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Can prohibition be progressive? As pubs reopen, spare a thought for the teetotal social justice warriors of old

Two men sampling a bottle Château Margaux 1848 (Photo by © Andrew Lichtenstein/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)

Two men sampling a bottle Château Margaux 1848 (Photo by © Andrew Lichtenstein/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)


April 12, 2021   6 mins

When Friedrich Engels, the original champagne socialist, was asked his definition of happiness, he replied: “Château Margaux 1848”. Pubs reopen today; and while a bottle of Château Margaux 1848 might be hard to come by, there’s something fitting about the fact that social drinking, as part of the first significant expansion of lockdown freedom, remains closely associated with greater happiness.

Similarly, when we think of historical opposition to the public consumption of alcohol, temperance and prohibition inevitably come to mind — the very opposite of happiness. The people behind these movements, we assume, were rural, reactionary busybodies who hated fun. They were also probably racist. And they definitely had no sense of humour. They were people you wouldn’t want to have a drink with because they wouldn’t want to have a drink with anyone.

Richard Hoftstadter, the influential American mid-twentieth century historian, eloquently expands this characterisation. “Prohibition,” he wrote, was “a pinched, parochial substitute for reform which had a widespread appeal to a certain type of crusading mind”. He describes this “crusading mind” as “linked not merely to an aversion to drunkenness and to the evils that accompanied it, but to the immigrant drinking masses, to the pleasures and amenities of city life, and to the well-to-do classes and cultivated men.” It was a “rural-evangelical virus”, spread around America by “the country Protestant”.

You can picture these people with fine precision: the ideological ancestors of Pat Robertson and every other Christian fundamentalist crank. This viewpoint, however, is a myth. An excellent myth which appeals to our contemporary intuitions about religion and secularism, freedom and authority. But a myth, nevertheless.

The “crusading mind” that characterised the temperance movement was underpinned not by reactionary impulses, but by the principles of social justice. As Mark Lawrence Schrad puts it in his utterly fascinating new book, Smashing the Liquor Machine, “Prohibitionism wasn’t moralising ‘thou shalt nots’, but a progressive shield for marginalised, suffering, and oppressed peoples to defend themselves from further exploitation”.

Consider, for instance, someone like Carrie Nation. Born in Kentucky and raised in Missouri, she became infamous for going into taverns and smashing their windows with a hatchet. She has been described as a Bible-thumping Amazon. Some historians blame her strange behaviour on menopause and sexual frustration. If you search for her name on Google Images, the first picture that comes up shows her holding a hatchet on her gloved right hand and an open Bible on her left. She looks absolutely terrifying; Mary Whitehouse decked in black in Midwest America.

But looks, as they say, can be deceiving. As Schrad puts it: “She was not some Bible-thumping, conservative ‘holy crone on a broomstick’, seeking to legislate morality or ‘discipline’ individual behaviour”. Rather, she was a “populist progressive” who viewed alcoholism as a social evil that, among other things, endangered women.

In Kansas City, she built a women’s shelter. And when she retired, she built an institution called “Hatchet Hall”, which Schrad describes as “part rest home for the impoverished elderly, part safe haven for women fleeing abusive husbands, and part homeschool for their children”.

Crucially, she didn’t view the “drinker as a sinner”, but as a victim, like “prostitutes” or “slaves”. The sinner was the person selling the drink. The same is true of other prohibitionists: they made clear that their objection was not against the person drinking, who they saw as a victim, but the liquor traffic that exploited them. Some people today would say they had a saviour complex.

Nation was also anti-racist. She donated “her lecture proceeds to the black African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church. And when she did speak at churches that denied blacks, she demanded that all be admitted entry. If that made racists uncomfortable, well, then they could leave”. Indeed, the relationship between temperance, women’s rights, and black civil rights was a close one. Most abolitionists, suffragists, and civil rights leaders in the nineteenth century supported prohibition.

