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Temperance movement in the United Kingdom

The temperance movement in the United Kingdom was a social movement that campaigned against the recreational use and sale of alcohol, and promoted total abstinence (teetotalism). In the 19th century, high levels of alcohol consumption and drunkenness were seen by social reformers as a danger to society's wellbeing, leading to social issues such as poverty, child neglect, immorality and economic decline. Temperance societies began to be formed in the 1830s to campaign against alcohol. Specific groups were created over periods of time dedicated to the different aspects of drinking. For example, in 1847, the Band of Hope was created to persuade children not to start drinking alcohol. Most of these temperance groups were aimed at the working class. Temperance was also supported by some religious groups, particularly the Nonconformist Churches. Although the temperance movement met with local success in parts of Britain, it failed to impose national prohibition, and disappeared as a significant force following the Second World War.

Origins

 
Gin Lane by William Hogarth, 1751

Before the 19th century, there were diatribes published against drunkenness and excess, but total abstinence from alcohol was very rarely advocated or practised. In the 18th century, there was a "gin craze" in Great Britain, as satirised in William Hogarth's Gin Lane.[1] The bourgeoisie became increasingly critical of the widespread drunkenness among the lower classes. Motivated by the bourgeoisie's desire for order, and amplified by the population growth in the cities, the drinking of gin became the subject of critical national debate.[2] In 1743, John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist Churches, proclaimed "that buying, selling, and drinking of liquor, unless absolutely necessary, were evils to be avoided".[3]

Early movement

The early temperance movement was inspired by the actions of Irish Presbyterian Church minister John Edgar, who poured his stock of whiskey out of his window in 1829. On 14 August 1829 he wrote a letter in the Belfast Telegraph advocating temperance. Edgar and other early advocates concentrated their efforts on the elimination of spirits rather than wine and beer.[4][5]: 141–144  The first organisation that promoted temperance was founded in 1829 by John Dunlop and his aunt, Lilias Graham of Gairbraid,[6] and named the Glasgow and West of Scotland Temperance Society.[7]

Joseph Livesey was another British temperance advocate who financed his philanthropic work with the profits attained from cheese production, following an introduction to the food product by a doctor he had consulted with regards to a serious ailment in 1816.[8] Livesey opened the first temperance hotel in 1833 and the next year founded the first temperance magazine, The Preston Temperance Advocate (1834–37).[5]: 146  The British Association for the Promotion of Temperance was established by 1835.[4]: 132 

As a response to rising social problems in the newly-industrialised cities, a stricter form of temperance emerged called teetotalism, which promoted the complete abstinence from alcoholic beverages, this time including wine and beer, not just ardent spirits. The term teetotal is apocryphally said to derive from a speech by Richard "Dickie" Turner, a follower of Livesey, in Preston in 1833.[9]

In 1838, the mass working class movement for universal suffrage, Chartism, included a current called "temperance chartism". Faced with the refusal of the parliament of the time to give the right to vote to working people, the temperance chartists saw the campaign against alcohol as a way of proving to the elites that working-class people were responsible enough to be granted the vote.[10][11] In short, the 1830s was mostly characterised by moral persuasion of workers.[12]: 25 

 
Band of Hope Banner located in the village of Constantine in Cornwall supporting temperance

In 1847, the Band of Hope was founded in Leeds, with the stated aim of saving working class children from the perils of drink. It promoted alcohol education. Band members had to pledge to abstain "from all liquors of an intoxicating quality, whether ale, porter, wine or ardent spirits, except as medicine"[13]: 99 

In 1853, inspired by the Maine liquor law in the US, the United Kingdom Alliance was formed with the aim of promoting a similar law prohibiting the sale of alcohol in the UK. This hard-line group of prohibitionists was opposed by other temperance organisations who preferred moral persuasion to a legal ban. This division in the ranks limited the effectiveness of the temperance movement as a whole. The impotence of legislation in this field was demonstrated when the Sale of Beer Act 1854 which restricted Sunday opening hours had to be repealed, following widespread rioting. In 1859 a prototype prohibition bill was overwhelmingly defeated in the House of Commons.[13]: 99–100 

