The Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) is an international
temperance organization, originating among
women in the United States Prohibition movement The Temperance movement began long before the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was introduced. Across the country different groups began lobbying for temperance by arguing that alcohol was morally corrupting and hurting familie ...
. It was among the first organizations of women devoted to social reform with a program that "linked the religious and the secular through concerted and far-reaching reform strategies based on applied
Christianity
Christianity is an Abrahamic monotheistic religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus of Nazareth
Jesus, likely from he, יֵשׁוּעַ, translit=Yēšūaʿ, label=Hebrew/Aramaic ( AD 30 or 33), also referred to as Jesu ...
."
It plays an influential role in the
temperance movement
The temperance movement is a social movement promoting temperance or complete abstinence from consumption of alcoholic beverages. Participants in the movement typically criticize alcohol intoxication or promote teetotalism, and its leaders emph ...
. The organization supported the
18th Amendment and was also influential in social reform issues that came to prominence in the
progressive era
The Progressive Era (late 1890s – late 1910s) was a period of widespread social activism and political reform across the United States focused on defeating corruption, monopoly, waste and inefficiency. The main themes ended during Am ...
.
The WCTU was originally organized on December 23, 1873, in
Hillsboro, Ohio
Hillsboro is a city in and the county seat of Highland County, Ohio, United States approximately 35 mi (56 km) west of Chillicothe, and 50 miles east of Cincinnati. The population was 6,605 at the 2010 census.
History
Hillsboro was p ...
, and officially declared at a national convention in
Cleveland, Ohio, in 1874.
It operated at an international level and in the context of religion and reform, including missionary work and
women's suffrage
Women's suffrage is the women's rights, right of women to Suffrage, vote in elections. Beginning in the start of the 18th century, some people sought to change voting laws to allow women to vote. Liberal political parties would go on to gran ...
. Two years after its founding, the American WCTU sponsored an international conference at which the International Women's Christian Temperance Union was formed.
The World's Woman's Christian Temperance Union was founded in 1883 and became the international arm of the organization, which has now affiliates in Australia, Canada, Germany, Finland, India, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, South Korea, United Kingdom, and the United States, among others.
The Woman's Christian Temperance Union conducts a White Ribbon Recruit (WRR) ceremony, in which babies are dedicated to the cause of temperance through a white ribbon being tied to their wrists, with their adult sponsors pledging to help the child live a life free from alcohol and other drugs.
History and purpose
Origins
At its founding in 1874, the stated purpose of the WCTU was to create a "sober and pure world" by abstinence, purity, and evangelical Christianity.
Annie Wittenmyer
Sarah "Annie" Turner Wittenmyer (August 26, 1827 – February 2, 1900) was an American social reformer, relief worker, and writer. She served as the first President of the Women's Christian Temperance Union from 1874 to 1879.Riley, Glenda (1986). ...
was its first president. Wittenmyer was conservative in her goals for the movement focussing only on the question of alcohol consumption and avoiding involvement in politics. The constitution of the WCTU called for "the entire prohibition of the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors as a beverage."
Frances Willard, a noted feminist, was elected the WCTU's second president in 1879 and Willard grew the organization to be the largest organization of women in the world by 1890. She remained president until her death in 1898.
Its members were inspired by the
Greek
Greek may refer to:
Greece
Anything of, from, or related to Greece, a country in Southern Europe:
*Greeks, an ethnic group.
*Greek language, a branch of the Indo-European language family.
**Proto-Greek language, the assumed last common ancestor ...
writer
Xenophon
Xenophon of Athens (; grc, Ξενοφῶν ; – probably 355 or 354 BC) was a Greek military leader, philosopher, and historian, born in Athens. At the age of 30, Xenophon was elected commander of one of the biggest Greek mercenary armies of ...
, who defined temperance as "moderation in all things healthful; total abstinence from all things harmful." In other words, should something be good, it should not be indulged in to excess; should something be bad for you, it should be avoided altogether — thus their attempts to rid society of what they saw (and still see) as the dangers of alcohol.
The WCTU perceived alcohol as a cause and consequence of larger social problems rather than as a personal weakness or failing. The WCTU also advocated against tobacco. The American WCTU formed a "Department for the Overthrow of the Tobacco Habit" as early as 1885 and frequently published anti-tobacco articles in the 1880s. Agitation against tobacco continued through to the 1950s.
Policy interests
As a consequence of its stated purposes, the WCTU was also very interested in a number of social reform issues, including labor,
prostitution,
public health
Public health is "the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health through the organized efforts and informed choices of society, organizations, public and private, communities and individuals". Analyzing the det ...
,
sanitation
Sanitation refers to public health conditions related to clean drinking water and treatment and disposal of human excreta and sewage. Preventing human contact with feces is part of sanitation, as is hand washing with soap. Sanitation syste ...
