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Major Cities in Minnesota with Drug Rehab and Treatment Centers:
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866-407-4380
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Drug Rehab Minnesota
is here to help people with drug and/or alcohol abuse problems in Minnesota. find treatment options. Due to our diverse networking system we can find a treatment option tailored to each individuals specific situation and needs. We are able to provide all phases of recovery included but not limited to, alcohol and/or drug intervention, drug and/or alcohol detox, in-patient treatment, out-patient treatment, short term treatment (30 days or less), long term treatment (90 days or longer).
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We design personalized treatment programs to provide each abuser with the greatest chance of a successful recovery outcome. Our comprehensive networking system works hand in hand with all of the drug treatment centers in Minnesota. At Drug Rehab Minnesota we know that each individual is unique and are treated as such. Deciding upon a treatment option in Minnesota, or anywhere can be a daunting task for any individual or family, we will guide you through each step of a comprehensive treatment plan for you or your loved one. We are determined in our mission, that every drug and/or alcohol abuser in Minnesota. that has a desire to change their life will be given a chance to recover from their addiction and we are dedicated to ensuring that they are given the opportunity to do so.
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866-407-4380
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History of Alcohol
History of Alcohol
Prohibition* In
1920, the national policy of Prohibition began. The 18th Amendment to the Constitution
had been officially ratified:
It sought,
by law, to make the whole Nation into enforced teetotalers and to put an end to
all evils associated with drinking. It sought to eradicate a taste deeply rooted
in the habits and customs of a large part of the population through outlawing
the business that ministered to its satisfaction (Hu, 1950: 48). 1650-1750:
THE FIRST HUNDRED YEARS In
fact, it started earlier. "Ministers shall not give themselves to excess
in drinkinge, or riott, or spending their tyme idellye day or night," ruled
the Virginia Colonial Assembly in 1629 (Cherrington, 1920:16). Massachusetts
ordered that no person shall remain in any tavern "longer than necessary
occasions" in 1637, while Plymouth Colony in 1633 prohibited the sale of
spirits "more than 2 pence worth to anyone but strangers just arrived"
(Cherrington, 1920: 18). This
sampling of the earliest colonial laws is representative of the attempt, continued
since those times, to control excessive consumption. Excessive drinking, it was
considered, produced behavior unseemly in some, such as ministers, and dangerous
in others, such as Indians. But
drinking per se was not frowned upon. Indeed, when the Puritans set sail to Massachusetts,
they had taken care to carry with them 42 tons of beer (in contrast with 14 tons
of water) and 10,000 gallons of wine (Lee, 1963: 15). The
regulation of liquor consumption was a matter of considerable concern in certain
colonies. Thus, for a time, Massachusetts went so far as to prohibit the drinking
of healths in 1638 (Lee, 1963: 19). The law was soon abandoned for reasons obvious,
albeit unrecorded. It rapidly became clear, however, that liquor laws could do
more and perhaps better, than control consumption: they could provide a source
of revenue. By the turn of the 18th century, the regulatory impulse was concentrated
on fines, excise taxes and license fees. Fines
were imposed for drunken behavior, unlawful sales to a drunken tippler or to Indians,
and for selling without a license. Court records indicate that these laws were
enforced with reasonable regularity (Krout 1967: 29-30). Licenses often carried
their own fees, and excise taxes were levied upon distilled spirits as well as
beer and fermented drink in many cases. Until
the 18th century, however, there was no attempt to prohibit the manufacture, importation,
sale, or consumption of alcoholic beverages. Quite the contrary, at least one
individual-in some cases a reluctant individual-was required in many towns to
run the local inn or public house for visitors and travelers. Although
colonial statutes made it clear that tipplers and idlers were unwelcome, the diary
of a colonial traveler, Sarah Kemble Knight, suggests that such laws were unsuccessful
in containing the ribaldry which took place in many such houses. Madam Knight
complained: I
could get no sleep, because of the Clamor of some of the Town Tope-ers in the
next room.... I heartily fretted & wish't 'am tongue tyed.... They kept calling
for Tother Gill, Wch while they were swallowing, was some Intermission, But presently,
like Oyle to fire, encreased the flame (Miller, Johnson, eds., 1963: 430-431). Persons
other than Madam Knight were to become more outspoken about their concern for
the use of spirits. The, most significant premonition was the Colony of Georgia's
action in 1735 when the first prohibitory statute against the importation of "ardent
spirits" was enacted. At the same time, however, the consumption of beer
was encouraged (Grant, 1932: 1). The time for temperance had not yet arrived.
1750-1825: TEMPERANCE
STIRRINGS As
the evils of intemperance began to attract the attention of the ministry, John
Wesley denounced the sin of distilling -and declared for its Prohibition in 1773
(Cherrington, 1920: 37-38). On
his heels came the publication of a pamphlet entitled "The Mighty Destroyer
Displayed and Some Account of the Dreadful Havoc Made by the Mistaken Use, As
Well As the Abuse, of Distilled Spiritous Liquors," by Anthony Benezet, a
member of the Society of Friends, advising against the use of any drink "which
is liable to steal away a man's senses and render him foolish, irrascible, uncontrollable,
and dangerous" (Cherrington, 1920: 38). Nevertheless,
typical of the century's ambivalence, the first master at Harvard was fired when
it was found that Harvard students had been left "wanting beer betwixt brewings
a week and a week and a half together" (Lee, 1963: 16). Concern
for the effect of liquor upon the public weal was expressed by John Adams who
noted in his diary on February 29, 1760, that the taverns were "becoming
the eternal haunt of loose, disorderly people . . ." (Cherrington, 1920:
37). Worst of all he continued:
...
These houses are become the nurseries of our legislators. An artful man, who has
neither sense nor sentiments, may, by gaining a little sway among the rabble of
the town, multiply taverns and dram shops and thereby secure the votes of taverner
and retailer and of all; and the multiplication of taverns will make many, who
may be induced to flip and rum, to vote for any man whatever (Dobyns, 1940: 215). The
health argument in behalf of temperance was first made by Nathaniel Ames, in the
1752 edition of his Almanack, who wrote that
Strong
Waters were formerly used only by the Direction of Physicians; but now Mechanicks
and low-li'd Labourers drink Rum like Fountain-Water, and they can infinitely
better endure it than the idle. unactive and sedentary Part of Mankind, but DEATH
is in the bottom of the cup of every one (Lee, 1963: 22). Dr.
Benjamin Rush shared his concern, publishing in 1785 his now famous "Inquiry
into the Effects of Ardent Spirits Upon the Human Body and Mind." Enumerating
the diseases of the body and mind which plague the drinker of distilled liquors,
Dr. Rush outlined the symptoms, including "unusual garrulity, unusual silence,
captiousness ... an insipid simpering ... profane swearing ... certain immodest
actions" and "certain extravagant acts which indicate a temporary fit
of madness" (Rush, 1943: 323, 325-326). Although
the rumblings of the temperance movement were thus perceptible in the late 18th
century, there is no evidence that its effects were felt. In 1766, it is recorded
that the repeal of the Stamp Act was greeted in Providence, Rhode Island with
"32 of the most loyal, patriotic and constitutional toasts" (Lee, 1963:
18). Notwithstanding this evidence of devotion to His Majesty. it was often thereafter
the tavern which provided the meeting places for the most defiant revolutionaries.
Subsequently,
when the colonial period disappeared into the post-Revolutionary era, Alexander
Hamilton adopted the idea earlier effected by the individual colonies, to tax
distilled liquors for revenue purposes. In 1791 , the tax was enacted as part
of the Revenue Act. The following year, the Second Congress of the United States
added license fees for distilleries and taxes on liquors distilled from imported
materials. Incensed
by this federal action, farmers in Western Pennsylvania mobbed revenue collectors
and armed to resist this intrusion by the new Federal Government. It required
15,000 militia to bring the so-called Whiskey Rebellion to an end (Peterson, 1969:
119-120). Such was the first indication that the liquor industry in the United
States would be a force with which the government would have to reckon. Toward
the end of the 18th century, a temperance movement, as such, became discernible.