Temperance clubs and institutes came into being, one of the largest in the UK, formed in 1864 and still in use, was Wisbech Working Men's Club and Institute, Isle of Ely. One of its trustees was the banker and Quaker Baron Peckover, Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire.[14]

The US-based (but international) Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) was founded in 1873,[15] becoming one of the largest women's societies in the world in the 19th century, campaigning for temperance and women's suffrage.[16]: 1  In 1876 the British Women's Temperance Association was formed by women to persuade men to stop drinking, rebranded in 2006 as the White Ribbon Association.[17]

One of the most active advocates of temperance was Dr. Norman Shanks Kerr. He promoted the treatment of inebriates and held that inebriety was a disease, not a vice, and that it should be treated accordingly. In 1884, in response to the inadequacy of the Habitual Drunkards Act of 1879, he founded the Society for the Study and Cure of Inebriety and was the first president.[18]: 135  The society still exists as the Society for the Study of Addiction.

In 1884 the National Temperance Federation, which was associated with the Liberal Party, was founded as an umbrella organisation. The Conservative Party largely supported the interests of the alcohol industry and opposed temperance.[19]

Religious support

 
Methodist Temperance Magazine, a Wesleyan Methodist publication in Cardiff

The various Nonconformist Churches actively encouraged total abstinence among their congregations, and lobbied parliament to restrict alcohol sales. By the 1870s most young ministers abstained from alcohol. In 1886 a survey of 1,900 Baptist ministers revealed that 1,000 were total abstainers.[19]

In the 19th century, the Methodist Churches were aligned with the temperance movement.[20] Methodists believed that despite the supposed economic benefits of liquor traffic such as job creation and taxes, the harm that it caused society through its contribution to murder, gambling, prostitution, and political corruption outweighed its economic benefits.[21]: 7  Both Wesleyan Methodists and Primitive Methodists championed the cause of temperance.[22] The Wesleyan Methodists built around 100 'Central Halls', large venues which hosted cheap concerts, comedy shows and films, intended to keep the urban working classes away from public houses.[23]

In 1864, another Methodist group, the Salvation Army was founded in London with a heavy emphasis on abstinence from alcohol and ministering to the working class, which led publicans to fund a Skeleton Army in order to disrupt their meetings. The Salvation Army quickly spread internationally, maintaining an emphasis on abstinence.[24][18]: 542 

In Wales Lady Llanover, motivated by Calvinistic Methodist teachings, was an outspoken critic of the evils of alcohol and closed all the public houses on her estate.[25]

Many Quakers (members of the Religious Society of Friends) took an active role in the temperance movement. Chocolatier John Cadbury was a temperance Quaker and he viewed drinking chocolate as an alternative to alcoholic beverages.[26] He prohibited the sale of alcohol in Bournville, the model village he founded, and no public houses have been built there.[27]

The Church of England Temperance Society, which had roots in the Anglo-Catholic tradition was founded in 1862 by Henry Ellison,[28][29] and its volunteers within the court system would lead to the first probation service. The League of the Cross was founded in 1873 by Cardinal Manning. A Roman Catholic-only organisation, the League's members took a pledge of total abstinence.[30]

From 1880 to 1882 the cause of abstinence was revived by the Gospel Temperance or Blue Ribbon movement, based in America. They sent a member named Richard Booth to promote their cause in England through mass meetings held up and down the country.[5]: 153–4 

Later movement and decline

 
Temperance fountain at the end of Blackfriars Bridge, London. Temperance fountains were installed to encourage people not to drink beer by the provision of safe and free water.