William Lloyd Garrison, editor of the influential abolitionist newspaper The Liberator, was also a staunch prohibitionist. In a letter he wrote in 1830, he states his principles clearly: that because “all men are born equal, and endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights,” it means:

“That intemperance is a filthy habit and an awful scourge, wholly produced by the moderate, occasional and fashionable use of alcoholic liquors—consequently, that it is sinful to distil, to import, to sell, to drink, or to offer such liquors to our friends or laborers, and that entire abstinence is the duty of every individual.”

Women’s rights leaders like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were also prohibitionists, and formed together the New York State Temperance Society. There they proclaimed it was the duty of women “to speak out against the liquor traffic and all men and institutions that in any way sanction, sustain, or countenance it”. At the women’s rights convention organised by Anthony and Stanton in 1866, Frances Harper, whom Schrad describes as “the most prolific and bestselling black poet and author of the nineteenth century”, spoke. Like “most abolitionist suffragists”, she was also a “proponent of temperance”.

Or consider the more recent example of Walter Rauschenbusch. He was a Baptist minister during the Progressive era — the early decades of twentieth century America — who espoused Social Gospel: a form of Christianity utterly dedicated to fighting against social injustice and exploitation. Rauschenbusch saw the liquor industry as a source of these evils, and was cited by Martin Luther King as a key influence.

So why is he overlooked in accounts of prohibitionism? As Schrad puts it: “Walter Rauschenbusch upsets all of our two-dimensional stereotypes of evangelical Christianity. He was compassionate, not commanding; cosmopolitan, not conservative; socialist, not reactionary”. As a result, “the most influential evangelical of his day almost never appears in traditional prohibition histories”.

Nor was the temperance movement limited to America. To strengthen his point that the movement was progressive, rather than reactionary, Schrad widens his analysis by examining prohibitionism around the world. He points out social democrats like Belgian Emile Vandervelde and Swedish Hjalmar Branting espoused it; Tolstoy and Gandhi, advocates of non-violent resistance and opponents of social injustice, also promoted it.

Even Lenin, perhaps the most consequential Leftist of the twentieth century, subscribed to temperance; he viewed Vodka as a tool used by the authorities to stupify and subjugate the masses. (Lenin was also opposed to free love, which he considered a bourgeois rather than proletarian demand. He thought sex had a “social interest, which gives rise to a duty towards the community”. Shame he was also a mass-murdering tyrant.)

Closer to home, there was also a temperance movement in Britain and Ireland. Henry Vincent, an influential leader of the Chartists, wanted to connect the Chartist movement with the Temperance Society. Meanwhile, nineteenth-century Ireland, under the influence of the Irish priest Thebold Mathew, had a greater proportion of people who followed temperance than anywhere else in the British isles. (Yes, you can read that last sentence again.) As Schrad writes, when mass immigration to the States happened in the wake of the Irish famine, “the Irish Paddy fresh off the boat was statistically more likely to be a teetotaler than the heavy-drinking white, nativist evangelicals in the American heartland”.

Frederick Douglass, the iconic abolitionist leader, was particularly inspired by his friendship with Father Mathew. In a lecture Douglass delivered in Cork, he said: “Seven years ago I was ranked among the beasts and creeping things; to-night I am here held as a man and a brother”. He added: “If I can but forget the position in which I once was, I can turn my attention to teetotalism, and shall be able to speak as a man for a few moments”.

The dignity conferred on him by a teetoller is the same dignity as being a free man — the implication being that slavery and drunkenness are fundamentally akin. Both are ways through which we exploit our fellow man. Douglass emphasised this connection between drunkenness and slavery by stating: “If we could but make the world sober, we would have no slavery”. Two days after his speech, Douglass took Father Mathew’s temperance vow.

So why has our understanding of prohibitionism been so distorted? The main reason, I suspect, is because we project contemporary assumptions to the past. Prohibitionism was reactionary because it was led, in our mind, by evangelical Christians — while forgetting or ignoring the fact that the campaign against the slave trade, for instance, was led by evangelical Christians, or that many influential early feminists, like Josephine Butler, were also evangelical Christians.

