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Prohibition in Canada

Prohibition in Canada was a ban on alcoholic beverages that arose in various stages, from local municipal bans in the late 19th century (extending to the present in some cases), to provincial bans in the early 20th century, and national prohibition (a temporary wartime measure) from 1918 to 1920. The relatively large and powerful beer and alcohol manufacturing sector, and the huge working class that purchased their products, failed to convince any of the governments to reverse their stance on prohibition.[1] Most provinces repealed their bans in the 1920s, though alcohol was illegal in Prince Edward Island from 1901 to 1948. By comparison, Ontario's temperance act was in effect from 1916 to 1927.[2]

A police raid confiscating illegal alcohol, in Elk Lake, Ontario, in 1925.

As legislation prohibiting the consumption of alcohol was repealed, it was typically replaced with regulation imposing restrictions on the sale of alcohol to minors, and with excise taxes on alcoholic products.

Origins

Temperance movement

Canadians drank heavily during the nineteenth century. The Upper Canadian census of 1851 recorded 1,999 taverns or one to 478 people. Drunkenness, fighting, domestic abuse, and household impoverishment were rampant.[2]

Prohibition was mostly spurred on by the organized crusades against social evil launched by the temperance movement. They targeted drinking establishments, which they viewed as the source of societal ills and misery. Initially, the temperance movement in Canada, which began in the 1820s, was largely concerned with the consumption of strong liquor, while beer, wine, and cider were not considered to be a significant problem. However, by the 1840s, "total abstinence" temperance societies were the norm, and all alcoholic beverages, including those with lighter alcohol content, were considered dangerous.[3] Inspired by the Maine Law of 1851, which saw legal prohibition in the state of Maine, the temperance movement in Canada shifted to the strategy of legal coercion to advance the cause of sobriety.[4]

The main temperance organizations that emerged at the beginning of the prohibition era in Canada were the Dominion Alliance for the Total Suppression of the Liquor Traffic[5] and the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) of Canada.[6] Protestant denominations, including Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians and Congregationalists, generally supported prohibition and campaigned for it beginning in the late 19th century. Prohibition was an important aspect of the Protestant Social Gospel.[7]

The WCTU established itself throughout much of Canada and the United States as one of the largest and most influential contributors to the temperance movement.[8] One way the WCTU attempted to spread the message of temperance was by pressuring provincial governments for temperance instruction in schools.[9] In 1892, under pressure from the WCTU and other temperance organizations, Nova Scotia enacted legislation requiring schools to teach students about the effects of alcohol on the human body.[10] By the end of the 19th century, through the efforts of the WCTU, most provinces had at least some temperance instruction in school.[11] The WCTU also looked outside of the formal school systems to promote temperance ideals to children, and also spread their message to Sunday schools, and youth groups.[12]

The Dominion Alliance was an umbrella organization that "included representatives from most temperance and prohibition societies," including the WCTU.[13] The group lobbied governments at various levels to enact prohibitory laws, and other legislation that advanced the cause of temperance.[13] They submitted a memorial, or a written statement of principles, to the nineteenth session of the Huron Diocese's Anglican Synod in 1876. In it they stated:

"The Council of the Alliance has agreed to the following principles as a basis to which they most respectfully but earnestly call your attention:

"DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLES.

"1. That it is neither right nor politic for the Government to afford legal protection and sanction to any traffic or system that tends to increase crime, to waste the resources of the Dominion, to corrupt the social habits, and to destroy the healths and lives of the people.

"2. That the traffic in intoxicating liquors as common beverages is inimical to the true interests of individuals, and destructive of the order and welfare of society, and ought therefore to be prohibited.

"3. That the history and results of all legislation in regard to the liquor traffic abundantly prove, that it is impossible satisfactorily to limit or regulate a system so essentially mischievous in its tendencies.

"4. That no consideration of private gain or public revenue can justify the upholding of a traffic so thoroughly wrong in principle, so suicidal in policy, and disastrous in its results, as the traffic in intoxicating liquors.

"5. That the Legislative Prohibition of the liquor traffic is perfectly compatible with national liberty, and with the claims of justice and legitimate commerce.

"6. That the Legislative Prohibition of the liquor traffic would be highly conducive to the development of progressive civilization.

"7. That rising above sectarian and party considerations, all good citizens should combine to procure an enactment prohibiting the manufacture and sale of intoxicating beverages, as affording the most efficient aid in removing the appalling evils of intemperance."

"There may be differences of opinion in regard to the foregoing particulars, but the Council assures the Christian Body it has now the honor to approach, that the utmost diligence has been exercised in the examination of evidence on all the subjects embraced therein.

"Deeply convinced of the value of the aid of Christian Ministers and Churches, as such, we solicit your co-operation in the efforts now being made to concentrate the moral and religious energies of the Dominion against the liquor traffic.

"Your memorialists most earnestly hope that your counsels may be wisely directed, and that you will take such action in the premises as may strengthen the hands and encourage the hearts of those who have the direction of the Prohibitory Liquor Law movement."[14]

Legislation

Local option

Some legislative steps toward prohibition were taken in the 19th century. The passage of the Canada Temperance Act of 1864, also called the "Dunkin Act", in the Province of Canada, allowed any county or city to forbid the sale of liquor by majority vote.[15] After Canadian Confederation, local option was extended to the rest of Canada via the Canada Temperance Act of 1878. It was often known as the Scott Act after its sponsor Sir Richard William Scott. It also allowed any county or city to opt in to a prohibitionist scheme if there was a bare majority in a local vote.[16] Under the CTA, the sale of alcohol for sacramental or medicinal usage remained legal.[17]

Local option votes resulted in more than 240 places in Ontario being under local option prohibition by 1912.[18]

The Cardston, Alberta, licence district, which included the town and surrounding countryside, voted in favour of local option prohibition in 1902.[19]

Failed referendum

An official, but non-binding, federal referendum on prohibition was held in 1898. 51 percent voted in favour of prohibition, and 49 percent voted against. Voter turnout was low at 44 percent. Prohibition had a majority in all provinces except Quebec, where a strong 80 percent of the population voted against it. The main factor was religion. Pietistic Protestants, such as Methodists, Presbyterians and Scandinavian Lutherans, were strongly in support. Liturgical or high church Protestants, such as Anglicans and German Lutherans were in opposition; the Catholic population, both French and Irish, strongly opposed. Urban areas were more opposed than rural, but economic wealth made little difference.[20] Despite a prohibition majority, Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier's government chose not to introduce a federal bill on prohibition, because of strong opposition in Quebec, and low voter turnout. As a result, prohibition in Canada would only be enacted through individual sets of laws passed at the provincial level during the first twenty years of the 20th century.

Provincial and federal prohibition

In 1900–1919, one province after another went "dry." In March 1918 the federal government as a war measure made it illegal to manufacture "intoxicating" drinks. Most of the provinces enacted prohibition during the First World War, and opted to extend the ban on alcohol following the end of the war. Between 1878 and 1928 about 75% of Canadian breweries had closed. Notable extremes were Prince Edward Island which implemented prohibition as early as 1901, and Quebec which adopted prohibition in 1919 but quickly repealed it after intense public pressure.[21]

The First World War was an important factor in the success of prohibition efforts in Canada at the beginning of the 20th century. Many believed that prohibition would create a Canadian society worthy of the sacrifices of soldiers overseas. The argument was also raised that prohibition would benefit the war effort since it would prevent waste and inefficiency. Some also considered the barroom a place where "foreigners" congregated and "plotted" against the British Empire, and therefore the war effort.[22] As former opponents of prohibition became silenced, lest they be judged as unpatriotic, provinces began to implement prohibition.