By the end of the 19th century, it was estimated that about a tenth of the adult population were total abstainers of alcohol.[19][31]

The temperance movement received an unexpected boost due to state intervention when the Liberal government passed the Defence of the Realm Act in 1914 at the beginning of the First World War. According to the provisions of the Act, pub hours were licensed, beer was watered down and was subject to a penny a pint extra tax.[13]: 106  This situation was maintained by the subsequent establishment of the State Management Scheme in 1916 which nationalised breweries and pubs in certain areas of Britain where armaments manufacture was taking place.[32]

At the same time, there were temperance organisations connected to the labour movement. An example would be the Scottish Prohibition Party, founded in 1901 by a communist temperance activist called Bob Stewart, who followed the British Labour Party on all other issues. It went on to defeat Winston Churchill in Dundee in the 1922 general election.[33] There was a Marxist offshoot called the Prohibition and Reform Party, which later became part of the Communist Party of Great Britain in 1920.[34]

Between the wars, American exponents of the sterling example set to Britain by National Prohibition, such as William "Pussyfoot" Johnson and Mary Harris Armor, toured the country, to be met with derision, and in Johnson's case, violence.[5]: 171–3  In the end, the example of the failure of prohibition in America put paid to any remote chance that the temperance lobby would succeed in achieving its aims in the UK.[13]: 107 

Legacy

The former Manchester City F.C. football stadium Maine Road took its name from a street that had been renamed Maine Road (from Dog Kennel Lane) by members of the temperance movement. They selected the name as a result of the 1853 Maine law.[35]

Vimto, originally "Vim Tonic", was concocted in 1908 as a healthy alternative to alcohol, and originally sold in temperance bars.[36] Fitzpatrick's Herbal Health in Rawtenstall, Lancashire, is thought to be the oldest surviving temperance bar – other such establishments have become popular in recent times.[37][38]

Several of the largest temperance organisations survive under different names. For example, the Band of Hope is now named Hope UK, with the stated aim of "providing drug and alcohol education and training for children and young people, parents and youth workers".[39]