The Methodist Church took a staunch position against the sale or imbibing of ardent
spirits "unless in cases of extreme necessity." Five years later, in
1789, even the exception was excised (Cherrington, 1920: 50). A similar platform
was adopted by the Presbyterian Synod of Pennsylvania and by the Yearly Meeting
of Friends of New England (Cherrington, 1920: 51, 58). On
a non-clerical level, the movement began to organize. Although there is some dispute
as to the identity of the original temperance society, it appears that as early
as 1778, there was an organization calling itself the Free African Society which
excluded men of drinking habits, followed soon thereafter by the Organization
of Brethren, and the Litchfield, Connecticut Association of "the most respectable
farmers" in Connecticut determined to discourage the use of spirits (Cherrington,
1920: 49, 58). The
turn of the century saw the vitalization of the temperance spirit. Religious leaders,
including Cotton Mather, Dr. Lyman Beecher, John Wesley and Reverend Andrew Elliott
inveighed against the consumption of liquors. Temperance activity figured prominently
in the concerns of the Presbyterian, Methodist, Universalist, Baptist, and Friends
churches. Whatever
the Christian input , however, it is also apparent that a desire to reform was
aroused in the country, very much like that which was to be experienced a century
later during the Progressive Movement. Thus, Massachusetts Society for the Suppression
of Intemperance of 1813, damned not only rum, but all of the "kindred vices,
profaneness and gambling" and beseeched members to "discourage... by
... example and influence, every kind of..... immorality" (Lee, 1963: 23).
Mingling with the potential temperance leaders during this period were the future
spokesmen of abolitionism, feminism, and utopianism. In
the meantime, the industry was able to report triumphantly that the federal taxes
on distilling and importing spirits were repealed in 1802. From 1813 until 1817,
the retailers' and distillers' licenses bore a federal tax, but beginning in 1818
the industry enjoyed a tax-free era which was to last until 1862. Thomas Jefferson
rejoiced-"as a moralist"-explaining that: It
is an error to view a tax on that liquor as merely a tax on the rich. It is a
prohibition of its use in the middling class of our citizens, and a condemnation
of them to the poison of whisky, which is desolating their houses. No nation is
drunken where wine is cheap; and none sober, where the only antidote is the bane
of whisky (Peterson, 1969: 122-123) Future
prohibitionists would likewise castigate the government for drawing its revenues
from the liquor industry and participating in the profits of evil thereby.
1825-1870: THE
PLEDGE Temperance
was not always equated with teetotalism. Beer and usually wine were initially
exempt from denunciation in both sermons and treatises. There developed in the
mid-19th century, however, the conviction that all brews, be they "ardent
spirits," beer, ale, or wine, were anathema. The,
new temper of the movement was epitomized by the travels of Father Theobald Matthew
of Ireland who toured the United States from 1849 to 1851, administering the pledge
of total abstinence to some 600,000 persons in 25 states. A White House dinner
and a Senate reception stamped official approval upon his sojourns (Furnas, 1968:
80). Thus did temperance drift into a new phase, with its ardent spokesman, Congressman
Gerrit Smith, crying that: I
would that no person were able to drink intoxicating liquors without immediately
becoming a drunkard. For, who, then would . . . drink the poison that always kills,
or jump into the fire that always burns? (Furnas, 1968: 15). It
was in this atmosphere that the first prohibition experiments were undertaken
on a statewide basis. "Until the liquor traffic is abolished . . . all efforts
at moral reform must languish," judged one of the earliest prohibitionists.
In "Grappling
with the Monster," T. S. Arthur stated, "The CURSE is upon us, and there
is but one CURE: Total Abstinence, by the help of God, for the Individual, and
Prohibition for the State" Furnas, 1968: 15). In
1847, the first such cure was enacted for the state of Maine (Cherrington, 1920:
134). (Actually, the first Prohibition law went into effect in 1843 in the territory
of Oregon. This was repealed five years later.) A
wave of prohibition statutes followed. Delaware, on the heels of Maine, passed
its first prohibition law only to have it declared unconstitutional the following
year. Similar laws were enacted in Ohio, Illinois, Rhode Island, Minnesota, Massachusetts,
Connecticut, Pennsylvania and New York during the next few years. They met with
varying fates, including veto by the governors, repeal by the legislatures and
invalidation by the state supreme courts. The
evaluations by several historians of these early trials were to he heard again
in the 20th century: the enactments lacked support from a large portion of the
population, making enforcement exceedingly difficult. Ultimately, all but one
of the states repealed the prohibition statutes of the 19th century (Grant, 1932:
5; Peterson, 1969: 123). Notwithstanding
this record, prohibitionists took heart. "This thing is of God," cried
Lyman Beecher from the pulpit. "That glorious Maine law was a square and
grand blow right between the horns of the Devil" (Furnas, 1968: 167). Temperance
societies, established in all but three states by 1832 and destined to proliferate,
began to consolidate as well. The
American Temperance Society, later to become the American Temperance Union, was
organized in 1826. It quickly begat auxiliaries, so that by 1835, 8,000 locals
existed (Cherrington, 1920: 92-93). As
the years passed, they witnessed the founding of more temperance, organizations
of a general and national character than during any other period in the United
States' history. The Washingtonian movement, organized in the City of Baltimore
in 1840, was followed by the Martha Washington movement in 1841. The
Sons of Temperance came into existence in 1842, at, the same time the Order of
Rechabites was organized, and the Congressional Temperance Society of 1833 was
revived on the basis of total abstinence. They took heart at their early state,
successes and fought against the defeats of repeal. In
the meantime, however, the United States government, which had heaped honors upon
Father Matthew, concluded a treaty with King Kamehameha III of Hawaii in 1850
permitting the introduction and sale of liquor on his island. As
further evidence of the national dichotomy, Chicagoans in the 1850's fought virulently
against the enforcement of Sunday closing laws. To protest, an armed mob burst
into the business district of the city, to be met by police. Fortunately, the
mob was dispersed before the mayor found it necessary to use the cannon he had
hurriedly planted around City Hall (Peterson, 1969: 120). It
was the time when patent medicines, 40 proof and more, began to develop their
clientele. And although the Demon Rum might threaten their health and life, Lydia
Pinkham's Compound offered a cure for any and all ails and aches. By
the time of the Civil War, both the assimilative and coercive traditions of the
temperance movement had crystallized: that is, temperance proponents were determined
to save the weak and to destroy the recalcitrant (Gusfield, 1963: 69-70). The
hardening of positions was accompanied by the development of political consciousness
in the movement and recognition of political objectives. These processes were
only temporarily blunted by the Civil War in the 1860's and the diversion of interest
to the abolitionist cause. Part
of the heritage of the Civil War was the tax on liquor and beer imposed in 1862.
Rates were increased several times between 1863 and 1868, so that the tax imposed
at the rate of 20 cents per gallon rose to $2 per gallon. An
interesting phenomenon was noted by the Federal Government: as the rates increased,
the revenue did not. In fact, the number of gallons reported actually declined.
As the decade went on, attempts were made to enforce the tax laws and in 1868,
$25,000 was actually appropriated to detect violators. Fraud continued almost
unabated. Stockpiling of liquor was popular to hedge against future, increases,
for they were not applicable to liquor on hand. The
infamous Whiskey Ring was active in these days and was not finally broken up until
1875, when, in a peak of nerve, members established a corruption fund in the District
of Columbia to halt the prosecution of 321 persons charged with violations of
the revenue laws. Before then, however, Congress apparently had second thoughts
about the implications of the revenue collections and reduced the tax from the
high of $2 per gallon to 50 cents in 1869. The happy result was to see a rise
in collections from $13.5 million in 1868, to $45 million in 1869, and $55 million
the following year. Taking further precautions, the government stipulated that
new stamps be developed to preclude counterfeiting and tampering (History of the
Alcohol 14-20; Cherrington, 1920: 156162). Congress did not escape unscathed by
criticism and reaction. It came from both sides of the temperance issue. Temperance
advocates such as Senator Wilson of Massachusetts and Senator Pomeroy of Kansas
decried the fact that federal revenues would be drawn from the liquor industry.