Yes, abolitionists and early feminists, like the temperance movement, were irritating busybodies. They did often look a bit scary. But they also proudly espoused views — such as the inherent dignity of black people and women — which may seem common sense to us now, but were certainly not back then.

So, strange as it may sound, when we clink our glasses today, let us spare a thought for the temperance movement. Many of the same people involved in that cause were right on fundamental issues. More to the point: the principles that underpinned those correct views were the same principles that animated their prohibitionism. Surely we can all drink to that.


Tomiwa Owolade is a freelance writer and the author of This is Not America, which is out in paperback in May.

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Mike Boosh
Mike Boosh
3 years ago

Whether Reactionary or “progressive” both sjws and prohibitionists are irritating busybodies who feel they have the right to tell other people what to do (and indeed what to say and think). A plague on them all.

Galeti Tavas
Galeti Tavas
3 years ago
Reply to  Mike Boosh

Good Point, same as they said about the opium trade to China, ‘If the Da* mn Ch** ks do not want to buy the stuff, then they do not have to’.

M Spahn
M Spahn
3 years ago
Reply to  Mike Boosh

Exactly, they were the wokescolds of their day and all too familiar.

Marcia McGrail
Marcia McGrail
2 years ago
Reply to  Mike Boosh

You may never need helping to your feet from the swill of your own vomit, or a bulwark from the destabilising influence poor decision making but others of your fellow citizens are more vulnerable. It is such as your pejorative vernacular that makes me hesitant to reach out as a helpmate.

Peter LR
Peter LR
3 years ago

Indeed: I’ll clink my glass of J2O to that too!
Thanks for some rehabilitation of the reputation of evangelical Christians who do suffer some profound misrepresentation. To the campaigns you highlight could also be added prison reform, the creation of schools and hospitals; and in our time foodbanks and drug rehabilitation work.

Last edited 3 years ago by Peter LR
Galeti Tavas
Galeti Tavas
3 years ago
Reply to  Peter LR

The writer did get in his gratuitous barb at “You can picture these people with fine precision: the ideological ancestors of Pat Robertson and every other Christian fundamentalist crank”.

Those people usually did huge good, kept the community healthy and joined up. That this knee jerk attitude exists is mere prejudice, I rather doubt the writer has spent time in the places, and with the people, he is denigrating. I suppose you can say things about that group that would get you canceled if you said such biased things about another. It is always ‘Open Season’ on them.

But then to be fair, the writer did an excellent job of making his excellent point, that Christians have been involved in almost all historical social justice causes, which is why freedoms and social good policies pretty much only came from Western society. And that drug/alcohol harm is the most destructive in the underclasses, where it can be a great evil.

Galeti Tavas
Galeti Tavas
3 years ago
Reply to  Peter LR

The writer did get in his gratuitous barb at “You can picture these people with fine precision: the ideological ancestors of Pat Robertson and every other Christian fundamentalist crank”.

Those people usually did huge good, kept the community healthy and joined up. That this knee j** k attitude exists is mere prej *dice, I rather doubt the writer has spent time in the places, and with the people, he is denigrating. I suppose you can say things about that group that would get you canceled if you said such bia*ed things about another. It is always ‘Open Season’ on them.

But then to be fair, the writer did an excellent job of making his excellent point, that Christians have been involved in almost all historical social justice causes, which is why freedoms and social good policies pretty much only came from Western society. And that drug/alcohol harm is the most destructive in the undercla* ses, where it can be a great evil.

My post got sent for moderation, so I am trying to put in some * to see if it then gets through. (Actually the J**k was I think the problem, their algorithm is kind of flighty)

Eloise Burke
Eloise Burke
3 years ago
Reply to  Peter LR

I need a good definition of “evangelical.” Does the meaning of the word change? Does it have a special meaning church history? Does it have the same meaning generally as it does in this article?