See also

References

  1. ^ Sooke, Alastair. "Hogarth's London: Gin Lane and Beer Street". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  2. ^ Yeomans, Henry (2014). Alcohol and Moral Regulation: Public Attitudes, Spirited Measures and Victorian Hangovers. Policy Press. p. 37. ISBN 9781447309932.
  3. ^ Williams, William Henry (1984). The Garden of American Methodism: The Delmarva Peninsula, 1769-1820. Peninsula Conference of the United Methodist Church. p. 151. ISBN 9780842022279.
  4. ^ a b Harrison, Brian (1971). Drink & the Victorians, The Temperance Question in England 1815–1872. Faber and Faber.
  5. ^ a b c d Peter, Fryer (1965). Mrs. Grundy: Studies in English Prudery. Corgi Books.
  6. ^ "The Glasgow Herald [November 19, 1929]". Archived from the original on 31 March 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  7. ^ Schrad, Mark Lawrence (2010). The Political Power of Bad Ideas: Networks, Institutions, and the Global Prohibition Wave. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-19974-235-6.
  8. ^ . www.waltonledale.co.uk. Walton le Dale. 2000–2012. Archived from the original on 9 March 2012. Retrieved 11 June 2012.
  9. ^ "teetotal". Oxford Dictionaries. Oxford University Press. 2012. Retrieved 11 June 2012.[dead link]
  10. ^ Harrison, Brian (1973). "Teetotal Chartism". History. 58 (193): 193–217. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.1973.tb01282.x. ISSN 0018-2648. JSTOR 24408553. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  11. ^ "To the working men of Great Britain". Chartist Circular. 19 December 1840. p. 1. Retrieved 2 December 2017.
  12. ^ Edman, Johan (September 2015). "Temperance and Modernity: Alcohol Consumption as a Collective Problem, 1885–1913". Journal of Social History. 49 (1): 20–52. doi:10.1093/jsh/shv029.
  13. ^ a b c d Brownlee, Nick (2002). This is Alcohol. London: Sanctuary Publishing. ISBN 978-186074-422-8.
  14. ^ Gardiner, FJ (1898). History of Wisbech and Neighborhood, during the last fifty years - 1848-1898. Gardiner & Co. p. 220.
  15. ^ Keating, Joseph (1913). "Temperance Movements" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  16. ^ Osborne, Lori (12 September 2015). Frances Willard and the Historic Link Between the 19th Century Women's Temperance and Suffrage Movements. National Archives in Washington.
  17. ^ "Our History". White Ribbon Association. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  18. ^ a b Blocker, Jack S.; David, M. Fahey; Tyrrell, Ian R., eds. (2003). Alcohol and Temperance in Modern History: An International Encyclopedia. p. 542.
  19. ^ a b c . Spartacus Educational. Spartacus Educational Publishers Ltd. Archived from the original on 20 May 2012. Retrieved 9 June 2012.
  20. ^ Vickers, John A. (ed.). "Temperance". A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  21. ^ Timberlake, James H. (1963). Prohibition and the Progressive Movement 1900-1920. London: Harvard University Press.
  22. ^ Wheeler, Henry (1882). Methodism and the Temperance Reformation. Walden and Stowe. p. 278.
  23. ^ Moore, Keith (30 August 2012). "What happened to the Methodist central halls?". BBC News.
  24. ^ Hare, Chris (1988). "The Skeleton Army and the Bonfire Boys, Worthing, 1884". Folklore. 99 (2): 221–231. doi:10.1080/0015587X.1988.9716444. JSTOR 1260460.
  25. ^ "Wales alcohol restrictions: Temperance's long history". BBC News. 4 December 2020. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  26. ^ Wilkes, Aaron; Ball, James (2009). KS3 History by Aaron Wilkes: Industry, Reform & Empire Student Book (1750-1900). Folens Limited. p. 99. ISBN 978-1-85008-346-7.
  27. ^ Meller, Helen (1997). Towns, Plans and Society in Modern Britain. Cambridge University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-521-57644-4. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  28. ^ Sherlock, Frederick (1910). Henry John Ellison: Founder of the Church of England Temperance Society.
  29. ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Temperance Movements" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  30. ^ Dingle, A. E.; Harrison, B. H. (1969). "Cardinal Manning as Temperance Reformer". The Historical Journal. 12 (3): 485–510. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00007251. S2CID 159977906.
  31. ^ Mcallister, Annemarie (2016) "Temperance Periodicals". In: The Routledge Handbook to Nineteenth-Century British Periodicals and Newspapers (PDF). Routledge. 2016. ISBN 978-1-4094-6888-2. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  32. ^ Duncan, Robert (2010). "Lord D'Abernon's "Model Farm": The Central Control Board's Carlisle Experiment". Social History of Alcohol & Drugs. 24 (2): 119–140. doi:10.1086/SHAD24020119. S2CID 158837534.
  33. ^ Walker, William M. (1973). "The Scottish Prohibition Party and the Millennium". International Review of Social History. 18 (3): 353–79. doi:10.1017/S0020859000004375.
  34. ^ Simkin, John (1997). "Prohibition and Reform Party". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  35. ^ James, Gary (2009). The Big Book of City. James Ward. ISBN 978-0-9558127-2-9.
  36. ^ Maconie, Stuart (10 September 2015). The Pie at Night: Nights Out in the North. Penguin Random House. p. 337. ISBN 978-0-09-193381-4.
  37. ^ Anson, John (12 March 2007). "Rawtenstall: Fitzpatrick's Temperance Bar". Newsquest (North West) Ltd. Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 16 May 2018.
  38. ^ Eby, Margaret (19 July 2019). "The rise of the sober bar". BBC. Retrieved 21 August 2019. In the late 19th Century, a number of alcohol-free bars known as temperance bars were established in the UK on the heels of the temperance movement, which advocated abstinence. Fitzpatrick's Temperance Bar, founded in 1890 in Rawtenstall, north of Manchester, is still slinging root beer and glasses of dandelion and burdock today. (...) The audience isn't just non-drinkers but anyone who wants a fun bar environment without the threat of a hangover the next day.
  39. ^ "Welcome to HOPE UK". Hope UK. 21 February 2017. Retrieved 24 April 2021.