At the
same, time, however, the industry revolted, leading to mass tax evasion schemes
and devices and the organization of their first industry lobby, the United States
Brewers Association. The Association rapidly launched a, legislative campaign
and succeeded in 1863 in reducing the tax rate of beer from $1 to 60 cents (Cherrington,
1920:157). By
1870, the Civil War dust had cleared and the temperance battle lines were drawn,
already tested by the skirmishes of the 1840's and 1850's. The most interesting
feature of their war strategy was soon to become apparent: women and children
were welcomed at the battlements. 1870-1913:
TOWARD A NATIONAL CONSCIENCE A
series of "isms" was aroused in this era: feminism, unionism, socialism,
and progressivism. Prohibition absorbed elements of them all, and vice versa.
The
feminist movement originated early in the 1800's. Until the 1870's, however, feminine
involvement in the temperance effort was largely peripheral. The Women's Crusade
of 1873 and the organization of the Women's Christian Temperance Union in 1874
marked the formal entrance of women into the temperance movement.
The WCTU was devotedly headed by Frances E. Willard, a lady equally committed
to the principle of equality of the sexes. Temperance was to bridge the gap, she
believed: Drink
and tobacco are the great separatists [sic] between men and women. Once they used
these things together, but woman's evolution has carried her beyond them; man
will climb to the same level . . . but meanwhile ... the fact that he permits
himself fleshly indulgence that he would deprecate in her, makes their planes
different, giving her an instinct of revulsion (Furnas, 1968: 281). Although the
WCTU was organized initially around the temperance issue, it was not long before
Miss Willard's leadership expanded its conscience.
A
statement of principles was adopted in its early years:
We believe
in a living wage; in an 8-hour day; in courts of conciliation and arbitration,
in justice as opposed to greed in gain; in "Peace on Earth and Good Will
to Men" (Gusfield, 1963: 76). Within
three years of its inception, the WCTU reported that its concerns included "a
better Indian policy" and "wiser civil service reform" (Gusfield,
1963: 77). There were those in the Union who felt that their interests should
be limited to temperance. But, forecasting the mood of Progressivism, Miss Willard
steered the organization along the broader lines to social reform. The
WCTU was responsible for part of the early campaign to educate the public about
temperance. Children were recruited to sing praises of "the true and the
brave" who signed the abstinence pledge. They were assisted in this effort
by McGuffey's Readers which denounced the licensing of liquor stores and saloons: Licensed-to
do thy neighbor harm, Licensed-to
kindle hire and strife, Licensed-to
nerve the robber's arm, Licensed-to
whet the murderer's knife, Licensed-like
spider for a fly, To
spread thy nets for man, thy prey, To
mock his struggles, crush his soul, Then
cast his worthless form away (Lee, 1963: 34-35). Whiskey
makes "the happy miserable" and impoverishes the rich, the, McGuffey
books concluded. And the word spread. By 1902, the temperance campaign had permeated
the public school systems: every state but Arizona had introduced compulsory temperance
education. Their texts teemed with both facts and misinformation such as "Alcohol
sometimes causes the coats of the blood vessels to grow thin. They are then liable
at any time to cause death by bursting." (Sinclair, 1962: 43). The
WCTU was not carrying the burden of reform alone, however. In 1869, the National
Prohibition Party was born. Three years later, the first party ticket was put
forth in the presidential campaign of 1872, headed by John Black, who received
5,607 votes for President. Success at the polls ultimately peaked in 1892 when
John Dedwell, the Prohibition presidential candidate, received a total of 270,710
votes. Thereafter, its partisans declined in number, having failed to break voters
away from their traditional affiliations (Cherrington, 1920: 165-169). As
a rule, the WCTU eschewed partisanship. Their objectives were far broader and
more practical than those contemplated by the Prohibition Party. Only once it
supported the Prohibition Party in the notorious election of 1884. The
election of 1884 carried a variety of implications for future candidates on the
temperance issue. In New York City alone, 1,007 primaries and conventions reportedly
were held by the various parties. Of these, over 60% took place in saloons (Peterson,
1969: 123), recalling to mind the complaint of John Adams a century before (Cherrington,
1920: 37; Dobyns, 1940: 215). The meeting places were indicative of the fact that
at this time neither party could afford to adopt a dry plank in its platform,
for New York would be a pivotal state in the race between Republican James G.
Blaine and Democrat Grover Cleveland. Blaine
campaigned hard, trying to overcome the defection of several thousand dry Republicans
to the Prohibition Party. Speaking in behalf of Blaine at a New York City rally,
Presbyterian minister Samuel Burchard denounced the Democrats as the party of
"Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion." Needless to say, the Catholic vote,
as well as the wet vote, quickly swelled the Democratic totals. Blaine, having
thus alienated both wets and drys, lost the state--and the election-by a tiny
margin (Furnas, 1968: 273; Lee, 1963: 29-30). In
case the lesson that temperance was an issue to be reckoned with in national politics
was lost on the parties after 1884, the events of the decade culminating in the
birth of the Anti-Saloon League in 1895, dramatized the point. A second wave of
state prohibition laws was experienced between 1880 and 1890. The results of much
of the legislation during those years were less than satisfying to temperance
advocates, however; only six states emerged with state-wide prohibition by statute
or constitutional amendment. Numerous other states had enacted local option, which
permitted towns to go dry if they so chose by referendum. Without state or federal
insulation from wet communities, however, the so-called dry towns were scarcely
temperance models. In
the wake of these state legislative actions, South Carolina introduced a state
dispensary system in order to eliminate the motive of private gain from the liquor
business. Political scandals which quickly developed tended to discredit it, however,
if indeed it had enjoyed much support from any corner (Cherrington, 1920: 250-251).
With
this discomfiting history behind it, the Anti-Saloon League arose to the challenge,
while Carrie Nation independently thrust her way into the public eye. The League
was to develop the art of lobbying or "pressure political" to its most
dramatic heights. Scarcely more than 10 years after organization, it was described
as "the most dangerous political movement that this country has ever known"
by the National Model License League, a wet (and harassed) association. A more
rational viewpoint was expressed by the president of the New York State Brewers
Association in 1913: We
are not dealing with a theory which is the delusion of the fanatic alone, but
with a real condition which is in the hands of a well organized force, led by
aggressive, experienced, and untiring leaders (Odegard, 1928: 23). The
focus of the League's indictments included not simply alcohol, but the saloon
itself, as the purveyor of spirits. The myriad League publications denounced the
saloon for "annually sending thousands of our youths to destruction, for
corrupting politics, dissipating workmen's wages, leading astray 60,000 girls
each year into lives of immorality and banishing children from school"
(Odegard, 1928: 40-59). "Liquor
is responsible for 19% of the divorces, 25% of the poverty, 25% of the insanity,
37% of the pauperism, 45% of child desertion, and 50% of the crime in this country,"
the League determined. "And this," it concluded , " is
a very conservative estimate" (Odegard, 1928: 60). League
posters appeared everywhere depicting the saloon-keeper as a profiteer who feasted
on death and enslavement. Others screamed out the dire consequences of alcohol.
"Alcohol inflames the passions, thus making the temptation to sex-sin unusually
strong," advertised one (Sinclair, 1962: 51). It
was the League which geared up the campaign, but it was not alone. As the Progressive
spirit caught the national interest in the early 19th century, the movement for
reform embraced the cause of temperance. The temperance movement assumed an aura
of evangelism, combining the concept of America's mission with the vision of Messianism.