Following the election of 1917 the federal government introduced national prohibition by an Order in Council that became effective on April 1, 1918.[23] It prohibited the importation of alcohol of more than 2.5 percent into Canada, the inter-provincial trade of alcohol, and included a ban on production. The wartime ban expired a year after the conclusion of the war. This was the first and last time that national prohibition on the production, distribution, and consumption of alcohol was enacted in Canada.[24]

First Nations

Indigenous peoples in Canada were subject to prohibitory alcohol laws under the Indian Act of 1876.[25] This was an attempt on the part of the Canadian government to facilitate assimilation, because for an indigenous person to possess alcohol they had to become a Canadian citizen through enfranchisement and to be eligible for enfranchisement indigenous people had to demonstrate sobriety.[25] The laws also reflected a widespread false belief among North Americans, that indigenous peoples were more prone to alcohol dependency, known as the "firewater myth."[26] Sections of the Indian Act regarding liquor were not repealed for over a hundred years, until 1985.[27]

Alcohol production in Ontario

Despite having prohibition from 1916 until 1927 in Ontario, the government allowed for numerous exceptions. Wineries were exempted from closure, and various breweries and distilleries remained open for the export market.[28] In Hamilton, Ontario, Rocco Perri specialized in exporting liquor from old Canadian distilleries, such as Seagram and Gooderham and Worts, to the United States, and helped these companies obtain a large share of the American market.[29] In London, Ontario, Harry Low and his group of rum-runners bought the Carling Brewery, while the Labatt family left the operations to the manager Edmund Burke. The fact that the "export" might be by small boat from Windsor across the river to Detroit only helped the province's economy. Rum-running occurred in other provinces as well.

Repeal

The dates for the repeal of prohibition are often debated. Throughout the prohibition period, Ontario-made wines remained legal in Ontario and some have argued that Ontario never had prohibition. The government allowed the sale of light beer, considered to be non-intoxicating (and generally reviled by drinkers) in 1923, but it did not repeal the legislation creating prohibition until 1927, replacing it with the Liquor Control Act and creating the Liquor Control Board of Ontario to enforce the Act.[30] Although some might argue the light beer amendment of 1923 ended prohibition, there is a general consensus among recent historians that 1927 is the date of repeal.[31] Similar debates can be made across the country. This table should not be taken as definitive, but rather one interpretation of prohibition's end points.

Province/territory Provincial prohibition enacted Repealed
British Columbia 1917 1921
Alberta 1916 1923
Saskatchewan 1915[32] 1925
District of Keewatin 1876[33] 1905
Manitoba 1916 1921
Ontario 1916 1927
Quebec 1919 1919
New Brunswick 1856 1856
1917 1927
Northwest Territories 1874 1891
Nova Scotia 1921 1930
Prince Edward Island 1901 1948
Yukon 1918 1920
Newfoundland (not part of Canada until 1949) 1917 1924

Between the years of 1920–1925 five provinces voted to repeal prohibition. The elimination of alcoholic beverages had made a difference in Canadian society. The Ontario Alliance for the Total Suppression of the Liquor Trade stated in 1922 that the number of convictions for offenses associated with drink had declined from 17,413 in 1914 to 5,413 in 1921, and drunkenness cases had dropped from 16,590 in 1915 to 6,766 in 1921.[34] By the end of prohibition, nearly three quarters of beer breweries had closed.[35] It was only in the second half of the twentieth century that a significant number of new breweries opened again.

After the First World War, opponents of prohibition claimed that too many people were ignoring the law and drinking illegally, and that prohibition contributed to the expansion of organized crime and violence. The new slogans were 'Moderation' and 'Government Regulation.' Moreover, the denominations of Presbyterianism, Methodism, and Congregationalism voted to merge as the United Church of Canada, to create a stronger liberal voice. The possibility of new revenue led several provinces to introduce government control on the sale of alcohol and by the mid-1920s prohibition was fighting a losing battle.[36]

Most provinces repealed their prohibition laws during the 1920s. After the 1924 Ontario prohibition referendum narrowly upheld prohibition under the Ontario Temperance Act (OTA), the Ontario government led by Howard Ferguson permitted the sale of low-alcohol beer. Ferguson's successful re-election platform in 1926 included a repeal of the OTA. Prohibition was ended in 1927 following the election, and the Liquor Control Act (LCA) was passed supplanting the OTA. The Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO) was created to enforce the LCA by "controlling the sale of liquor to the public and the regulation of the places in which people could drink their booze."[37] The Liquor Control Act of 1927 allowed for the sale of alcoholic beverages for individual purchase, but public drinking of full strength alcohol (in pubs, taverns, restaurants, beverage rooms) remained illegal. Subsequently, the Liquor Control Act of 1934 permitted public drinking, but only in hotel beverage rooms where beer was permitted, and dining rooms where beer and wine was permitted with meals.[38]

Since each province had its own laws,[39] any attempt to generalize liquor control legislation distorts the situation. Quebec repealed prohibition in 1919; British Columbia in 1921, and this rolled across the country roughly west to east. Quebec had a more liberal system than most places in North America at the time. They legalized the sale of light beer, cider, and wine in hotels, taverns, cafes, clubs and corner stores in 1919. Two years later, faced with extensive smuggling of hard liquors, the province legalized the sale of spirits in government run stores.

Quebec, a convenient train ride from the eastern seaboard of the United States, became a mecca for thirsty Americans, even inspiring the song "Hello Montreal."[40] British Columbia's new law initially covered only public sale in stores. Public drinking remained illegal until 1925, when "beer by the glass" legislation permitted beer parlours to open in hotels.[41]

Alberta repealed prohibition in 1924, along with Saskatchewan, upon realizing that the laws were enforceable only at great expense. Alberta replaced Prohibition with government-store sales of hard liquor and beer "parlours" selling beer under strict conditions.

Prince Edward Island was the last province to repeal prohibition in 1948.

Despite the lifting of provincial Prohibition laws, it still remained illegal for most types of liquor to be shipped across provincial borders, under the Importation of Intoxicating Liquors Act, into the 21st century. In response, Okanagan MP Dan Albas tabled Bill C-311, which would repeal this restriction and allow the interprovincial distribution of wine (but not beer or spirits). With the promise of potential for increased investment in Canada's wine industry if the restrictions were lifted (owing to wineries finally being able to distribute their product nationally), the bill passed the House with a vote of 287–0 in June 2012. However, the exemption created by the amendment is subject to the laws of the province into which the wine is being shipped. So far, the provinces have responded inconsistently. For example, Ontario and British Columbia have permitted the interprovincial transport of wine on the person (up to one case), but have made no law or policy that allows interprovincial shipment of wine.[42]

Dry communities in Canada

Municipalities in Canada that have prohibited or restricted sale of alcohol within their borders:

Alberta

In 2022 Raymond considered allowing alcohol sales. "In June of 2020, the province removed the last vestiges of the Prohibition Act and when that happened, Raymond went from prohibited community to a community without licence,” said Kurtis Pratt, Raymond’s chief administrative officer.[44]

Manitoba

  • Steinbach did not allow the sale of liquor within city limits until 2011.