External links

  • Drink and the Victorians: a history of the British Temperance Movement (ca. 1200 items) is housed in the Department of Special Collections and University Archives 4 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine at Stanford University Libraries
  • Temperance Town, a suburb in Cardiff, Wales, where alcohol was banned
  • See more images from temperance movement in United Kingdom by selecting the "Alcohol" subject at the Persuasive Cartography, The PJ Mode Collection, Cornell University Library

temperance, movement, united, kingdom, temperance, movement, united, kingdom, social, movement, that, campaigned, against, recreational, sale, alcohol, promoted, total, abstinence, teetotalism, 19th, century, high, levels, alcohol, consumption, drunkenness, we. The temperance movement in the United Kingdom was a social movement that campaigned against the recreational use and sale of alcohol and promoted total abstinence teetotalism In the 19th century high levels of alcohol consumption and drunkenness were seen by social reformers as a danger to society s wellbeing leading to social issues such as poverty child neglect immorality and economic decline Temperance societies began to be formed in the 1830s to campaign against alcohol Specific groups were created over periods of time dedicated to the different aspects of drinking For example in 1847 the Band of Hope was created to persuade children not to start drinking alcohol Most of these temperance groups were aimed at the working class Temperance was also supported by some religious groups particularly the Nonconformist Churches Although the temperance movement met with local success in parts of Britain it failed to impose national prohibition and disappeared as a significant force following the Second World War Contents 1 Origins 2 Early movement 3 Religious support 4 Later movement and decline 5 Legacy 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOrigins Edit Gin Lane by William Hogarth 1751 Before the 19th century there were diatribes published against drunkenness and excess but total abstinence from alcohol was very rarely advocated or practised In the 18th century there was a gin craze in Great Britain as satirised in William Hogarth s Gin Lane 1 The bourgeoisie became increasingly critical of the widespread drunkenness among the lower classes Motivated by the bourgeoisie s desire for order and amplified by the population growth in the cities the drinking of gin became the subject of critical national debate 2 In 1743 John Wesley the founder of the Methodist Churches proclaimed that buying selling and drinking of liquor unless absolutely necessary were evils to be avoided 3 Early movement EditThe early temperance movement was inspired by the actions of Irish Presbyterian Church minister John Edgar who poured his stock of whiskey out of his window in 1829 On 14 August 1829 he wrote a letter in the Belfast Telegraph advocating temperance Edgar and other early advocates concentrated their efforts on the elimination of spirits rather than wine and beer 4 5 141 144 The first organisation that promoted temperance was founded in 1829 by John Dunlop and his aunt Lilias Graham of Gairbraid 6 and named the Glasgow and West of Scotland Temperance Society 7 Joseph Livesey was another British temperance advocate who financed his philanthropic work with the profits attained from cheese production following an introduction to the food product by a doctor he had consulted with regards to a serious ailment in 1816 8 Livesey opened the first temperance hotel in 1833 and the next year founded the first temperance magazine The Preston Temperance Advocate 1834 37 5 146 The British Association for the Promotion of Temperance was established by 1835 4 132 As a response to rising social problems in the newly industrialised cities a stricter form of temperance emerged called teetotalism which promoted the complete abstinence from alcoholic beverages this time including wine and beer not just ardent spirits The term teetotal is apocryphally said to derive from a speech by Richard Dickie Turner a follower of Livesey in Preston in 1833 9 In 1838 the mass working class movement for universal suffrage Chartism included a current called temperance chartism Faced with the refusal of the parliament of the time to give the right to vote to working people the temperance chartists saw the campaign against alcohol as a way of proving to the elites that working class people were responsible enough to be granted the vote 10 11 In short the 1830s was mostly