Through the combination of temperance and progressivism, it was believed that
the Kingdom of God could actually come to the United States. In
an article in Appleton's Magazine in 1908, the Reverend Charles F. Aked articulated
the aspirations of the reformers: We
are spending our lives, many of us, in the effort to make the world a little better
and brighter for those that shall come after us.... we want to open out life and
liberty to all the sons of men. We want to make possible for all of life in the
whole, the good and the beautiful ... and the common sale of intoxicating liquor
renders our work a thousand times more difficult ... (Timberlake, 1063: 34-38). Others
were more mundane. Scientists began accumulating evidence of the effect of quantities
of alcohol on the nervous system and general physical condition. The myth that
alcohol consumption improved muscular power was exploded. The relationship between
mental psychoses and alcohol was documented, and thus did the condemnation of
alcohol as a poison assume scientific support. Finally, in 1915, whiskey and brandy
were discreetly removed from the list of authoritative medicinal drugs contained
in the United States Pharmacopoeia (Timberlake, 1963: 47). Who
were the people fueling the movement? Largely middle class, rural, Anglo-Saxon
and Protestant comprised the temperance movement and they confronted the urban
and industrial communities head-on. "The Anglo-Saxon stock is the best improved,
hardiest and fittest.... [I]f we are to preserve this nation and the Anglo-Saxon
type we must abolish [saloons]," proclaimed one temperance publication (Gusfield,
1963: 100). Calling itself "The Protestant church in action" (Sinclair,
1962: 108), the Anti-Saloon League concentrated single-mindedly and evangelically
on the cause of temperance and refrained from dabbling in other reforms (Gusfield,
1963: 108). Nevertheless,
the Episcopal and Lutheran churches never aligned themselves with the AntiSaloon
League, while Jewish and Catholic groups generally opposed their objective. The
conviction shared by Anti-Saloon Leaguers expressed by Reverend Francis Ascott
McBride was: "The League was born of God" (Lee, 1963: 35). Thus one
had to be for or against the movement; there was no half-way commitment. When
the sides were lined up initially, industrialists and union leaders alike preferred
to keep God on their side. From the company's point of view, the saloon was often
responsible for industrial injuries and absenteeism. Some believed that the drinking
man demanded higher wages than his sober counterparts. Furthermore, union locals
tended to congregate in saloon meeting halls maintained for that purpose and,
it was sometimes suspected, for the plottings of anarchistic conspirators (Furnas,
1968: 310). Accordingly,
it was not long before industry moved from an acquiescent position to an active
role in the temperance movement. Various methods were adopted to encourage sobriety,
including lectures, literature and job preferences for teetotalers. Businessmen
opined that sobriety expanded productivity, increased bank deposits, improved
collections and stimulated the retail trade (Timberlake, 1963: 67-79). At
the same time, the prospect of diverting patronage of the liquor industry to other
products tantalized some industries. Thus the Welch Grape Juice Company advertised: Get
the Welch Habit-It's one that won't get you! (Timberlake, 1963: 77). Opinion
was not unanimous, of course. Businessmen, including bankers, whose interests
were tied to the liquor industry could ill afford to be beneficent toward temperance.
Others, including the DuPonts, Rockefellers, Kresges, and Wanamakers spent freely
to cover the League's annual campaign costs of $2.5 million (Odegard, 1928: 126).
As surely
as liquor was the enemy of the home, it was also proclaimed the enemy of the working
man. "The great sinkhole for the workers' wages is the saloon," wrote
the editors of one League publication, The California Liberator. "When that
abomination is destroyed, labor is freed from its greatest curse" (Odegard,
1928: 53). The logic appealed to the union leadership. According to one official
of the American Federation of Labor: No
force in our country has been as effective in the promotion of temperance among
working people as the organized labor movement. The labor movement has achieved
more for the cause of temperance than all the temperance societies combined ...
(Timberlake, 1963: 83). Since
similar credit has been claimed for the League, the Protestant church, and business
interests, it is difficult to apportion the plaudits. Subsequent events suggest
that the labor interests failed to live up to this claim, however. Notwithstanding
Terrence V. Powerderly's early speech against "the strong right hand of labor
itself . . . that carries with it the rum which drowns reason," his own Knights
of Labor repealed their constitutional provision which denied membership to anyone
connected with the liquor trade (Timberlake, 1963: 85-86). As
the reports of the National Commission on Enforcement of the Prohibition Laws
(known as the "Wickersham Commission") were later to record, it was
particularly the workers who resented the paternal legislation which they believed
was directed at them and their habits (National Commission on Law Observance,
1931: 345). In
addition, there were. those whose livelihoods would be directly affected-indeed,
effaced-by the success of the campaign: brewery workers, bartenders, glass workers,
waiters, and musicians among others. Thus,
even though the Socialist Party resolved in 1908 that "any excessive indulgence
in intoxicating liquors by members of the working class is a serious obstacle
to the triumph of our cause since it impairs the vigor of the fighters in political
and economic struggle" (Timberlake, 1963: 98), the industrial urban centers
of the country continued to harbor and stimulate antagonism towards the temperance
movement. The
identification of the saloon and its offerings with the urban, immigrant working
class further enraged Prohibitionists. As one sociologist observed, "The
saloon appeared as the symbol of a culture which was alien to the ascetic character
of American values . . ." (Gusfield, 1963: 100). Thus, Americanism became
a central issue in the temperance movement. One
temperance spokesman, cited in Barker's "The Saloon Problem," vented
these sentiments: The
influx of foreigners into our urban centers, many of whom have liquor habits [sic],
is a menace to good government. . . . [T] he foreign born population is largely
under the social and political control of the saloon. If the cities keep up their
rapid growth they will soon have the balance of political power in the nation
and become storm centers of political life (Timberlake, 1963: 118).
1913-1933: NATIONAL
PROHIBITION -- PROLOGUE AND FINISH The
distrust of the immigrant population became more pronounced as the economic, political,
and social power of the cities developed. It was given a strong impetus by the
anti-German tremors which shook the country in a mood of anticipation before World
War 1. The United States Brewers Association misread the prevailing temper and
associated itself with the German-American Alliance to oppose the temperance advocates
and defend German kultur in the United States. As
the United States came closer to war, the antipathy which developed against the
Central Powers was directed with equal force against brewers and tipplers (Furnas,
1968: 334-35): Pro-Germanism
is the only froth from the German's beer saloon. Our German Socialist Party and
the German American Alliance are the spawn of the saloon. . . . Prohibition is
the infallible submarine chaser (Sinclair, 1962:122). The
war gave the prohibition cause new ammunition. Literature depicted brewers and
licensed retailers as treacherously stabbing American soldiers in the back. Raw
materials and labor were being diverted from the war effort to an industry which
debilitated the nation's capacity to defend itself. It was urged that wartime
prohibition would stop the waste of grain and molasses and would remove a handicap
on workers' efficiency. "Liquor
is a menace to patriotism because it puts beer before country," preached
Prohibitionist Wayne Wheeler (Odegard, 1928: 72). The fact that names Pabst, Schlitz,
and Blatz broadcast their national origin only did further injury to their interests.
In this
atmosphere the Wartime Prohibition Act was passed in 1918. It followed a series
of federal laws such as the Wilson Original Packages Act and the Webb-Kenyon Act,
attempts to protect dry states from their wet neighbors. The
Wilson Original Packages Act was passed on August 8, 1890, and provided that all
intoxicating beverages shipped interstate would be subject to the laws of the
destination state upon arrival. No mechanism for federal enforcement was provided.
The
Webb-Kenyon Act, enacted March 1, 1913, was intended to reinforce the 1890 Act
by providing that it was a violation of federal law to ship an intoxicating beverage
interstate with the intent that it be used or sold in any manner in violation
of the laws of the destination state. The lack of federal enforcement rendered
the statute virtually meaningless. The
Reed Amendment, enacted four years later, provided a fine of $1,000 for transporting
liquor into a dry state with no greater effect. None
of the earlier acts met with substantial success in curbing the flow of liquor
into purportedly dry regions, but they did mark a change in federal policy. Formerly
liquor laws were designed solely to produce federal revenue; Congress now took
cognizance of the role it could play in the regulation of consumption. The
role was actually forced upon a reluctant Congress at first. Indeed, the government
had passed up numerous prior opportunities to involve itself in the temperance
movement as such. The particular part it was to play was forecast by the Sons
of Temperance who, in 1856, declared themselves for national constitutional prohibition.