Newfoundland and Labrador

Northwest Territories

Nunavut

There are also 12 communities that operate the committee system. In these communities anybody wishing to purchase alcohol must obtain permission, including the quantity, from a locally elected Alcohol Education Committee (AEC), before they are allowed to order from Iqaluit (Baffin communities), Rankin Inlet (Kivalliq communities), or Yellowknife (Kitikmeot communities). These communities are Arctic Bay, Cape Dorset, Chesterfield Inlet, Clyde River, Hall Beach, Igloolik, Kimmirut, Naujaat (Repulse Bay), Pond Inlet, Qikiqtarjuaq, Resolute Bay, and Whale Cove. Seven communities are unrestricted: Baker Lake, Cambridge Bay, Grise Fiord, Iqaluit, Kugluktuk, Rankin Inlet, and Taloyoak.[67][68]

In May 2022 the hamlet of Kugluktuk voted to return to limit on alcohol sales. A total of 287 votes were cast. This was equivalent to 38 percent of eligible voters in the community whose total population is approximately 1,400. Sixty per cent of those voters opted for restrictions, which exceeds the 60-per-cent threshold that was required for change.[69]

Ontario

Quebec

Saskatchewan

  • Govenlock After Montana's prohibition declaration in 1919, large groups of drinkers from that state frequently crossed the border by train to visit Govenlock to purchase booze. Govenlock is now a ghost town since 1976.

Yukon

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Bellamy, Matthew (May 2009). "Beer Wars". Canada's History. Canada's History. from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 24 January 2017. ...they served up a watered-down response to the threat of prohibition.
  2. ^ a b Bellamy, Matthew J. (2009). "The Canadian Brewing Industry's Response to Prohibition, 1874-1920" (PDF). Journal of the Brewery History Society. pp. 2–17. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
  3. ^ Smart, Reginald George; Ogborne, Alan C. (Alan Charles) (1986). Northern spirits: drinking in Canada, then and now. Substance Abuse Librarians and Information Specialists (SALIS). Toronto: Addiction Research Foundation. pp. 19. ISBN 9780888681294.
  4. ^ Craig, Heron (2003). Booze : a distilled history. Toronto, Ont.: Between the Lines. p. 152. ISBN 1896357830. OCLC 54454765.
  5. ^ See The Journal of the Synod of the Church of England in the Diocese of Huron, Nineteenth Session, June 20-22, 1876. pp. 38, 45, 51, 142, 165. The Dominion Alliance formed just prior to the 1876 session
  6. ^ Coombs, Adam James (2011). "Liberty and Community:The Political Ideas of Nineteenth-Century Canadian Temperance Movements". The Graduate History Review. 3 (1).
  7. ^ Allen, Richard (1968). "The Social Gospel and the Reform Tradition in Canada, 1890–1928". The Canadian Historical Review. 49 (4): 387. doi:10.3138/CHR-049-04-03. ISSN 1710-1093. S2CID 154487598.
  8. ^ Sheehan, Nancy M. (1984). "The WCTU and Educational Strategies on the Canadian Prairie". History of Education Quarterly. 24 (1): 101–119. doi:10.2307/367995. JSTOR 367995. S2CID 145405511.
  9. ^ Sheehan, Nancy M. (1984). "National Pressure Groups and Provincial Curriculum Policy: Temperance in Nova Scotia Schools 1880-1930". Canadian Journal of Education. 9 (1): 74. doi:10.2307/1494450. JSTOR 1494450.
  10. ^ Sheehan, Nancy M. (1984). "National Pressure Groups and Provincial Curriculum Policy: Temperance in Nova Scotia Schools 1880-1930". Canadian Journal of Education. 9 (1): 78. doi:10.2307/1494450. JSTOR 1494450.
  11. ^ Sheehan, Nancy M. (1984). "The WCTU and Educational Strategies on the Canadian Prairie". History of Education Quarterly. 24 (1): 103. doi:10.2307/367995. JSTOR 367995. S2CID 145405511.
  12. ^ Sheehan, Nancy M. (1984). "The WCTU and Educational Strategies on the Canadian Prairie". History of Education Quarterly. 24 (1): 113–114. doi:10.2307/367995. JSTOR 367995. S2CID 145405511.
  13. ^ a b Smart, Reginald George; Ogborne, Alan C. (Alan Charles) (1986). Northern spirits : drinking in Canada, then and now. Substance Abuse Librarians and Information Specialists (SALIS). Toronto : Addiction Research Foundation. pp. 22. ISBN 9780888681294.
  14. ^ The Journal of the Synod of the Church of England in the Diocese of Huron, Nineteenth Session, June 20-22, 1876. p. 165, 166
  15. ^ Smart, Reginald George; Ogborne, Alan C. (Alan Charles) (1986). Northern spirits : drinking in Canada, then and now. Substance Abuse Librarians and Information Specialists (SALIS). Toronto : Addiction Research Foundation. pp. 42. ISBN 9780888681294.
  16. ^ Smart, Reginald George; Ogborne, Alan C. (Alan Charles) (1986). Northern spirits : drinking in Canada, then and now. Substance Abuse Librarians and Information Specialists (SALIS). Toronto : Addiction Research Foundation. pp. 44. ISBN 9780888681294.
  17. ^ Boyce, Cyril D. (1923). "Prohibition in Canada". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 109: 225–229. doi:10.1177/000271622310900125. JSTOR 1015012. S2CID 143096730.
  18. ^ Edmonton Bulletin, Nov. 5, 1912
  19. ^ Edmonton Bulletin, January 26, 1907; Lethbridge Herald, February 5, 1908, p. 11
  20. ^ Dostie, Benoit; Dupré, Ruth (2012). ""The people's will": Canadians and the 1898 referendum on alcohol prohibition". Explorations in Economic History. 49 (4): 503–504. doi:10.1016/j.eeh.2012.06.005. ISSN 0014-4983.
  21. ^ Bellamy, Matthew (April 2009). "Beer Wars". The Beaver. 89 (2): 16–23.
  22. ^ Pistula, James M. (2008). For all we have and are: Regina and the experience of the Great War. University of Manitoba Press. pp. 75–76. Retrieved 2018-06-01.
  23. ^ Bumsted, J.M. (2008). The Peoples of Canada: A Post-Confederation History, Third Edition. Oxford: University Press. pp. 218, 219. ISBN 978-0-19-542341-9.
  24. ^ Maquis, Greg (2004). "Brewers and Distillers Paradise: American Views of Canadian Alcohol Policies". Canadian Review of American Studies. 34 (2): 136, 139.
  25. ^ a b Campbell, Robert A. (Winter 2008). "Making Sober Citizens: The Legacy of Indigenous Alcohol Regulation in Canada, 1777–1985". Journal of Canadian Studies. University of Toronto Press. 42 (1): 108. doi:10.3138/jcs.42.1.105. ISSN 1911-0251. S2CID 145221946.
  26. ^ Campbell 2008, p. 106.
  27. ^ Campbell 2008, p. 117.
  28. ^ Prohibition's Hangover -- Ontario's Black Market in Alcohol 2008-07-24 at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ "Rum runners and whisky cargoes: Toronto during Prohibition was anything but dry". thestar.com. 3 May 2015.
  30. ^ Malleck "Niagara wine and the regulatory environment: 1850s-1944" in The World of Niagara Wine, ed. Michael Ripmeester, Phillip Gordon Mackintosh, and Christopher Fullerton (Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2013).
  31. ^ Craig Heron, Booze: A Distilled History (Toronto: Between the Lines Press, 2003); Malleck Try to Control Yourself: The regulation of public drinking in post-prohibition Ontario, 1927-1944 (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2012). The year 1923 is the date set by Gerald Hallowell, in Prohibition in Ontario, 1919-1923 (Toronto: Ontario Historical Society, 1972)
  32. ^ "Saskatchewan Settlement Experience". saskarchives.com. Retrieved 2018-03-13.
  33. ^ "Prohibition". The Daily Free Press. May 31, 1876. p. 1.
  34. ^ J.M. Bumsted, “The Peoples of Canada: A Post-Confederation History, Third Edition, 260
  35. ^ Bellamy, Bellamy (May 2009). . Canada's History. Canada's History Magazine. Archived from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
  36. ^ J.M. Bumsted, “The Peoples of Canada: A Post-Confederation History, Third Edition,” 260.
  37. ^ Malleck, Dan (2012). "Try to control yourself: the regulation of public drinking in post-prohibition Ontario, 1927-44 - Scholars Portal Books". books2.scholarsportal.info. p. 3. Retrieved 2018-06-01.
  38. ^ Dan Malleck, “An Innovation from Across the Line: The American Drinker and Liquor Regulation in Two Ontario Border Communities, 1927-1944.” Journal of Canadian Studies, vol. 41, 1, Winter 2007, 153, 154, 157. Malleck, Try to Control Yourself: The regulation of public drinking in post-prohibition Ontario 1927-1944 (Vancouver and Toronto: UBC Press, 2012)
  39. ^ Bellamy, Matthew J. (2012). "The Canadian Brewing Industry's Response to Prohibition, 1874-1920" (PDF). Brewery History. Journal of the Brewery History Society. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
  40. ^ Craig., Heron (2003). Booze : a distilled history. Toronto, Ont.: Between the Lines. p. 272. ISBN 1896357830. OCLC 54454765.
  41. ^ Robert Campbell, Demon Rum or Easy Money (Ottawa: Carleton University Press, 1991), 50-55; On the creation and management of public drinking in Vancouver, see, Robert Campbell, Sit Down and Drink your Beer: Regulating Vancouver's Beer Parlours, 1925-54 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2001)
  42. ^ . Postmedia News Service. Archived from the original on 10 June 2012. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
  43. ^ "One of Alberta's last dry communities could soon see pours of alcohol". Retrieved 2022-04-04.
  44. ^ Baig, Fakiha (7 April 2022). "Alberta town of Raymond surveys citizens on reversing alcohol ban in restaurants". The Globe and Mail.
  45. ^ . CBC News. February 1, 2008. Archived from the original on Feb 2, 2008. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  46. ^ . CBC News. January 30, 2008. Archived from the original on Jan 31, 2008. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  47. ^ . CBC News. Mar 26, 2010. Archived from the original on Mar 28, 2010. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  48. ^ "Sheshatsiu votes 'no' to alcohol ban". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 2014-02-01.
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  53. ^ Legislation Division, Department of Justice (14 November 2007), Tsiigehtchic Liquor Prohibition Regulations, NWT Reg 035-92, Yellowknife, Northwest Territories: Territorial Printer, retrieved 10 February 2019
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  67. ^ "Liquor enforcement and inspections". Nunavut: Department of Finance. Iqaluit, Nunavut: The Government of Nunavut. Retrieved 10 February 2019.
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  69. ^ "Kugluktuk voters opt for return to restricted alcohol access". 17 May 2022.
  70. ^ Ross, Sara (9 July 2010). . Orillia Packet & Times. Barrie Examiner. Archived from the original on 2014-03-25. Retrieved 2013-06-11.