characterised by moral persuasion of workers 12 25 Band of Hope Banner located in the village of Constantine in Cornwall supporting temperance In 1847 the Band of Hope was founded in Leeds with the stated aim of saving working class children from the perils of drink It promoted alcohol education Band members had to pledge to abstain from all liquors of an intoxicating quality whether ale porter wine or ardent spirits except as medicine 13 99 In 1853 inspired by the Maine liquor law in the US the United Kingdom Alliance was formed with the aim of promoting a similar law prohibiting the sale of alcohol in the UK This hard line group of prohibitionists was opposed by other temperance organisations who preferred moral persuasion to a legal ban This division in the ranks limited the effectiveness of the temperance movement as a whole The impotence of legislation in this field was demonstrated when the Sale of Beer Act 1854 which restricted Sunday opening hours had to be repealed following widespread rioting In 1859 a prototype prohibition bill was overwhelmingly defeated in the House of Commons 13 99 100 Temperance clubs and institutes came into being one of the largest in the UK formed in 1864 and still in use was Wisbech Working Men s Club and Institute Isle of Ely One of its trustees was the banker and Quaker Baron Peckover Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire 14 The US based but international Woman s Christian Temperance Union WCTU was founded in 1873 15 becoming one of the largest women s societies in the world in the 19th century campaigning for temperance and women s suffrage 16 1 In 1876 the British Women s Temperance Association was formed by women to persuade men to stop drinking rebranded in 2006 as the White Ribbon Association 17 One of the most active advocates of temperance was Dr Norman Shanks Kerr He promoted the treatment of inebriates and held that inebriety was a disease not a vice and that it should be treated accordingly In 1884 in response to the inadequacy of the Habitual Drunkards Act of 1879 he founded the Society for the Study and Cure of Inebriety and was the first president 18 135 The society still exists as the Society for the Study of Addiction In 1884 the National Temperance Federation which was associated with the Liberal Party was founded as an umbrella organisation The Conservative Party largely supported the interests of the alcohol industry and opposed temperance 19 Religious support EditSee also Christian views on alcohol Methodist Temperance Magazine a Wesleyan Methodist publication in Cardiff The various Nonconformist Churches actively encouraged total abstinence among their congregations and lobbied parliament to restrict alcohol sales By the 1870s most young ministers abstained from alcohol In 1886 a survey of 1 900 Baptist ministers revealed that 1 000 were total abstainers 19 In the 19th century the Methodist Churches were aligned with the temperance movement 20 Methodists believed that despite the supposed economic benefits of liquor traffic such as job creation and taxes the harm that it caused society through its contribution to murder gambling prostitution and political corruption outweighed its economic benefits 21 7 Both Wesleyan Methodists and Primitive Methodists championed the cause of temperance 22 The Wesleyan Methodists built around 100 Central Halls large venues which hosted cheap concerts comedy shows and films intended to keep the urban working classes away from public houses 23 In 1864 another Methodist group the Salvation Army was founded in London with a heavy emphasis on abstinence from alcohol and ministering to the working class which led publicans to fund a Skeleton Army in order to disrupt their meetings The Salvation Army quickly spread internationally maintaining an emphasis on abstinence 24 18 542 In Wales Lady Llanover motivated by Calvinistic Methodist teachings was an outspoken critic of the evils of alcohol and closed all the public houses on her estate 25 Many Quakers members of the Religious Society of Friends took an active role in the temperance movement Chocolatier John Cadbury was a temperance Quaker and he viewed drinking chocolate as an alternative to alcoholic beverages 26 He prohibited the sale of alcohol in Bournville the model village he founded and no public houses have been built there 27 The Church of England Temperance Society which had roots in the Anglo Catholic tradition was founded in 1862 by Henry Ellison 28 29 and its volunteers within the court system would lead to the first probation