Twenty years later, Congressman Henry Blair of New Hampshire introduced a prohibition
amendment to the Constitution for the first time in Congress. As a senator, he
introduced another such resolution in 1885, along with Senator Preston Plum of
Kansas. After consideration by the Senate Committee on Education, the bill was
reported out favorably and placed on the Senate Calendar in 1886. Nevertheless,
no action resulted (Cherrington, 1920: 317 ). In
the meantime, states continued the struggle between the wets and the drys, with
great success for the temperance advocates. By 1913, nine states were under stateside
prohibition. In 31 other states, local option laws were in effect. By reason of
these and other variants of regulatory schemes, more than 50% of the United States
population was then under prohibition. The
national constitutional campaign was resumed as such in 1913 when the Anti-Saloon
League went on record at its 15th National Convention in favor of immediate prosecution
of the objective of constitutional amendment. The
National Temperance Council, founded at the same time, coordinated the activities
of numerous temperance organizations with the same object. In 1913, the demands
of the League were formally presented to Congress by the Committee of 1,000. The
measure was then introduced in the House by Congressman Thompson and in the Senate
by Senator Sheppard. The following year, the first joint resolution failed to
secure the necessary two thirds majority for submitting a constitutional amendment
to the states. A second resolution was submitted in 1915 and favorably considered
by the Judiciary Committees of both houses, but neither ever came to a vote. Ultimately,
in 1917, the resolution to prohibit the manufacture, sale, transportation or importation
of alcoholic beverages in the United States was approved by Congress and sent
to the states for ratification (Cherrington, 1920: 317-330). It
took only one year and eight days for the 18th Amendment to secure the necessary
ratification. On January 8, 1918, Mississippi proudly became the first state to
ratify, and on January 16, 1919, Nebraska completed the job as the 36th state
(Lee, 1963: 42). By the end of February 1919, there remained only three hold-outs:
New Jersey, Connecticut, and Rhode Island (Cherrington, 1920: 330). October 28,
1919, was the day that Congress enacted the National Prohibition Act-more often
known as the Volstead Act-with the intent to give effect to the new constitutional
amendment. Officially, the liquor drought was to begin on January 17, 1920. The
celebrants of the occasion were concentrated in the membership of the Anti-Saloon
League, which could rightly claim that its consummate skill in pressure politics
had maneuvered the country into its dry state. The
early experience of the Prohibition era gave the government a taste of what was
to come. In the three months before the 18th Amendment became effective, liquor
worth half a million dollars was stolen from Government warehouses. By midsummer
of 1920, federal courts in Chicago were overwhelmed with some 600 pending liquor
violation trials (Sinclair, 1962: 176-177). Within three years, 30 prohibition
agents were killed in service. Other
statistics demonstrated the increasing volume of the bootleg trade. In 1921, 95,933
illicit distilleries, stills, still works and fermentors were seized. in 1925,
the total jumped to 172,537 and up to 282,122 in 1930. In connection with these
seizures, 34,175 persons were arrested in 1921; by 1925, the number had risen
to 62,747 and to a high in 1928 of 75,307 (Internal Revenue, Service, 1921, 1966,
1970: 95, 6, 73). Concurrently, convictions for liquor offenses in federal courts
rose from 35,000 in 1923 to 61,383 in 1932. The
law could not quell the continuing demand for alcoholic products. Thus, where
legal enterprises could no longer supply the demand, an illicit traffic developed,
from the point of manufacture to consumption. The institution of the speakeasy
replaced the institution of the saloon. Estimates of the number of speakeasies
throughout the United States ranged from 200,000 to 500,000 (Lee, 1963: 68). Writers
of this period point out that the law was circumvented by various means. Although
there may have been legitimate, medicinal purposes for whiskey, the practice of
obtaining a medical prescription for the illegal substance was abused. It is estimated
that doctors earned $40 million in 1928 by writing prescriptions for whiskey.
The
legal system was equally evasive; the courts convicted about seven percent of
those charged with liquor violations (Sinclair, 1962: 193-195; Dobyns, 1940: 292).
The exception for sacramental wine from protection under the Volstead Act also
invited abuse. In 1925, the Department of Research and Education of the Federal
Council of the Churches of Christ reported that: The
withdrawal of wine on permit from bonded warehouses for sacramental purposes amounted
in round figures to 2,139,000 gallons in the fiscal year 1922; 2,503,500 gallons
in 1923; and 2,944,700 gallons in 1924. There is no way of knowing what the legitimate
consumption of fermented sacramental wine is but it is clear that the legitimate
demand does not increase 800,000 gallons in two years (Dobyns, 1940: 297).
The smuggling trade
was revived with new vigor and new incentives. Rum-runners, often under foreign
flags, brought liquor into the country from Belgium and Holland. In 1923, there
were 134 seizures of such vessels. The following year, 236 were apprehended (History
of the Alcohol . . . 928). With fewer risks, liquor was readily smuggled across
the Canadian border. One way or the other, the Department of Commerce estimated
that, as of 1924, liquor valued at approximately $40 million was entering the
United States annually (Sinclair, 1962: 198). The
manufacture of "near-beer" and industrial alcohol provided other opportunities
for diversion from licit channels, while the salvage of the California grape industry
was section 29 of the Volstead Act (27 U.S.C. § 46) which authorized the home
production of fermented fruit juices. Although the section was allegedly inserted
to save the vinegar industry and the hard cider of America's farmers, it was welcomed
by home winemakers as well. In the spirit of cooperation, the grape growers even
produced a type of grape jelly suggestively called "Vine-go" which,
with the addition of water, could make a strong wine within two months (Sinclair,
1962: 206). One
of the great ironies of the prohibition era was the fact, noted by the Wickersham
Commission, that women happily took to drink during the experimental decade, and,
what is more, did so in public. As the counterpart of the WCTU, the Women's Organization
for National Prohibition Reform was founded, stating in its declaration of principles
that Prohibition was "wrong in principle" and "disastrous in
consequences in the hypocrisy, the corruption, the tragic loss of life and the
appalling increase of crime which has attended the abortive attempt to enforce
it" (Dobyns, 1940: 107). Drinking
at an earlier age was also noted, particularly during the first few years of Prohibition.
The superintendents of eight state mental hospitals reported a larger percentage
of young patients during Prohibition (1919-1926) than formerly. One of the hospitals
noted: "During the past year (1926), an unusually large group of patients
who are of high school age were admitted for alcoholic psychosis" (Brown,
1932:176). In
determining the age at which an alcoholic forms his drinking habit, it was noted:
"The 1920-1923 group were younger than the other groups when the drink habit
was formed" (Pollock, 1942: 113). AVERAGE
AGE AT FORMATION OF DRINK HABIT
| Period | Males | Females
| | 1914 | 21.4 | 27.9 |
| 1920-23 | 20.6 | 25.8 |
| 1936-37 | 23.9 | 31.7 |
To be sure,
the Volstead Act was enforced in the United States wherever it had popular support.
In the rural South and West prohibition was effective and in some cases still
is. The failures of prohibition enforcement were spotlighted in the big cities
where the law was flagrantly defied and in the smaller towns, populated by miners
and industrial workers, where the law was simply ignored (National Commission
on Law Observance, 1931: 345). Notwithstanding
the weak enforcement of the Volstead Act, some believe that it was only the coming
of the Depression with its demand for increased employment and tax revenues which
finally killed the experiment (Gusfield, 1963: 127). Others observe that Prohibition
was a by-product of the stress and excesses of war and could not have survived
in peacetime even under optimal economic conditions (Sinclair, 1962: 23-24). Finally,
there are those who accuse the selfishly motivated businessmen of the United States
for repeal which they allegedly brought about through the same high-pressure tactics
so successfully employed by the partisans of temperance in the preceding decades
(Dobyns, 1940: 5-130 passim). Despite
mixed motivations, the repeal movement was financed and driven by the Association
Against the Prohibition Amendment (AAPA). The
members declared that "the principal business and objective of the Association
shall be to educate its members as to the fundamental provisions, objects and
purposes of the Constitution of the United States" (Dobyns, 1940: 5). They
worked for the election of Congressmen who agreed to submit the question of repeal
to a vote of the people in each state. They were successful fund-raisers and by
January 1, 1931, had almost $3 million in cash in the bank (Dobyns, 1940: 9).
