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- Date: Thu, 1 Sep 1994 07:49:45 -0700
- From: Eric Sterling <esterling@igc.apc.org>
- Message-Id: <199409011449.HAA07915@igc.apc.org>
- To: drctalk-l@netcom.com
- Subject: Prohibition Repeal
-
- Some folks are writing about the history of prohibition repeal
- without knowing anything about it, and concluding that there was
- no movement to make it happen. Ignorance is bliss.
-
- An excellent history of the movement to repeal prohibition is
- _Repealing National Prohibition_ by David Kyvig, published by the
- University of Chicago Press in 1979.
-
- There was a popular movement. It was built, at great effort and
- expense, by a number of people. The most important organization,
- which got off the ground in 1920 -- the first full year of
- prohibition -- was the Association Against the Prohibition
- Amendment. AAPA "had found it difficult to work with other
- antiprohibition organizations and looked upon their proliferation
- as divisive." (p.118) [Does that sound familiar?] In 1929 a new
- group was founded, the Women's Organization for National
- Prohibition Reform. The founder, Pauline Morton Sabin, was the
- wife of the chairman of the Guaranty Trust Corporation in New York
- and one of the founders of the Women's National Republican Club.
-
- in 1926 the AAPA was suffering a great deal of discord. A ballot
- initiative was placed on the ballot in Missouri by a strong AAPA
- branch. But the national AAPA was afraid of losing the vote and
- on September 3, the national advised voters to withhold their
- support! The referendum was defeated 2-1. The Missouri division
- head, Judge Henry S. Priest wrote, "We feel constrained to
- repudiate your dictatorship and express indignation at the
- betrayal of the confidence we reposed in you, and to withdraw from
- your organization and to form one of our own to prosecute the
- worthy cause which we feel your stupid one-horse management is
- endangering.
-
- In December 1927, a small meeting was held in the home of former
- U.S. Senator James Wadsworth. they met again on January 6, 1928,
- and considered the reports of two committees that had met. The
- organization was to be REORGANIZED. "A national board of
- directors would be chosen for the value of their endorsement of
- the association." (p.92).
-
- Management was placed in an executive committee chaired by Pierre
- du Pont. "The pattern of a window-dressing board of directors and
- a strong executive committee to which the organization's spokesmen
- and administrators were responsible followed closely the general
- management systems established at the Du Pont Company and General
- Motors."
-
- The board grew to 67 by mid-Aprl 1928, 103 by the end of the year,
- and 435 by 1933. "...the board came to include notables from
- various fields -- law, education, medicine, organized labor -- but
- not surprisingly, for the most part from the heights of American
- business and finance."
-
- The Women's Organization for National Prohibition Reform (WONPR)
- grew rapidly. At the second annual meeting in April 1931, Sabin
- announced a membership of 300,000, and one year later, a
- membership of 600,000. By the 1932 election, membership of 1.1
- million was claimed.
-
- WONPR was run by "fashionable ladies." One argument about why
- WONPR grew was because membes could "improve their social
- standing" and emulate the fashionable ladies who led the
- organization. That has been a typical kind of denigration of the
- seriousness and value of the political work of the women involved.
- But generally the membership was concerned that prohibition was
- subverting youth, the home and family, the economy, and respect
- for all law.
-
- There was a movement and it took a lot of time, effort and money
- to build.
-
- Eric E. Sterling The Criminal Justice Policy Foundation 1899 L
- Street, NW, Suite 500 Washington, DC 20036 202-835-9075 Fax
- 202-833-8561 esterling@igc.apc.org
-