References

  • Campbell, Robert A. “Profit was just a circumstance: The Evolution of Government Liquor Control in British Columbia, 1920-1988.” Drink in Canada: Historical Essays. Ed. Warsh, Cheryl Krasnick. Montreal, Quebec: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1993. 178–183. Print.
  • Cook, Sharon Anne. (1995) Through Sunshine and Shadow: The Woman's Christian Temperance Union, Evangelicalism, and Reform in Ontario, 1874-1930 (McGill-Queen's Press-MQUP, 1995), in Canada.
  • Cook, Sharon Anne. " 'Sowing Seed for the Master': The Ontario WCTU and Evangelical Feminism 1874-1930." Journal of Canadian studies 30.3 (1995): 175-194.
  • Hallowell, Gerald (1988). "Prohibition in Canada". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Hurtig Publishers. ISBN 0-88830-328-9.
  • Grant, George M. (1898). Principal Grant's letters on prohibition: as they appeared in the Toronto daily "Globe", December, 1897, January, 1898. Grant opposed prohibition.
  • Noel, Jan. (2004). "Temperance Movement" The Oxford Companion to Canadian History. 2004.
  • Warsh, Cheryl Krasnick. (2004). "Prohibition" The Oxford Companion to Canadian History. 2004.
  • Sheehan, Nancy M. "National Pressure Groups and the provincial Curriculum Policy: Temperance in Nova Scotia Schools in 1880–1930," Canadian Journal of Education/Revenue Canadienne de l'éducation, no.1, (1984), p. 73-88
  • Sheehan, Nancy M. "The WCTU and educational strategies on The Canadian Prairie," History of Education Quarterly, Vol.24, No.1, Spring 1984, p101-119 Spring 1984
  • Sheehan, Nancy M. "Temperance, education and the WCTU in Alberta, 1905-1930." Journal of Educational Thought (JET)/Revue de la Pensée Educative 14.2 (1980): 108-124.