Starry Gordon
Starry Gordon
3 years ago
Reply to  Eloise Burke

In popular parlance these days it seems to refer to right-wing Fundamentalists (but even they are quite a mixed bag).

Tom Watson
Tom Watson
3 years ago
Reply to  Eloise Burke

I believe it means Protestants outside of more mainstream churches, giving a more prominent role than the mainstream (although I’m sure plenty would object to this characterisation) to charismatic preaching and the inerrance of Biblical text (‘fundamentalist’) rather than ritual and solemnity. E.g. Baptists and Pentecostals as opposed to high church Anglicans/Episcopalians in the US. Not sure whether all those movements originally considered ‘dissenting’ in the olden days (Quakers/Methodists/Presbyterians/Unitarians etc.) and their descendants would be considered Evangelical, I’m no expert and these days ‘Evangelical’ is usually shorthand for ‘right-wing and socially conservative.’ Many such churches and their members are, but historically they were at the forefront of social reform movements that we now consider progressive (e.g. abolition on both sides of the Atlantic, temperance/prohibition, the Labour party “owing as much to Methodism as to Marxism,” the Sally Army today). I suppose the conservatives among them would argue it’s society that changed, not them!

Marcia McGrail
Marcia McGrail
2 years ago
Reply to  Eloise Burke

You may find that contemporary language [vis a vis words] can mean whatever you want it to mean, whenever you say it and can change it according to your prevailing mood and audience. It doesn’t appear to matter if the hearer has a different interpretation – that’s his/her/it/z/their problem. The dictionary is a dinosaur. Whatever that means.

Marcia McGrail
Marcia McGrail
2 years ago
Reply to  Peter LR

Indeed. Some of the comments remind me about a very famous and wealthy chap who spent his comfortable life railing against such as Mr Boosh’s ‘irritating busybodies’, only to be compassionately cared for by them at the end of his life.

Mark Preston
Mark Preston
3 years ago

I don’t see why one group of individuals think it’s OK to try to tell another group of individuals how to live their lives. Let drinkers drink provided they don’t annoy/harm anyone else.
I write this as an alcoholic who hasn’t had a drink in over 8 years.

Mark H
Mark H
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark Preston

It’s because of the knock-on effect on other people. My father was an alcoholic and I’ve seen the damage done in my family and others.

Mike Boosh
Mike Boosh
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark H

I’ve seen the same damage (alcoholic father in law) so have sympathy, but would argue that one person’s lack of self control doesn’t justify punishing anybody else.

Mark Preston
Mark Preston
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark H

Did you not read the bit where I said “ Let drinkers drink provided they don’t annoy/harm anyone else.”? Or did you not understand it?

Mark H
Mark H
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark Preston

Actually, I missed that.

Galeti Tavas
Galeti Tavas
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark Preston

Mark, the issue is you are one of the modern kind, you forget society used to have ‘Community’, one where individual rights to be antisocial were superseded by what is best for all. Hogarth did the great ‘Gin Lane’ painting to show the depths of destruction your sort of attitude of anything goes wrecks on society which has not the restraint of convention. The inner city ghettos have been made hellish by substance abuse, Crack Cocaine and heroin the ones we all know, Alcohol also.

I lived in the Far North and many communities there have up to 50% babies born with fetal alcohol syndrome.

Again, as I always do in this discussion, say read about the Opium Trade in China, was it OK? Did the right to trade opium exist because as you say ““ Let drinkers drink provided they don’t annoy/harm anyone else.”?” and it was the right of the individual Chinese to decide for themselves?

Modern society has become utterly degenerate, and it is because of your attitude of anything goes if it only destroys you and not others, But this is false, if you allow individuals to destroy themselves it does impact everyone in the greater picture. The problem is degrees. Some social control is vital, and we differ very much at which level that should be at. Personally I see the destruction of marriage as the greatest harm of any in society by a huge margin, and it is from your self based morality that has happened, Porn and sexual freedom being the main tool, welfare being another.

