
We were also impressed to learn of an aspect of the work of the
WCTU in a seemingly unrelated area: until they got legislative
action in 1887 raising the age of consent to 16 years, it was a
mind-boggling 10 years old. One pauses in wonder at what the sexual
proclivities of a legislature that considered ten year old girls to be
fair game must have been.
See our
New York State Miscellany page for more information.
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