service The League of the Cross was founded in 1873 by Cardinal Manning A Roman Catholic only organisation the League s members took a pledge of total abstinence 30 From 1880 to 1882 the cause of abstinence was revived by the Gospel Temperance or Blue Ribbon movement based in America They sent a member named Richard Booth to promote their cause in England through mass meetings held up and down the country 5 153 4 Later movement and decline Edit Temperance fountain at the end of Blackfriars Bridge London Temperance fountains were installed to encourage people not to drink beer by the provision of safe and free water By the end of the 19th century it was estimated that about a tenth of the adult population were total abstainers of alcohol 19 31 The temperance movement received an unexpected boost due to state intervention when the Liberal government passed the Defence of the Realm Act in 1914 at the beginning of the First World War According to the provisions of the Act pub hours were licensed beer was watered down and was subject to a penny a pint extra tax 13 106 This situation was maintained by the subsequent establishment of the State Management Scheme in 1916 which nationalised breweries and pubs in certain areas of Britain where armaments manufacture was taking place 32 At the same time there were temperance organisations connected to the labour movement An example would be the Scottish Prohibition Party founded in 1901 by a communist temperance activist called Bob Stewart who followed the British Labour Party on all other issues It went on to defeat Winston Churchill in Dundee in the 1922 general election 33 There was a Marxist offshoot called the Prohibition and Reform Party which later became part of the Communist Party of Great Britain in 1920 34 Between the wars American exponents of the sterling example set to Britain by National Prohibition such as William Pussyfoot Johnson and Mary Harris Armor toured the country to be met with derision and in Johnson s case violence 5 171 3 In the end the example of the failure of prohibition in America put paid to any remote chance that the temperance lobby would succeed in achieving its aims in the UK 13 107 Legacy EditThe former Manchester City F C football stadium Maine Road took its name from a street that had been renamed Maine Road from Dog Kennel Lane by members of the temperance movement They selected the name as a result of the 1853 Maine law 35 Vimto originally Vim Tonic was concocted in 1908 as a healthy alternative to alcohol and originally sold in temperance bars 36 Fitzpatrick s Herbal Health in Rawtenstall Lancashire is thought to be the oldest surviving temperance bar other such establishments have become popular in recent times 37 38 Several of the largest temperance organisations survive under different names For example the Band of Hope is now named Hope UK with the stated aim of providing drug and alcohol education and training for children and young people parents and youth workers 39 See also Edit United Kingdom portalList of Temperance organizations Rothwell Temperance Band Alcohol and health Harriet A GlazebrookReferences Edit Sooke Alastair Hogarth s London Gin Lane and Beer Street www bbc com Retrieved 24 April 2021 Yeomans Henry 2014 Alcohol and Moral Regulation Public Attitudes Spirited Measures and Victorian Hangovers Policy Press p 37 ISBN 9781447309932 Williams William Henry 1984 The Garden of American Methodism The Delmarva Peninsula 1769 1820 Peninsula Conference of the United Methodist Church p 151 ISBN 9780842022279 a b Harrison Brian 1971 Drink amp the Victorians The Temperance Question in England 1815 1872 Faber and Faber a b c d Peter Fryer 1965 Mrs Grundy Studies in English Prudery Corgi Books The Glasgow Herald November 19 1929 Archived from the original on 31 March 2017 Retrieved 31 March 2017 Schrad Mark Lawrence 2010 The Political Power of Bad Ideas Networks Institutions and the Global Prohibition Wave Oxford University Press USA p 35 ISBN 978 0 19974 235 6 Joseph Livesey the Walton weaver www waltonledale co uk Walton le Dale 2000 2012 Archived from the original on 9 March 2012 Retrieved 11 June 2012 teetotal Oxford Dictionaries Oxford University Press 2012 Retrieved 11 June 2012 dead link Harrison Brian 1973 Teetotal Chartism History 58 193 193 217 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1973 tb01282 x ISSN 0018 2648 JSTOR 24408553 Retrieved 24 April 2021 To the working men of Great Britain Chartist Circular 19 December 1840 p 1 Retrieved 2 December 2017 Edman Johan September 2015 Temperance and