prohibition, canada, alcoholic, beverages, that, arose, various, stages, from, local, municipal, bans, late, 19th, century, extending, present, some, cases, provincial, bans, early, 20th, century, national, prohibition, temporary, wartime, measure, from, 1918,. Prohibition in Canada was a ban on alcoholic beverages that arose in various stages from local municipal bans in the late 19th century extending to the present in some cases to provincial bans in the early 20th century and national prohibition a temporary wartime measure from 1918 to 1920 The relatively large and powerful beer and alcohol manufacturing sector and the huge working class that purchased their products failed to convince any of the governments to reverse their stance on prohibition 1 Most provinces repealed their bans in the 1920s though alcohol was illegal in Prince Edward Island from 1901 to 1948 By comparison Ontario s temperance act was in effect from 1916 to 1927 2 A police raid confiscating illegal alcohol in Elk Lake Ontario in 1925 As legislation prohibiting the consumption of alcohol was repealed it was typically replaced with regulation imposing restrictions on the sale of alcohol to minors and with excise taxes on alcoholic products Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Temperance movement 2 Legislation 2 1 Local option 2 2 Failed referendum 2 3 Provincial and federal prohibition 2 4 First Nations 2 5 Alcohol production in Ontario 3 Repeal 4 Dry communities in Canada 4 1 Alberta 4 2 Manitoba 4 3 Newfoundland and Labrador 4 4 Northwest Territories 4 5 Nunavut 4 6 Ontario 4 7 Quebec 4 8 Saskatchewan 4 9 Yukon 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 ReferencesOrigins EditTemperance movement Edit Main article Temperance movement Canadians drank heavily during the nineteenth century The Upper Canadian census of 1851 recorded 1 999 taverns or one to 478 people Drunkenness fighting domestic abuse and household impoverishment were rampant 2 Prohibition was mostly spurred on by the organized crusades against social evil launched by the temperance movement They targeted drinking establishments which they viewed as the source of societal ills and misery Initially the temperance movement in Canada which began in the 1820s was largely concerned with the consumption of strong liquor while beer wine and cider were not considered to be a significant problem However by the 1840s total abstinence temperance societies were the norm and all alcoholic beverages including those with lighter alcohol content were considered dangerous 3 Inspired by the Maine Law of 1851 which saw legal prohibition in the state of Maine the temperance movement in Canada shifted to the strategy of legal coercion to advance the cause of sobriety 4 The main temperance organizations that emerged at the beginning of the prohibition era in Canada were the Dominion Alliance for the Total Suppression of the Liquor Traffic 5 and the Woman s Christian Temperance Union WCTU of Canada 6 Protestant denominations including Baptists Methodists Presbyterians and Congregationalists generally supported prohibition and campaigned for it beginning in the late 19th century Prohibition was an important aspect of the Protestant Social Gospel 7 The WCTU established itself throughout much of Canada and the United States as one of the largest and most influential contributors to the temperance movement 8 One way the WCTU attempted to spread the message of temperance was by pressuring provincial governments for temperance instruction in schools 9 In 1892 under pressure from the WCTU and other temperance organizations Nova Scotia enacted legislation requiring schools to teach students about the effects of alcohol on the human body 10 By the end of the 19th century through the efforts of the WCTU most provinces had at least some temperance instruction in school 11 The WCTU also looked outside of the formal school systems to promote temperance ideals to children and also spread their message to Sunday schools and youth groups 12 The Dominion Alliance was an umbrella organization that included representatives from most temperance and prohibition societies including the WCTU 13 The group lobbied governments at various levels to enact prohibitory laws and other legislation that advanced the cause of temperance 13 They submitted a memorial or a written statement of principles to the nineteenth session of the Huron Diocese s Anglican Synod in 1876 In it they stated The Council of the Alliance has agreed to the following principles as a basis to which they most respectfully but earnestly call your attention DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLES 1 That it is neither right nor politic for the Government to afford legal protection and sanction to any traffic or system that tends to increase crime to waste the resources of the Dominion to corrupt the social habits and to destroy the healths and lives of the people 2 That the traffic in intoxicating liquors as common beverages is inimical to the true interests of individuals and destructive of the order and welfare of society and ought therefore to be prohibited 3 That the history and results of all legislation in regard to the liquor traffic abundantly prove that it is impossible satisfactorily to limit or regulate a system so essentially mischievous in its tendencies 4 That no consideration of private gain or public revenue can justify the upholding of a traffic so thoroughly wrong in principle so suicidal in policy and disastrous in its results as the traffic in intoxicating liquors 5 That the Legislative Prohibition of the liquor traffic is perfectly compatible with national liberty and with the claims of justice and legitimate commerce 6 That the Legislative Prohibition of the liquor traffic would be highly conducive to the development of progressive civilization 7 That rising above sectarian and party considerations all good citizens should combine to procure an enactment prohibiting the manufacture and sale of intoxicating beverages as affording the most efficient aid in removing the appalling evils of intemperance There may be differences of opinion in regard to the foregoing particulars but the Council assures the Christian Body it has now the honor to approach that the utmost diligence has been exercised in the examination of evidence on all the subjects embraced therein Deeply convinced of the value of the aid of Christian Ministers and Churches as such we solicit your co operation in the efforts now being made to concentrate the moral and religious energies of the Dominion against the liquor traffic Your memorialists most earnestly hope that your counsels may be wisely directed and that you will take such action in the premises as may strengthen the hands and encourage the hearts of those who have the direction of the Prohibitory Liquor Law movement 14 Legislation EditLocal option Edit Some legislative steps toward prohibition were taken in the 19th century The passage of the Canada Temperance Act of 1864 also called the Dunkin Act in the Province of Canada allowed any county or city to forbid the sale of liquor by majority vote 15 After Canadian Confederation local option was extended to the rest of Canada via the Canada Temperance Act of 1878 It was often known as the Scott Act after its sponsor Sir Richard William Scott It also allowed any county or city to opt in to a prohibitionist scheme if there was a bare majority in a local vote 16 Under the CTA the sale of alcohol for sacramental or medicinal usage remained legal 17 Local option votes resulted in more than 240 places in Ontario being under local option prohibition by 1912 18 The Cardston Alberta licence district which included the town and surrounding countryside voted in favour of local option prohibition in 1902 19 Failed referendum Edit An official but non binding federal referendum on prohibition was held in 1898 51 percent voted in favour of prohibition and 49 percent voted against Voter turnout was low at 44 percent Prohibition had a majority in all provinces except Quebec where a strong 80 percent of the population voted against it The main factor was religion Pietistic Protestants such as Methodists Presbyterians and Scandinavian Lutherans were strongly in support Liturgical or high church Protestants such as Anglicans and German Lutherans were in opposition the Catholic population both French and Irish strongly opposed Urban areas were more opposed than rural