, and
international peace. As the movement grew in numbers and strength, members of the WCTU also focused on
suffrage. The WCTU was instrumental in organizing woman's suffrage leaders and in helping more women become involved in American politics. Local chapters, known as "unions", were largely autonomous, though linked to state and national headquarters. Willard pushed for the "Home Protection" ballot, arguing that women, being the morally superior sex, needed the vote in order to act as "citizen-mothers" and protect their homes and cure society's ills. At a time when suffragists were viewed as
radicals and alienated most American women, the WCTU offered a more traditionally feminine and "appropriate" organization for women to join.
Home Protection interests also extended to
Labor rights
Labor rights or workers' rights are both legal rights and human rights relating to labor relations between workers and employers. These rights are codified in national and international labor and employment law. In general, these rights in ...
, and an openness to
Socialism
Socialism is a left-wing economic philosophy and movement encompassing a range of economic systems characterized by the dominance of social ownership of the means of production as opposed to private ownership. As a term, it describes the ...
. WCTU had a close association with the
Knights of Labor
Knights of Labor (K of L), officially Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of Labor, was an American labor federation active in the late 19th century, especially the 1880s. It operated in the United States as well in Canada, and had chapters also ...
, sharing goals for class harmony, sober and disciplined workers, and a day of rest. Concern for workers' conditions and the effect on family life led many members to also critique the exploitation of capital, as well as demand a
living wage
A living wage is defined as the minimum income necessary for a worker to meet their basic needs. This is not the same as a subsistence wage, which refers to a biological minimum, or a solidarity wage, which refers to a minimum wage tracking labo ...
.
Although the WCTU had chapters throughout
North America with hundreds of thousands of members, the "Christian" in its title was largely limited to those with an evangelical Protestant conviction and the importance of their role has been noted. The goal of evangelizing the world, according to this model, meant that very few Catholics, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists or Hindus were attracted to it, "even though the last three had a pronounced cultural and religious preference for abstinence".
As the WCTU grew internationally, it developed various approaches that helped with the inclusion of women of religions other than Christianity. But, it was always primarily, and still is, a Christian women's organization.
The WCTU's work extended across a range of efforts to bring about personal and social moral reform. In the 1880s it worked on creating legislation to protect working girls from the exploitation of men, including raising
Age of Consent
The age of consent is the age at which a person is considered to be legally competent to consent to sexual acts. Consequently, an adult who engages in sexual activity with a person younger than the age of consent is unable to legally cla ...
laws.
It also focused on keeping Sundays as Sabbath days and restrict frivolous activities. In 1901 the WCTU said that golf should not be allowed on Sundays.
The WCTU was also involved with efforts to
alleviate poverty by discouraging the purchase of alcohol products. Through journal articles, the WCTU tried to prove that abstinence would help people move up in life. A fictional story in one of their journal articles illustrates this fact:
Ned has applied for a job, but he is not chosen. He finds that the potential employer has judged him to be like his Uncle Jack. Jack is a kindly man but he spends his money on drink and cigarettes. Ned has also been seen drinking and smoking. The employer thinks that Ned Fisher lacks the necessary traits of industriousness which he associates with abstinence and self-control.
Spread and influence
The Woman's Christian Temperance Union grew rapidly. The WCTU adopted Willard's "Do Everything" philosophy, which meant that the "W.C.T.U. campaigned for local, state, and national prohibition, woman suffrage, protective purity legislation, scientific temperance instruction in the schools, better working conditions for labor, anti-polygamy laws, Americanization, and a variety of other reforms"
[How Did the Reform Agenda of the Minnesota Woman's Christian Temperance Union Change, 1878-1917?, by Kathleen Kerr. (Binghamton, NY: State University of New York at Binghamton, 1998). Introduction] despite having the image of a gospel temperance organization. The presidential addresses of the WCTU provide excellent insight as to how the organization seamlessly blended issues of grass-roots organizing, temperance, education, immigration and cultural assimilation.
One prominent state chapter was the Minnesota Women's Christian Temperance Union. The Minnesota chapter's origin is rooted in nation's anti-saloon crusades of 1873 and 1874 where women all throughout the United States "joined together outside saloons to pray and harass the customers."
In Minnesota there was stiff resistance to this public display and "in Anoka, Minnesota, 'heroic women endured the insults of the saloon-keeper and his wife who poured cold water upon the women from an upper window while they prayed on the sidewalk below. Sometimes beer was thrown on the sidewalk so that they could not kneel there but they prayed.'"
As a result, Minnesotan women were motivated and "formed local societies, which soon united to become the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union in 1874. Women from St. Paul, Minneapolis, Red Wing, and Owatonna organized their first local W.C.T.U. clubs between 1875 and 1877. The Minnesota WCTU began in the fall of 1877.
From this point the Minnesota WCTU began to expand throughout the state in both size and interests.