The
sources of the funds included a number of converts from the dry cause. In 1928,
the DuPont family abandoned the drys, followed in 1932 by John D. Rockefeller
and S. S. Kresge (Gusfield, 1963: 128). Their conversion was effected under the
strong influence of the income tax. Doggedly, Pierre S. DuPont circulated a brochure
concluding that "the British liquor policy applied in the United States would
permit the total abolition of the income tax both personal and corporate"
(Dobyns, 1940: 22). Concern
for the effects of the prohibition laws was not limited to the private, wealthy
sector. In 1928, a dry-wet confrontation emerged in the presidential election
between Alfred E. Smith, a Catholic New Yorker, and Herbert Hoover. Hoover solemnly
praised the "great social and economic experiment" and tightened his
grip on the dry vote. Notwithstanding
the popular image of Smith as a staunch wet, his platform tried to avoid any outright
repeal sentiment. He asked instead for an amendment of the Volstead Act which
would provide a "scientific definition of the alcoholic content of an intoxicating
beverage." This would enable each state to interpret and apply the federal
standard within its borders. In addition, he favored what was to be known as the
"state store" system of manufacturing and dispensing alcoholic beverages
(Lee, 1963: 212). In
retrospect, it is difficult to ascertain whether it was the religious campaign
or the dry campaign which defeated Al Smith. H. L. Mencken may have written accurately
that "if [Al Smith] loses, it will be because those who fear the Pope outnumber
those who are tired of the Anti-Saloon League" ('Sinclair, 1962: 303). Nevertheless,
Prohibition survived the 1928 election, as did Hoover's campaign pledge to establish
a commission to investigate the conditions under Prohibition. Head of the Commission
was George W. Wickersham, former Attorney General under Taft. Although the Commission's
purpose was set forth as an examination of the problems of enforcement, it soon
decided to undertake much broader policy considerations. The
Commission's report, published in 1931, included opinion surveys, statistics on
the number of deaths connected with enforcement efforts, testimony by consultants
and experts, and an analysis of the organization, personnel and methods of prohibition
enforcement. On the basis of the five volume report, the Wickersham Commission
ironically concluded in its summary that:
There
have been more sustained pressures to enforce this law than on the whole has been
true of any other federal statute, although this pressure in the last four or
five years has met with increasing resistance as the sentiment against prohibition
has developed . . . . That a main source of difficulty is in the attitude of at
least a very large number of respectable citizens in most of our large cities
and in several states, is made more clear when the enforcement of the national
prohibition act is compared with the enforcement of the laws as to narcotics.
There is an enormous margin of profit in breaking the latter. The means of detecting
transportation are more easily evaded than in the case of liquor. Yet there are
no difficulties in the case of narcotics beyond those involved in the nature of
the traffic because the laws against them are supported everywhere by a general
and determined public sentiment (Sinclair, 1962: 367-368). Notwithstanding
this dire analysis, 10 out of the 11 commissioners signed a summary of conclusions
of the report which stated that the Commission as a whole opposed the repeal of
the 18th Amendment, the entry of the Federal or state governments into liquor
business, or even the modification of national prohibition to permit the sale
of light wines and beer (Sinclair, 1962: 364). Walter
Lippmann commented, "What was done was to evade a direct and explicit official
confession that Federal prohibition is a hopeless failure" (Sinclair, 1962:
365). Whether or not Lippmann correctly read the Commission's intentions, there
was clearly a gap between the input and the outcome of the report. It
is difficult to assess the relative numbers of the wet and dry partisans during
the last few years of national prohibition. In terms of strength, however, the
wets surely had the edge which less than two decades before had belonged to the
drys. The new wet strength showed up at the National Convention of the Democratic
party held in Chicago in 1932, where Mayor Cermak of that city filled the galleries
with his supporters. And, though Franklin D. Roosevelt had wooed the dry vote
for some time, he now came forward on a platform which favored the outright repeal
of the 18th Amendment. Accepting his nomination, he stated:
I congratulate
this convention for having had the courage, fearlessly to write into its declaration
of principles what an overwhelming majority here assembled really thinks about
the 18th Amendment. This convention wants repeal. Your candidate wants repeal.
And I am confident that the United States of America wants repeal (Dobyns, 1940:
160). While
dry leaders looked on with disgust, Roosevelt was elected president and Congress
turned a somersault. The repeal amendment was introduced February 14, 1933, by
Sen. Blaine of Wisconsin and approved two days later by the Senate 63 to 23. The
House followed four days later, voting 289 to 121 to send the amendment on to
the States (Lee, 1963: 231). It required approval by 36 states. Michigan was the
first state to ratify it; 39 states voted, on the amendment during 1933, with
37 approving its ratification and two-North and South Carolina-voting against
its ratification. The final ratification was accomplished on November 7,1933,
when Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Utah gave their approval. Congress
officially adopted the 21st Amendment to the Constitution on December 5, 1933.
Within
three weeks of taking office, President Roosevelt witnessed the first sales of
3.2 beer, following a redefinition by statute of the terms "intoxicating
liquors." The more popular, higher alcohol-content beer was relegalized by
Congress under the Cullen-Harrison Act. Sale of beer became legal on April 7,
1933, in the District of Columbia and the 20 states where state laws did not prohibit
its sale. During the next four years the remaining states changed their laws to
permit its sale, with Alabama and Kansas in 1937, as the last to join the legal
sale ranks. The
job of total repeal was accomplished with the help of the determined AAPA during
the succeeding year. Their lawyers assisted the states in preparing bills for
conventions and release of various forms of political propaganda, thereby enacting
a serious satire on the 1919 campaign launched by the Anti-Saloon League. Notwithstanding
their high and enduring constitutional principles, on December 31, 1933, with
repeal a reality, the AAPA ceased to exist and sent its files to the Library of
Congress. "Having attained its objective . . . the Association resisted the
temptation to linger on as a 'sentinel of American liberty' '', the New York Times
observed in the organization's obituary (Dobyns, 1940: 132).
PROHIBITION IN
PERSPECTIVE During
13 years, what did Prohibition accomplish? There is no single compilation of Prohibition
statistics which would enable us to determine the degree of success which Prohibition
enjoyed during its lifetime. In
discussing the relative successes and failures of Prohibition, most observers
conclude that the undertaking failed. "Prohibition destroyed the manufacturing
and distributive agencies through which the demand for liquor had been legally
supplied. But the demand remained" (Hu, 1950: 51). In its Report on the
Enforcement of the Prohibition Laws of the United States, the Wickersham Commission
concluded that the country had prohibition in law but not in fact. They reported: There
was general prevalence of drinking in homes, clubs and hotels.... Throughout the
country people of wealth, businessmen and professional men and their families,
and the higher paid workingmen and their families, are drinking in large numbers
in open flouting of the law. And neither Congress nor the states set up adequate
machinery or appropriated sufficient funds for the enforcement of the prohibitory
legislation. Federal and state legislation, as a matter of fact, strove to satisfy
so that, as it was aptly said, the drys had their prohibition law and the wets
had their liquor (Hu, 1950: 52). Although
some view the theory of prohibition as reasonable, it is generally conceded that
the realities of manufacture and distribution make it unworkable, for in one form
or another, alcohol can be easily produced by farmers, high school chemistry students,
and ordinary citizens. Prohibition
has been attempted many times in various parts of the world; except for some Moslem
areas, attempted legislative controls have not proven adequate. In spite of many
sincere and determined efforts, no country in Europe or the Americas has yet succeeded
in eliminating the use of alcohol by society by legislative fiat (H.E.W., 1968:
41). Those
who had been accustomed to using alcoholic beverages sought other sources of supply
"in disregard of the legislative mandate. In the presence of high pecuniary
returns there [was] a strong tendency for supply to meet demand in spite of prohibition"
(Hu, 1950: 51). Consumption.
Although it is impossible to make an accurate determination of the consumption
of alcoholic beverages under Prohibition-since there are no statistics compiled
regarding the output and sale of the outlaw industry-estimates have been made
by those examining the economic results of Prohibition as well as by the Bureau
of Prohibition of the U.S. Department of Justice. The Bureau placed the consumption
of alcoholic beverages at 73,831,172 gallons, or 0.6 gallon per capita in fiscal
year 1930 as contrasted with 166,983,681 gallons or 1.7 gallons per capita in
1914. In
terms of pure alcohol, the Bureau concluded that per capita consumption in 1930
was 35% of the 1914 rate of legal consumption. These estimates have been criticized
as being far too low (Tillitt, 1932: 35). The
figures published by the Department of Commerce in the Statistical Abstract of
the United States reflect a different picture. The average annual per capita consumption
of hard liquor from 1910-1914, inclusive, was 1.46 proof gallons. "This 5-year
period was before the rise of abnormal conditions coincident to the World War
and may be taken as fairly indicative of the normal rate of drinking that prevailed
in the Pre-Prohibition era" (Rosenbloom, 1935: 51). The
per capita rate for the Prohibition years is computed to be 1.63 proof gallons.