but economic wealth made little difference 20 Despite a prohibition majority Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier s government chose not to introduce a federal bill on prohibition because of strong opposition in Quebec and low voter turnout As a result prohibition in Canada would only be enacted through individual sets of laws passed at the provincial level during the first twenty years of the 20th century Provincial and federal prohibition Edit In 1900 1919 one province after another went dry In March 1918 the federal government as a war measure made it illegal to manufacture intoxicating drinks Most of the provinces enacted prohibition during the First World War and opted to extend the ban on alcohol following the end of the war Between 1878 and 1928 about 75 of Canadian breweries had closed Notable extremes were Prince Edward Island which implemented prohibition as early as 1901 and Quebec which adopted prohibition in 1919 but quickly repealed it after intense public pressure 21 The First World War was an important factor in the success of prohibition efforts in Canada at the beginning of the 20th century Many believed that prohibition would create a Canadian society worthy of the sacrifices of soldiers overseas The argument was also raised that prohibition would benefit the war effort since it would prevent waste and inefficiency Some also considered the barroom a place where foreigners congregated and plotted against the British Empire and therefore the war effort 22 As former opponents of prohibition became silenced lest they be judged as unpatriotic provinces began to implement prohibition Following the election of 1917 the federal government introduced national prohibition by an Order in Council that became effective on April 1 1918 23 It prohibited the importation of alcohol of more than 2 5 percent into Canada the inter provincial trade of alcohol and included a ban on production The wartime ban expired a year after the conclusion of the war This was the first and last time that national prohibition on the production distribution and consumption of alcohol was enacted in Canada 24 First Nations Edit Indigenous peoples in Canada were subject to prohibitory alcohol laws under the Indian Act of 1876 25 This was an attempt on the part of the Canadian government to facilitate assimilation because for an indigenous person to possess alcohol they had to become a Canadian citizen through enfranchisement and to be eligible for enfranchisement indigenous people had to demonstrate sobriety 25 The laws also reflected a widespread false belief among North Americans that indigenous peoples were more prone to alcohol dependency known as the firewater myth 26 Sections of the Indian Act regarding liquor were not repealed for over a hundred years until 1985 27 Alcohol production in Ontario Edit Despite having prohibition from 1916 until 1927 in Ontario the government allowed for numerous exceptions Wineries were exempted from closure and various breweries and distilleries remained open for the export market 28 In Hamilton Ontario Rocco Perri specialized in exporting liquor from old Canadian distilleries such as Seagram and Gooderham and Worts to the United States and helped these companies obtain a large share of the American market 29 In London Ontario Harry Low and his group of rum runners bought the Carling Brewery while the Labatt family left the operations to the manager Edmund Burke The fact that the export might be by small boat from Windsor across the river to Detroit only helped the province s economy Rum running occurred in other provinces as well Repeal EditThe dates for the repeal of prohibition are often debated Throughout the prohibition period Ontario made wines remained legal in Ontario and some have argued that Ontario never had prohibition The government allowed the sale of light beer considered to be non intoxicating and generally reviled by drinkers in 1923 but it did not repeal the legislation creating prohibition until 1927 replacing it with the Liquor Control Act and creating the Liquor Control Board of Ontario to enforce the Act 30 Although some might argue the light beer amendment of 1923 ended prohibition there is a general consensus among recent historians that 1927 is the date of repeal 31 Similar debates can be made across the country This table should not be taken as definitive but rather one interpretation of prohibition s end points Province territory Provincial prohibition enacted RepealedBritish Columbia 1917 1921Alberta 1916 1923Saskatchewan 1915 32 1925District of Keewatin 1876 33 1905Manitoba 1916 1921Ontario 1916 1927Quebec 1919 1919New Brunswick 1856 18561917 1927Northwest Territories 1874 1891Nova Scotia 1921 1930Prince Edward Island 1901 1948Yukon 1918 1920Newfoundland not part of Canada until 1949 1917 1924Between the years of 1920 1925 five provinces voted to repeal prohibition The elimination of alcoholic beverages had made a difference in Canadian society The Ontario Alliance for the Total Suppression of the Liquor Trade stated in 1922 that the number of convictions for offenses associated with drink had declined from 17 413 in 1914 to 5 413 in 1921 and drunkenness cases had dropped from 16 590 in 1915 to 6 766 in 1921 34 By the end of prohibition nearly three quarters of beer breweries had closed 35 It was only in the second half of the twentieth century that a significant number of new breweries opened again After the First World War opponents of prohibition claimed that too many people were ignoring the law and drinking illegally and that prohibition contributed to the expansion of organized crime and violence The new slogans were Moderation and Government Regulation Moreover the denominations of Presbyterianism Methodism and Congregationalism voted to merge as the United Church of Canada to create a stronger liberal voice The possibility of new revenue led several provinces to introduce government control on the sale of alcohol and by the mid 1920s prohibition was fighting a losing battle 36 Most provinces repealed their prohibition laws during the 1920s After the 1924 Ontario prohibition referendum narrowly upheld prohibition under the Ontario Temperance Act OTA the Ontario government led by Howard Ferguson permitted the sale of low alcohol beer Ferguson s successful re election platform in 1926 included a repeal of the OTA Prohibition was ended in 1927 following the election and the Liquor Control Act LCA was passed supplanting the OTA The Liquor Control Board of Ontario LCBO was created to enforce the LCA by controlling the sale of liquor to the public and the regulation of the places in which people could drink their booze 37 The Liquor Control Act of 1927 allowed for the sale of alcoholic beverages for individual purchase but public drinking of full strength alcohol in pubs taverns restaurants beverage rooms remained illegal Subsequently the Liquor Control Act of 1934 permitted public drinking but only in hotel beverage rooms where beer was permitted and dining rooms where beer and wine was permitted with meals 38 Since each province had its own laws 39 any attempt to generalize liquor control legislation distorts the situation Quebec repealed prohibition in 1919 British Columbia in 1921 and this rolled across the country roughly west to east Quebec had a more liberal system than most places in North America at the time They legalized the sale of light beer cider and wine in hotels taverns cafes clubs and corner stores in 1919 Two years later faced with extensive smuggling of hard liquors the province legalized the sale of spirits in government run stores Quebec a convenient train ride from the eastern seaboard of the United States became a mecca for thirsty Americans even inspiring the song Hello Montreal 40 British Columbia s new law initially covered only public sale in stores Public drinking remained illegal until 1925 when beer by the glass legislation permitted beer parlours to open in hotels 41 Alberta repealed prohibition in 1924 along with Saskatchewan upon realizing that the laws were enforceable only at great expense Alberta replaced Prohibition with government store sales of hard liquor and beer parlours selling beer under strict conditions Prince Edward Island was the last province to repeal prohibition in 1948 Despite the lifting of provincial Prohibition laws it still remained illegal for most types of liquor to be shipped across provincial borders under