Drahcir Nevarc
Drahcir Nevarc
3 years ago
Reply to  Galeti Tavas

Exceedingly well said.

Dave H
Dave H
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark Preston

provided they don’t annoy/harm anyone else.

That’s the key though isn’t it. Particularly where alcoholism has gone hand in hand with poverty, it’s caused a lot of people a lot of harm. Strict prohibitionism may be overkill, but you can see how the view develops that all booze is evil.
Thankfully we’ve learned that banning it has unintended consequences, but there’s still a case to be made that more support is needed in our communities.
Congrats on your achievement there!

Drahcir Nevarc
Drahcir Nevarc
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark Preston

The trouble is that heavy drinkers often do annoy/harm other people.

Galeti Tavas
Galeti Tavas
3 years ago
Reply to  Drahcir Nevarc

Are you looking at me when you say that? I said… ARE YOU LOOKING AT ME?

Drahcir Nevarc
Drahcir Nevarc
3 years ago
Reply to  Galeti Tavas

I have a heart condition. If you hit me it’s murder.

Tony Taylor
Tony Taylor
3 years ago

The world would be a better place if there was less alcohol, but nor do I agree with prohibition. We just need to be collectively more sensible about the syrup.

Galeti Tavas
Galeti Tavas
3 years ago
Reply to  Tony Taylor

Prohibition exists with alcohol, in age, hours, tax, where it can be consumed, and so on. The thing is what degree is acceptable. I pretty much think it is about right as it is, but am against legalizing of drugs as I know them and they are no good.

William Harvey
William Harvey
3 years ago
Reply to  Tony Taylor

Well said. Alchol and other drugs should be tackled as a personal and community health issue…rather than a draconian legal issue. How’s Nixon’s “War on Drugs” going…yet another defeat for the USA as far as I can see

Pete Kreff
Pete Kreff
3 years ago

A very interesting article, exploring an issue I didn’t know anything about. Thank you.
I only have two points to make.

1) In a letter he wrote in 1830, he states his principles clearly: that because “all men are born equal, and endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights,” it means:

Unfortunately, Garrison’s quoted passage that comes next is a complete non sequitur, in my mind.

2) “If we could but make the world sober, we would have no slavery”.

The admirable Frederick Douglass’s words are also patently untrue, as the Islamic world clearly shows.

Tony Nunn
Tony Nunn
3 years ago

The issue I have with prohibitionists is that they focus entirely on the harm done by the abuse of alcohol by a minority of drinkers while completely ignoring its aesthetic appeal to the majority. Most of us don’t drink for the purpose of intoxication but for the pleasure afforded our taste buds by moderate consumption. Anyone who spends a considerable amount of money on, say, a bottle of vintage port or a 40-year-old single malt is not doing so to get drunk; if that were the intention, a tenner’s worth of supermarket cider would suffice.
Also, as an Anglican for whom the progression from church to pub is second nature, I am not convinced by the Evangelical tendency to regard temperance as a Christian virtue. If our Lord had intended us not to drink, He surely would not have chosen for His first miracle to turn more than 100 gallons of water into wine. Cheers!

Margaret Donaldson
Margaret Donaldson
3 years ago
Reply to  Tony Nunn

Temperance as a Christian virtue simply means not overdoing things and falling into the vice of gluttony that can then connect to anger, lust, sloth, adultery, envy, covetousness and pride. These are the causes of social evils. I’m not a Prohibitionist either but our society has a hypocritical attitude towards alcohol. It knows its evils but encourages its excessive consumption and then complains about the effect. I would venture that far too many people drink too much and it is a minority who just ‘enjoy’ a drink. The sale of alcohol has become far too important for our economy as the lockdown has shown. Thank you, Unherd, for a most interesting article.

Judy Johnson
Judy Johnson
3 years ago

You are right Margaret. Jesus said, ‘don’t be drunk with wine,’ not ‘don’t drink wine.’