This is 11.64% higher than the Pre-Prohibition rate (Tillitt, 1932: 35). Based
on these figures one observer concluded: "And so the drinking which was,
in theory, to have been decreased to the vanishing point by Prohibition has, in
fact, increased" (Tillitt, 1932: 36). Others
disagree with the implications of these unverified statistics noting that persons
of limited means, formerly unable to patronize the expensive speakeasies, once
again had cheap access to alcohol following repeal and thereby increased consumption
(Harrison & Laine, 1936: 1). Popular
opinion is equally inconclusive; a survey conducted by the American Institute
of Public Opinion in 1936 asked whether conditions (drinking customs, consumption,
etc.) were better worse or without significant change since Repeal 36% indicated
a worsening and 31% could see no appreciable change (Harrison & Laine, 1936:
2). Perhaps indicative of a gradual process of adjustment, however, the results
of later Gallup polls suggest a gradual decline in the use of alcohol. Of a national
sample, 67% indicated they used alcohol in 1945, in contrast to 60% in 1950 and
55% in 1958 (Gusfield, 1963: 135). Alcoholic
Psychoses. There was a notable decrease in alcoholic psychoses and in deaths due
to alcoholism immediately preceding the enactment of Prohibition and a gradual
increase in alcoholic psychosis and in deaths from alcoholism in the general population
since 1920. "These
facts appear to indicate that since 1920, Prohibition [was] increasingly impotent
as a means of preventing excessive use of alcohol to an extent productive of serious
mental disorders and untimely death. 1920 marks the end of the decline and the
beginning of the rise in the trends of alcoholic mental diseases and of deaths
from alcoholism in the general population" (Brown, 1932: 88). The
increase in mental disorders and deaths from alcoholism after 1920, however, also
coincides with the heavy consumption period-early 1900's-which would have resulted
in an increase in alcoholism some years later. The following table
reflects the decrease prior to 1920 and the subsequent gradual increase in percentage
of alcoholic psychosis among new admissions to 56 hospitals in 25 states as well
as among admissions to New York civil state hospitals (Brown, 1932: 76-77; Malzburg,
1949: 294) : 56
Hospitals
| Year | All
new admissions | New
admissions with alcoholic psychoses | NY
State - civil hospital percent admission with alcoholic psychoses. |
| | | Number | Percent | |
| 1910
| 17,439 | 1,486 | 8.5 | ...
| | 1911 | 17,299 | 1,366 | 7.9 |
| | 1912 | 17,570 | 1,567 | 8.9 | ...
| | 1913 | 17,525 | 1,633 | 9.3 | 9.3
| | 1914 | 19,134 | 1,573 | 8.2 | 7.4
| | 1915 | 18,875 | 1,331 | 7.1 | 5.7
| | 1916 | 17,929 | 1,370 | 7.6 | 6.1
| | 1917 | 20,041 | 1,576 | 7.9 | 8.2
| | 1918 | 19,741 | 1,021 | 5.2 | 5.2
| | 1919 | 19,737 | 841 | 4.3 | 4.1
| | 1920 | 19,579 | 485 | 2.5 | 2.0
| | 1921 | 20,368 | 567 | 2.8 | 2.8
| | 1922 | 20,741 | 798 | 3.8 | 3.2
| | 1923 | 20,316 | 861 | 4.2 | 4.0
| | 1924 | 19,818 | 896 | 4.9 | 5.4
| | 1925 | 20,857 | 1,017 | 4.
9 | 5.8
| | 1926 | 20,911 | 997 | 4.8 | 5.9
| | 1927 | 21,982 | 1,268 | 5.8 | 7.0
| | 1928 | 23,293 | 1,257 | 5.4 | 6.0
| | 1929 | 23,242 | 1,380 | 5.9 | 6.2
| | 1930 | 24,100 | 1,251 | 5.2 | 6.0
|
Deaths
from Alcoholism. In New York City, from 1900 through 1909, there was an average
of 526 deaths annually attributable to alcoholism. From 1910 through 1917, the
average number was 619. It plummeted to 183 for the years 1918 through 1922. Thereafter,
the figure rose, averaging a new high of 639 for the years 1923 through 1927 (Rice,
ed., 1930: 122). Total
deaths from alcoholism in the United States show a comparable trend, with the
gradual increase resuming somewhat earlier, about 1922 (Brown, 1932: 61, 77; Feldman,
1927: 397; U.S. Department of Commerce, 1924: 55).
| Year | Deaths
from all causes rate per 100,000 | Deaths
from alcoholism rate per 100,000 | | 1910 | 1,496.1 | 5.4 |
| 1911 | 1,418.1 | 4.9 |
| 1912 | 1,388.8 | 5.3 |
| 1913 | 1,409.6 | 5.9 |
| 1914 | 1,364.6 | 4.9 |
| 1915 | 1,355.0 | 4.4 |
| 1916 | 1,404.3 | 5.8 |
| 1917 | 1,425.5 | 5.2 |
| 1918 | 1,809.1 | 2.7 |
| 1919 | 1,287.4 | 1.6 |
| 1920 | 1,306.0 | 1.0 |
| 1921 | 1,163.9 | 1.8 |
| 1922 | 1,181.7 | 2.6 |
| 1923 | 1,230.1 | 3.2 |
| 1924 | 1,183.5 | 3.2 |
| 1925 | 1,182.3 | 3.6 |
| 1926 | 1,222.7 | 3.9 |
| 1927 | 1,141.9 | 4.0 |
| 1928 | 1,204.1 | 4.0 |
| 1929 | 1,192.3 | 3.7 |
The highest
death rates from alcoholism occurred during the decade prior to Prohibition as
did the highest death rates from cirrhosis of the liver. These statistics should
be qualified by the observations of Dr. Charles Morris, Chief Medical Examiner
for New York City: In making out death certificates (which are basic to Census
Reports) private or family physicians commonly avoid entry of alcoholism as a
cause of death whenever possible. This practice was more prevalent under the National
Dry Law than it was in preprohibition time" (Tillitt, 1932: 114-115). Even
if reliable, per se, such statistics may be unrelated to the consumption of alcoholic
beverages in any given year. Another writer of this period noted: "The relation
of fatal alcoholic diseases to consumption of alcohol must be one extending over
a long period of years and the actual duration of the critical period can hardly
be estimated" (Jellinek, 1942: 48-1). According to one sociologist, rates
of alcoholism and related mental and physical diseases reflect past drinking habits,
developed ten to 15 years earlier (Gusfield, 1963: 119). A
shorter "lead time" is suggested by a mental hygiene statistician who
attributes the temporary reduction in alcoholic psychoses "to the legal restriction
of the sale and use of alcoholic beverages, made effective by the support of public
opinion which during the war period had discountenanced self-indulgence, of all
sorts" (Brown, 1932: 88). He adds, however, that the notable increase in
alcoholic psychoses and deaths from alcoholism towards the end of the prohibition
era (1927-1932) indicated that: ...
since 1920, prohibition has become increasingly impotent as a means of preventing
excessive use of alcohol to an extent productive of serious mental disorders and
untimely deaths (Brown, 1932: 88). The
highly limited statistical label of death from alcoholism has been noted elsewhere: The
trend of death from alcoholism reflects hardly anything else than progress in
the treatment of the so-called diseases of chronic alcoholism. Nevertheless, statistics
of death from alcoholism have been used by both Drys and Wets to prove that Prohibition
or repeal has greatly improved the rate of death from alcoholism. . . . Death
from alcoholism is simply not an index of the prevalence of inebriety. Death from
alcoholism could fall to zero in response to medical progress, while at the same
time the rate of inebriety might rise many fold (Jellinek, 1947: 39). Arrests
Arrests for drunkenness also provide a source of information about the extent
of drinking in the United States. It must be noted, however, that statistics of
this sort vary with local police policies. For example, during a six-year period
in the 1930's, the arrests for drunkenness were from 14 to 31 times higher in
Philadelphia than in New York (Kolb, 1941: 608). Nevertheless,
gross statistics drawn from 383 cities indicate that arrests for drunkenness per
10,000 population reached a high of 192 in 1916 and fell to 71 in 1920. From this
level, they rose steadily again to reach 157 in 1928 (Warburton, 1932: 102). Of
course, arrests prior to Prohibition may not bear the same relation to the use
of alcohol as they did subsequently, Warburton theorizes: .