the Importation of Intoxicating Liquors Act into the 21st century In response Okanagan MP Dan Albas tabled Bill C 311 which would repeal this restriction and allow the interprovincial distribution of wine but not beer or spirits With the promise of potential for increased investment in Canada s wine industry if the restrictions were lifted owing to wineries finally being able to distribute their product nationally the bill passed the House with a vote of 287 0 in June 2012 However the exemption created by the amendment is subject to the laws of the province into which the wine is being shipped So far the provinces have responded inconsistently For example Ontario and British Columbia have permitted the interprovincial transport of wine on the person up to one case but have made no law or policy that allows interprovincial shipment of wine 42 Dry communities in Canada EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items December 2011 Municipalities in Canada that have prohibited or restricted sale of alcohol within their borders Alberta Edit Cardston County the western portion of the Warner County and the communities contained within their boundaries do not allow standing licenses for sale of liquor within their limits This area includes the communities of Cardston Raymond Magrath and Stirling 43 In 2022 Raymond considered allowing alcohol sales In June of 2020 the province removed the last vestiges of the Prohibition Act and when that happened Raymond went from prohibited community to a community without licence said Kurtis Pratt Raymond s chief administrative officer 44 Manitoba Edit Steinbach did not allow the sale of liquor within city limits until 2011 Newfoundland and Labrador Edit Natuashish a federal Indian reserve voted to ban alcohol in 2008 and a vote to repeal the ban in 2010 was not successful 45 46 47 48 Northwest Territories Edit As of 2019 update there are seven dry communities Behchoko 49 Gameti 50 Lutselk e 51 Nahanni Butte 52 Tsiigehtchic 53 Wekweeti 54 and Whati 55 As of 2019 update there are also communities where the amount of alcohol is limited These are Deline 56 Dettah 57 Fort Good Hope 58 Fort Liard 59 Fort McPherson 60 Paulatuk 61 Trout Lake 62 Tuktoyaktuk 63 Tulita 64 and Ulukhaktok 65 As of 2019 update there are seven liquor stores in the Territory 66 Nunavut Edit As of 2019 six communities in Nunavut are dry These are Arviat Coral Harbour Gjoa Haven Kugaaruk Pangnirtung and Sanikiluaq There are also 12 communities that operate the committee system In these communities anybody wishing to purchase alcohol must obtain permission including the quantity from a locally elected Alcohol Education Committee AEC before they are allowed to order from Iqaluit Baffin communities Rankin Inlet Kivalliq communities or Yellowknife Kitikmeot communities These communities are Arctic Bay Cape Dorset Chesterfield Inlet Clyde River Hall Beach Igloolik Kimmirut Naujaat Repulse Bay Pond Inlet Qikiqtarjuaq Resolute Bay and Whale Cove Seven communities are unrestricted Baker Lake Cambridge Bay Grise Fiord Iqaluit Kugluktuk Rankin Inlet and Taloyoak 67 68 In May 2022 the hamlet of Kugluktuk voted to return to limit on alcohol sales A total of 287 votes were cast This was equivalent to 38 percent of eligible voters in the community whose total population is approximately 1 400 Sixty per cent of those voters opted for restrictions which exceeds the 60 per cent threshold that was required for change 69 Ontario Edit Orillia ended prohibition in 1955 70 The city of Owen Sound continued to outlaw liquor well into the 1970s Parts of west Toronto see The Junction did not permit liquor sales until 2000 due largely to the efforts of William Horace Temple that resulted in the ban from 1904 to 1998 James Bay Cree communities in Ontario remain dry as of 2016 Moose Factory Fort Albany Kashechewan Attawapiskat Deer Lake First Nation in that there is no government store selling alcoholic products Restriction of the transport of alcohol into the communities is not generally enforced and consumption is still common Liquor sales are available in Moosonee which is accessible from all communities by ice road in the winter Quebec Edit James Bay Cree communities in Quebec with the exception of Whapmagoostui are still dry as of 2013 Waskaganish Eastmain Wemindji Chisasibi Waswanipi Mistissini Ouje Bougoumou and Nemaska Chisasibi is unique in that it has a checkpoint for enforcing the ban on bringing alcohol into the village although this is skirted by snowmobiles avoiding the main road Saskatchewan Edit Govenlock After Montana s prohibition declaration in 1919 large groups of drinkers from that state frequently crossed the border by train to visit Govenlock to purchase booze Govenlock is now a ghost town since 1976 Yukon Edit Old Crow is a dry Gwich in community on the Porcupine River Ross River is a dry community See also EditWhiskey Gap Alberta Drug liberalization Prohibition in the United States Beer in CanadaFootnotes Edit Bellamy Matthew May 2009 Beer Wars Canada s History Canada s History Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 24 January 2017 they served up a watered down response to the threat of prohibition a b Bellamy Matthew J 2009 The Canadian Brewing Industry s Response to Prohibition 1874 1920 PDF Journal of the Brewery History Society pp 2 17 Retrieved 21 January 2017 Smart Reginald George Ogborne Alan C Alan Charles 1986 Northern spirits drinking in Canada then and now Substance Abuse Librarians and Information Specialists SALIS Toronto Addiction Research Foundation pp 19 ISBN 9780888681294 Craig Heron 2003 Booze a distilled history Toronto Ont Between the Lines p 152 ISBN 1896357830 OCLC 54454765 See The Journal of the Synod of the Church of England in the Diocese of Huron Nineteenth Session June 20 22 1876 pp 38 45 51 142 165 The Dominion Alliance formed just prior to the 1876 session Coombs Adam James 2011 Liberty and Community The Political Ideas of Nineteenth Century Canadian Temperance Movements The Graduate History Review 3 1 Allen Richard 1968 The Social Gospel and the Reform Tradition in Canada 1890 1928 The Canadian Historical Review 49 4 387 doi 10 3138 CHR 049 04 03 ISSN 1710 1093 S2CID 154487598 Sheehan Nancy M 1984 The WCTU and Educational Strategies on the Canadian Prairie History of Education Quarterly 24 1 101 119 doi 10 2307 367995 JSTOR 367995 S2CID 145405511 Sheehan Nancy M 1984 National Pressure Groups and Provincial Curriculum Policy Temperance in Nova Scotia Schools 1880 1930 Canadian Journal of Education 9 1 74 doi 10 2307 1494450 JSTOR 1494450 Sheehan Nancy M 1984 National Pressure Groups and Provincial Curriculum Policy Temperance in Nova Scotia Schools 1880 1930 Canadian Journal of Education 9 1 78 doi 10 2307 1494450 JSTOR 1494450 Sheehan Nancy M 1984 The WCTU and Educational Strategies on the Canadian Prairie History of Education Quarterly 24 1 103 doi 10 2307 367995 JSTOR 367995 S2CID 145405511 Sheehan Nancy M 1984 The WCTU and Educational Strategies on the Canadian Prairie History of Education Quarterly 24 1 113 114 doi 10 2307 367995 JSTOR 367995 S2CID 145405511 a b Smart Reginald George Ogborne Alan C Alan Charles 1986 Northern spirits drinking in Canada then and now Substance Abuse Librarians and Information Specialists SALIS Toronto Addiction Research Foundation pp 22 ISBN 9780888681294 The Journal of the Synod of the Church of England in the Diocese of Huron Nineteenth Session June 20 22 1876 p 165 166 Smart Reginald George Ogborne Alan C Alan Charles 1986 Northern spirits drinking in Canada then and now Substance Abuse Librarians and Information Specialists SALIS Toronto Addiction Research Foundation pp 42 ISBN 9780888681294 Smart Reginald George Ogborne Alan C Alan Charles 1986 Northern spirits drinking in Canada then and now Substance Abuse Librarians and Information Specialists SALIS Toronto Addiction Research Foundation pp 44 ISBN 9780888681294 Boyce Cyril D 1923 Prohibition in Canada The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 109 225 229 doi 10 1177 000271622310900125 JSTOR 1015012 S2CID 143096730 Edmonton Bulletin Nov 5 1912 Edmonton Bulletin January 26 1907 Lethbridge Herald February 5 1908 p 11 Dostie Benoit Dupre Ruth 2012 The people s will Canadians and the 1898 referendum on alcohol prohibition Explorations in Economic History 49 4 503 504 doi 10 1016 j eeh 2012 06 005 ISSN 0014 4983 Bellamy Matthew April 2009 Beer Wars The Beaver 89 2 16 23 Pistula James