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
3 years ago

Ideas so good that they have to be mandatory. What could possibly be more progressive. But it’s a bit of stretch to equate either abolitionists or prohibitionists to today’s wokerati who are intent on fixing problems that have largely been solved.

ralph bell
ralph bell
3 years ago

Thanks for such a timely and informative article to balance the thirst for social drinking. Personally I will be smiling with a pint in hand.

Drahcir Nevarc
Drahcir Nevarc
3 years ago
Reply to  ralph bell

I too will be smiling with a pint in hand, but not until Friday or Saturday. Moderate drinking is far more pleasurable than drunkenness.

Angus J
Angus J
3 years ago

“…we project contemporary assumptions to the past.”
A very common failing, which I refer to as ‘retrospective anachronistic presupposition’. It happens a lot when reading ancient documents such as the Bible.

Marcia McGrail
Marcia McGrail
2 years ago
Reply to  Angus J

I’m suitably impressed. Do you read ancient documents such as the Bible a lot? For work or leisure?

Starry Gordon
Starry Gordon
3 years ago

Lenin and company were pretty much required to wage war by their opponents, competitors, and sometimes even their supposed allies, at least if they wanted to keep breathing. There was not a lot of room in the Russian Empire of 1917-1924 for liberal reformers. And if you want to win a serious war, you probably have to kill a lot of people — ‘mass-murdering’ — and exert authoritarian leadership — ‘tyrant’. I’m severely tempted to engage in some whataboutism here, but I’ll hold off as long as I can.

Drahcir Nevarc
Drahcir Nevarc
3 years ago

Temperance to me denotes moderation rather than abstinence. I regard my standard weekly ten unit consumption as temperate.

Simric Yarrow
Simric Yarrow
3 years ago

It was pretty interesting here in South Africa to be thrown repeatedly into a state of prohibition last year. The black market obviously flourished, and in general it seems that a more standard approach has now prevailed with greater limits on opening hours rather than blanket bans. The rebel in me obviously sought out the local shebeens occasionally that sprang up (I actually drink very little normally so ended up drinking more than usual just for the thrill of it). But the social reformer in me also noted the apparently big drop in figures of weekend admissions to our A&Es. I can see the desire to clamp down but it’s obviously not the right approach long term as plenty have realised before now…

Michael Whittock
Michael Whittock
3 years ago

The drive toward temperance is often inspired by religious revival. For instance the Welsh Revival of 1904-05 reduced convictions for drunkenness by 50%. The preaching of repentance, the assurance of God’s forgiveness through faith in Christ, and the reception of the joy and inner resources given by the Holy Spirit led many to break with alcohol abuse.
Prohibition was not an issue in Jesus’ time. So it’s not surprising that He is recorded as attending social events where wine will certainly have flowed.(Matthew 9.9-13). He also performed the miracle of changing water into wine.(John2.1-11).
There is little in the New Testament about alcohol as such. But there is some teaching on the literal meaning of temperance which is moderation,restraint and self-control. For instance self-control is listed as one of the signs that God is at work in a person’s life who is filled with His Holy Spirit.( Galatians 5.22-23).
Cheers.

Last edited 3 years ago by Michael Whittock
Tom Watson
Tom Watson
3 years ago

“Can prohibition ever be progressive?” Yes. Obviously. It was explicitly conceived of as a progressive measure – what could be more progressive than attempting to reduce vice, unemployment, crime, poor health, poverty and spousal/child abuse by force of legislation against the drug that’s at the root of a huge proportion of them? Hence the prominent role played in it by the early women’s rights movement, evangelical churches and so on.
Unfortunately, just because something’s ‘progressive’ doesn’t mean it’s a good idea.

Marcia McGrail
Marcia McGrail
2 years ago
Reply to  Tom Watson

It’s still a good idea – the fact that each human being reckons their rights trump the greater good and if a few miscreants can’t control themselves, tough – means that alcohol’s minions are grinning from ear to ear.