Modernity Alcohol Consumption as a Collective Problem 1885 1913 Journal of Social History 49 1 20 52 doi 10 1093 jsh shv029 a b c d Brownlee Nick 2002 This is Alcohol London Sanctuary Publishing ISBN 978 186074 422 8 Gardiner FJ 1898 History of Wisbech and Neighborhood during the last fifty years 1848 1898 Gardiner amp Co p 220 Keating Joseph 1913 Temperance Movements In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Osborne Lori 12 September 2015 Frances Willard and the Historic Link Between the 19th Century Women s Temperance and Suffrage Movements National Archives in Washington Our History White Ribbon Association Retrieved 24 April 2021 a b Blocker Jack S David M Fahey Tyrrell Ian R eds 2003 Alcohol and Temperance in Modern History An International Encyclopedia p 542 a b c Temperance Society Spartacus Educational Spartacus Educational Publishers Ltd Archived from the original on 20 May 2012 Retrieved 9 June 2012 Vickers John A ed Temperance A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland Retrieved 24 April 2021 Timberlake James H 1963 Prohibition and the Progressive Movement 1900 1920 London Harvard University Press Wheeler Henry 1882 Methodism and the Temperance Reformation Walden and Stowe p 278 Moore Keith 30 August 2012 What happened to the Methodist central halls BBC News Hare Chris 1988 The Skeleton Army and the Bonfire Boys Worthing 1884 Folklore 99 2 221 231 doi 10 1080 0015587X 1988 9716444 JSTOR 1260460 Wales alcohol restrictions Temperance s long history BBC News 4 December 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2021 Wilkes Aaron Ball James 2009 KS3 History by Aaron Wilkes Industry Reform amp Empire Student Book 1750 1900 Folens Limited p 99 ISBN 978 1 85008 346 7 Meller Helen 1997 Towns Plans and Society in Modern Britain Cambridge University Press p 20 ISBN 978 0 521 57644 4 Retrieved 24 April 2021 Sherlock Frederick 1910 Henry John Ellison Founder of the Church of England Temperance Society Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Temperance Movements Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Dingle A E Harrison B H 1969 Cardinal Manning as Temperance Reformer The Historical Journal 12 3 485 510 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00007251 S2CID 159977906 Mcallister Annemarie 2016 Temperance Periodicals In The Routledge Handbook to Nineteenth Century British Periodicals and Newspapers PDF Routledge 2016 ISBN 978 1 4094 6888 2 Retrieved 24 April 2021 Duncan Robert 2010 Lord D Abernon s Model Farm The Central Control Board s Carlisle Experiment Social History of Alcohol amp Drugs 24 2 119 140 doi 10 1086 SHAD24020119 S2CID 158837534 Walker William M 1973 The Scottish Prohibition Party and the Millennium International Review of Social History 18 3 353 79 doi 10 1017 S0020859000004375 Simkin John 1997 Prohibition and Reform Party Spartacus Educational Retrieved 24 April 2021 James Gary 2009 The Big Book of City James Ward ISBN 978 0 9558127 2 9 Maconie Stuart 10 September 2015 The Pie at Night Nights Out in the North Penguin Random House p 337 ISBN 978 0 09 193381 4 Anson John 12 March 2007 Rawtenstall Fitzpatrick s Temperance Bar Newsquest North West Ltd Lancashire Telegraph Retrieved 16 May 2018 Eby Margaret 19 July 2019 The rise of the sober bar BBC Retrieved 21 August 2019 In the late 19th Century a number of alcohol free bars known as temperance bars were established in the UK on the heels of the temperance movement which advocated abstinence Fitzpatrick s Temperance Bar founded in 1890 in Rawtenstall north of Manchester is still slinging root beer and glasses of dandelion and burdock today The audience isn t just non drinkers but anyone who wants a fun bar environment without the threat of a hangover the next day Welcome to HOPE UK Hope UK 21 February 2017 Retrieved 24 April 2021 External links EditDrink and the Victorians a history of the British Temperance Movement ca 1200 items is housed in the Department of Special Collections and University Archives Archived 4 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine at Stanford University Libraries Temperance Town a suburb in Cardiff Wales where alcohol was banned See more images from temperance movement in United Kingdom by selecting the Alcohol subject at the Persuasive Cartography The PJ Mode Collection Cornell University Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Temperance movement in the United Kingdom amp oldid 1144115590 Religious support, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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