. . [U]nder Prohibition, especially during the early years, police were more strict
in making arrests, and . . . a larger proportion than formerly of persons appearing
on the streets under the influence of liquor are arrested. Also, since the sale
of liquor is illegal and cannot be obtained in public saloons, and when the police
are more strict in arresting intoxicated persons, it is reasonable to suppose
that drinking is less public and that fewer drunken persons appear on the streets
relative to the quantity of liquor consumed (Warburton, 1932: 103). Nevertheless,
the cyclical trend suggested by these figures coincides with statistics on alcoholism
(Brown, 1932: 61, 71, 77). Whatever their independent validity, however, they
correlate earth the theory of one author that: [T]
he 18th Amendment could not have been passed without the support of the psychologically
tolerant, made temporarily intolerant by the stress of war. But when the moderates
deserted the drys in the time of peace, the hard core of the movement was revealed
(Sinclair, 1962: 23--24). Without
the support of the moderates, the author theorizes, Prohibition was to become
itself a symbol of excess, unsupported by the vast majority of the population.
Outcome.
What, then, did Prohibition accomplish? To a great extent it eliminated the saloon
from American life. While bars and taverns reopened joyfully following repeal,
they ceased to be the centers of systematic political corruption and debauchery
which they had once been. Part of this may be attributable to the greater sophistication
of the electorate and politics generally. Part, no doubt, is owing to the fact
that women were welcome as customers in the new cocktail lounges, having shown
themselves to be eager patrons of the speakeasies. And
finally, the change in the character of the saloon was effected by public determination
that it should be changed. This attitude was expressed in the post-repeal statutes
concerned with the physical appearance of the saloon and the character of persons
authorized to operate them. Prohibition
did make the nation conscious that corruption of the law and of the populace may
be the consequence of a law which is not reflective of the morals and mores of
the time. It played out some of the deepest social class resentments, culminating
in the realization that the behavioral standards of some could not be impressed
upon others. It demonstrated that the fervor of war and the cult of patriotism
may be abused-and abuse the country in return. Repeal
reimposed the burden of regulation upon the states. They were required to develop
a system of control directed at the particular objectives they wished to achieve.
The post-repeal era was to prove an exercise not only in states' rights but in
states' responsibilities. 1933-1971:
AFTER THE DELUGE On
December 4, 1933, the day before final ratification of the repeal amendment, the
President established the Federal Alcohol Control Administration, pursuant to
Executive Order No. 6474. FACA was to have the power to grant or revoke permits
to engage in the alcoholic beverage industry-not the brewing industry-as well
as the power to control plant capacity and production; it was also to engage in
consumer protection through regulations designed to prevent misbranding and false
advertising of alcoholic beverages. In addition, FACA prohibited the ownership
of retail outlets by manufacturers and wholesalers (Harrison & Laine, 1936:
24-29). This
scheme fell under the Schecter Poultry decision by the Supreme Court. The Treasury,
Federal Trade, Commission and Food and Drug Administration then moved in. A new
alcohol control agency was proposed, leading to a dispute as to whether it should
be independent or part of the Treasury. Joseph H. Choate, Jr.,
first head of the FACA, testified that: The
Treasury has not been an organization whose duty it was to study and understand
the liquor business, the interest of the public in that business, or the method
by which that business ought to be carried on in order to subserve the interests
of both the public and state governments. It has been a creature of one idea,
that one idea being, quite properly, to get revenue and get it as fast and as
copiously as it could (Harrison & Laine, 1936: 33). The
Department of the Treasury agreed with Choate's analysis. Nevertheless,
this testimony was disregarded and the Federal Alcohol Administration was created
as a division of Treasury in 1935. This arrangement was superseded in 1936 when
the Liquor Tax Administration Act established FACA as an independent agency of
the government. Soon thereafter it was reorganized, once again as an arm of the
Department of Treasury, and even its separate identity was abolished as of June
30, 1940. Today, the Treasury retains full authority to administer all federal
liquor laws. The
current federal laws regulating trade in intoxicating beverages may be classified
in the following categories: (1)
Revenue: Taxes are imposed on rectifiers, brewers, manufacturers of stills, dealers;
wholesale and retail stamps are required on distilled spirits (26 USC, 1971a).
(2)
Criminal Penalties: Criminal penalties are provided for unauthorized production,
sale or possession, transportation into states prohibiting sale, C.O.D. shipments
and unlabeled shipments (26 USC, 1971b; 18 USC, 1971). (3)
Interstate Transportation: Interstate shipments of alcoholic beverages are subject
to the laws of the receiving state (27 USC, 1971a). (4)
Permits: Importers, manufacturers and sellers of intoxicating beverages must have
permits (27 USC, 1971b). (5)
Unfair Practices: Exclusive sales arrangements, tying, bribery and false advertising
or labeling are prohibited (27 USC, 1971b). The
intent of the Federal Government to reserve all decisions regarding regulation
of consumption is quite clear from federal statutes presently in force. The states
have reacted with a variety of regulatory schemes controlling to varying degrees
the seller, the buyer, the place, time and opportunity for sale and, through revenue
measures, the cost. In
18 states, the state store or state monopoly system has entirely displaced the
private wholesale or retail sale of intoxicating beverages. Other states permit
the sale of liquor, wine and beer through private, licensed outlets. The
license system may be implemented by different, means. Administration may be solely
by the state, or control may be shared by the counties or municipalities. Local
control may be exercised to a greater or lesser degree. For example, in the 1930's,
immediately after repeal, Massachusetts and New Mexico permitted local boards
to grant retail licenses only after investigation and approval of applicants by
the state board. During the same period, other states, predominantly in the South,
gave local authorities supplemental powers to issue licenses while requiring concurrent
state licenses as well. In
some jurisdictions, the local license had to be obtained first, and the state
license could be granted thereafter. In Illinois, however, the state commission's
power was curtailed by requiring that a state license be granted once the local
license was secured. And although the state was given the power to revoke its
license, it was given no power to inspect places of sale to determine grounds
for revocation (Harrison & Laine, 1936: 50-53). The
license system has been suspect by many wets as well as drys because of the opportunities
it may afford for political abuse. On the ther hand, there is substantial opinion
which holds direct participation in the sale of liquor in contempt. As to the
relative efficacy of each, there are no reliable means of making a judgment. Each
apparently depends on the integrity and capacity of the individuals charged with
the job of enforcement and oversight. Superimposed
on the basic system of regulating the sale of liquor are other sumptuary laws
which are directed at the purchaser. Sales are not permitted to minors or intoxicated
persons. Credit is often prohibited on liquor sales as well. Criminal penalties
may be imposed for driving under the influence of alcohol as well as for drunken
behavior. The
sale of liquor by the drink is permitted in most states, but some still require
that it be sold in packaged form only, reflecting the continuing fear of the resurrection
of the saloon. In many states Sunday closing laws are enforced, and mandatory
closing times are imposed upon bars and package stores alike. Sales are prohibited
almost uniformly on Election Day, at least during polling hours, and, in many
places, on Thanksgiving, Memorial Day, Christmas and other holidays. Local option
is still granted in most states, in voting units ranging from the plantation to
the city or county. Of the monopoly or control states, only Utah and Wyoming fail
to make provision for local option at all. Wyoming maintains a state monopoly
at the wholesale level only. Private retailer sellers are licensed. In
the remaining monopoly states, it is often possible for towns within a wet county
to go dry, and sometimes vice versa. Of the 33 license states, only 10 (including
the District of Columbia) do not permit local option at any level. Notwithstanding
the various patterns of regulation, Senator Arthur Capper's words of the 1930's
still seem to be correct:
We can
repeal prohibition, but we cannot repeal the liquor problem (Peterson, 1969: 126). Neither
the states nor the population have yet come to grips with the problems of alcoholism
and alcohol abuse. Both the monopoly system and the license system are directed
at other concerns. They, no more than Prohibition, have been able to control or
even alleviate the very real and dire consequences of alcohol use by society. top
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