M 2008 For all we have and are Regina and the experience of the Great War University of Manitoba Press pp 75 76 Retrieved 2018 06 01 Bumsted J M 2008 The Peoples of Canada A Post Confederation History Third Edition Oxford University Press pp 218 219 ISBN 978 0 19 542341 9 Maquis Greg 2004 Brewers and Distillers Paradise American Views of Canadian Alcohol Policies Canadian Review of American Studies 34 2 136 139 a b Campbell Robert A Winter 2008 Making Sober Citizens The Legacy of Indigenous Alcohol Regulation in Canada 1777 1985 Journal of Canadian Studies University of Toronto Press 42 1 108 doi 10 3138 jcs 42 1 105 ISSN 1911 0251 S2CID 145221946 Campbell 2008 p 106 Campbell 2008 p 117 Prohibition s Hangover Ontario s Black Market in Alcohol Archived 2008 07 24 at the Wayback Machine Rum runners and whisky cargoes Toronto during Prohibition was anything but dry thestar com 3 May 2015 Malleck Niagara wine and the regulatory environment 1850s 1944 in The World of Niagara Wine ed Michael Ripmeester Phillip Gordon Mackintosh and Christopher Fullerton Waterloo Wilfrid Laurier University Press 2013 Craig Heron Booze A Distilled History Toronto Between the Lines Press 2003 Malleck Try to Control Yourself The regulation of public drinking in post prohibition Ontario 1927 1944 Vancouver University of British Columbia Press 2012 The year 1923 is the date set by Gerald Hallowell in Prohibition in Ontario 1919 1923 Toronto Ontario Historical Society 1972 Saskatchewan Settlement Experience saskarchives com Retrieved 2018 03 13 Prohibition The Daily Free Press May 31 1876 p 1 J M Bumsted The Peoples of Canada A Post Confederation History Third Edition 260 Bellamy Bellamy May 2009 Beer Wars Canada s History Canada s History Magazine Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 21 January 2017 J M Bumsted The Peoples of Canada A Post Confederation History Third Edition 260 Malleck Dan 2012 Try to control yourself the regulation of public drinking in post prohibition Ontario 1927 44 Scholars Portal Books books2 scholarsportal info p 3 Retrieved 2018 06 01 Dan Malleck An Innovation from Across the Line The American Drinker and Liquor Regulation in Two Ontario Border Communities 1927 1944 Journal of Canadian Studies vol 41 1 Winter 2007 153 154 157 Malleck Try to Control Yourself The regulation of public drinking in post prohibition Ontario 1927 1944 Vancouver and Toronto UBC Press 2012 Bellamy Matthew J 2012 The Canadian Brewing Industry s Response to Prohibition 1874 1920 PDF Brewery History Journal of the Brewery History Society Retrieved 21 January 2017 Craig Heron 2003 Booze a distilled history Toronto Ont Between the Lines p 272 ISBN 1896357830 OCLC 54454765 Robert Campbell Demon Rum or Easy Money Ottawa Carleton University Press 1991 50 55 On the creation and management of public drinking in Vancouver see Robert Campbell Sit Down and Drink your Beer Regulating Vancouver s Beer Parlours 1925 54 Toronto University of Toronto Press 2001 MPs vote to allow transport of wine across provinces Postmedia News Service Archived from the original on 10 June 2012 Retrieved 10 June 2012 One of Alberta s last dry communities could soon see pours of alcohol Retrieved 2022 04 04 Baig Fakiha 7 April 2022 Alberta town of Raymond surveys citizens on reversing alcohol ban in restaurants The Globe and Mail Labrador Innu village votes for booze ban CBC News February 1 2008 Archived from the original on Feb 2 2008 Retrieved 16 October 2020 Natuashish to vote on all out ban on alcohol drugs CBC News January 30 2008 Archived from the original on Jan 31 2008 Retrieved 16 October 2020 Natuashish votes to keep alcohol ban CBC News Mar 26 2010 Archived from the original on Mar 28 2010 Retrieved 16 October 2020 Sheshatsiu votes no to alcohol ban Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 2014 02 01 Legislation Division Department of Justice 10 September 2009 Behchoko Liquor Prohibition Regulations NWT Reg 061 2009 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 18 August 2008 Gameti Liquor Prohibition Regulations RRNWT 1990 c L 43 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 11 February 2005 Lutselk e Liquor Prohibition Regulations RRNWT 1990 c L 47 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 12 May 2004 Nahanni Butte Liquor Prohibition Regulations RRNWT 1990 c L 37 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 14 November 2007 Tsiigehtchic Liquor Prohibition Regulations NWT Reg 035 92 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 18 August 2008 Wekweeti Liquor Prohibition Regulations NWT Reg 097 91 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 24 March 2009 Whati Liquor Prohibition Regulations RRNWT 1990 c L 32 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 13 July 2018 Deline Liquor Restriction Regulations NWT Reg 013 2008 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 12 May 2004 Dettah Liquor Restriction Regulations RRNWT 1990 c L 21 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 12 May 2004 Fort Good Hope Liquor Restriction Regulations NWT Reg 032 97 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 14 May 2004 Fort Liard Liquor Restriction Regulations RRNWT 1990 c L 24 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 13 December 2007 Fort McPherson Liquor Restriction Regulations NWT Reg 006 2007 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 14 March 2008 Paulatuk Liquor Restriction Regulations NWT Reg 002 2008 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 11 November 2016 Trout Lake Liquor Restriction Regulations NWT Reg 103 2011 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 9 February 2018 Tuktoyaktuk Liquor Restriction Regulations NWT Reg 009 2010 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 13 December 2007 Tulita Liquor Restriction Regulations NWT Reg 096 2007 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Legislation Division Department of Justice 10 September 2009 Ulukhaktok Liquor Restriction Regulations NWT Reg 041 2008 Yellowknife Northwest Territories Territorial Printer retrieved 10 February 2019 Where to buy liquor Northwest Territories Liquor and Cannabis Commission Government of the Northwest Territories Retrieved 10 February 2019 Liquor enforcement and inspections Nunavut Department of Finance Iqaluit Nunavut The Government of Nunavut Retrieved 10 February 2019 Liquor retailing in the territory Nunavut Department of Finance Iqaluit Nunavut The Government of Nunavut Retrieved 10 February 2019 Kugluktuk voters opt for return to restricted alcohol access 17 May 2022 Ross Sara 9 July 2010 Century old Atherley Arms goes up for sale Orillia Packet amp Times Barrie Examiner Archived from the original on 2014 03 25 Retrieved 2013 06 11 References EditCampbell Robert A Profit was just a circumstance The Evolution of Government Liquor Control in British Columbia 1920 1988 Drink in Canada Historical Essays Ed Warsh Cheryl Krasnick Montreal Quebec McGill Queen s University Press 1993 178 183 Print Cook Sharon Anne 1995 Through Sunshine and Shadow The Woman s Christian Temperance Union Evangelicalism and Reform in Ontario 1874 1930 McGill Queen s Press MQUP 1995 in Canada Cook Sharon Anne Sowing Seed for the Master The Ontario WCTU and Evangelical Feminism 1874 1930 Journal of Canadian studies 30 3 1995 175 194 Hallowell Gerald 1988 Prohibition in Canada The Canadian Encyclopedia Hurtig Publishers ISBN 0 88830 328 9 Grant George M 1898 Principal Grant s letters on prohibition as they appeared in the Toronto daily Globe December 1897 January 1898 Grant opposed prohibition Noel Jan 2004 Temperance Movement The Oxford Companion to Canadian History 2004 Warsh Cheryl Krasnick 2004 Prohibition The Oxford Companion to Canadian History 2004 Sheehan Nancy M National Pressure Groups and the provincial Curriculum Policy Temperance in Nova Scotia Schools in 1880 1930 Canadian Journal of Education Revenue Canadienne de l education no 1 1984 p 73 88 Sheehan Nancy M The WCTU and educational strategies on The Canadian Prairie History of Education Quarterly Vol 24 No 1 Spring 1984 p101 119 Spring 1984 Sheehan Nancy M Temperance education and the WCTU in Alberta 1905 1930 Journal of Educational Thought JET Revue de la Pensee Educative 14 2 1980 108 124 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prohibition in Canada amp oldid 1119589842, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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