The Minnesota WCTU worked hard to extol the values of the WCTU which included converting new immigrants to American culture or "Americanization." Bessie Laythe Scovell, a native New Englander that moved to Minnesota in the 1800s and served as president of the Minnesota WCTU chapter from 1897–1909 delivered her 1900 "President's Address", where she expounded on the methods the Minnesota chapter of the WCTU would utilize to accomplish its variety of goals within the state. Scovell adopted what was at the time a "progressive" approach to the issue of immigrants, particularly German and Scandinavian in Minnesota, indulging in alcohol and stated:
We must have a regiment of American workers, who will learn the German language, love the German people, work among the German children and young people until we get them to love clear brains better than beer. There must be others who for the love of country and dear humanity will learn the Scandinavian language and be real neighbors to the many people of this nationality who have come to make homes in America. Again others must learn the French and Italian and various dialects, even, that the truths of personal purity and total abstinence be taught to these who dwell among us. We must feel it a duty to teach these people the English language to put them in sympathy with our purposes and our institutions.
For Scovell and the women of the Minnesota WCTU, speaking English and participating in established American institutions were essential to truly become "American" just as abstaining from alcohol was necessary to be virtuous. By linking language to culture and institutions, Scovell and the WCTU recognized that a multicultural approach would be necessary to communicate values to new immigrants, but did not conclude that multiculturalism was a value in itself. The WCTU viewed the foreign European cultures as a corrupter and despoiler of virtue, hence the excessive drinking. That is ultimately why it was paramount the immigrants learned English and assimilated.
Prohibition
In 1893, the WCTU switched focus toward prohibition, which was ultimately successful when the 18th amendment to the US Constitution was passed. After prohibition was instituted, WCTU membership declined.
Over the years, different prohibition and suffrage activists had suspected that brewer associations gave money to anti-suffrage activities. In 1919, there was a Senate investigation that confirmed their suspicions. Some members of the
United States Brewers Association were openly against the woman's suffrage movement. One member stated, "We have defeated woman's suffrage at three different times."
Although the WCTU was an explicitly religious organization and worked with religious groups in social reform, it protested wine use in religious ceremonies. During an Episcopal convention, it asked the church to stop using wine in its ceremonies and to use unfermented grape juice instead. A WCTU direct resolution explained its reasoning: wine contained "the narcotic poison, alcohol, which cannot truly represent the blood of Christ."
The WCTU also favored banning tobacco. In 1919, the WCTU expressed to Congress its desire for the total abolition of tobacco within five years.
Under Willard, the WCTU supported the White Life for Two program. Under this program, men would reach women's higher moral standing (and thus become woman's equal) by engaging in lust-free, alcohol-free, tobacco-free marriages. At the time, the organization also fought to ban alcohol use on military bases, in Indian reservations, and within Washington's institutions. Ultimately, Willard succeeded in increasing the political clout of the organization because, unlike Annie Wittenmyer, she strongly believed that the success of the organization would only be achieved through the increased politicization of its platform.
Reach of the Woman's Christian Temperance Movement
In the United States, the WCTU was divided along ideological lines. The first president of the organization, Annie Wittenmyer, believed in the singleness of purpose of the organization—that is, that it should not put efforts into woman suffrage, prohibition, etc. This wing of the WCTU was more concerned with how morality played a role during the temperance movement. With that in mind, it sought to save those whom they believed to be of lower moral character. For them, the alcohol problem was one of moral nature and was not caused by the institutions that facilitated access to alcohol.
The second president of the WCTU, Frances Willard, demonstrated a sharp distinction from Wittenmyer. Willard had a much broader interpretation of the social problems at hand. She believed in "a living wage; in an
eight-hour day
The eight-hour day movement (also known as the 40-hour week movement or the short-time movement) was a social movement to regulate the length of a working day, preventing excesses and abuses.
An eight-hour work day has its origins in the 1 ...
; in courts of conciliation and arbitration; in justice as opposed to greed in gain; in Peace on Earth and Good-Will to Men." This division illustrated two of the ideologies present in the organization at the time, conservatism and progressivism. To some extent, the Eastern Wing of the WCTU supported Wittenmyer and the Western Wing had a tendency to support the more progressive Willard view.
Membership within the WCTU grew greatly every decade until the 1940s.
By the 1920s, it was in more than forty countries and had more than 766,000 members paying dues at its peak in 1927.
Classification of WCTU Committee
Reports by Period and Interests
*Source:Sample of every fifth ''Annual Report'' of the WCTU
Percentages total more than 100 percent due to several interests in some committee reports.
Frances Willard
In 1874 Willard was elected the new secretary of the WCTU. Five years later, in 1879, she became its president. Willard also started her own organization, called the World's Women Christian Temperance Union, in 1883.
After becoming WCTU's president, Willard broadened the views of the group by including woman's rights reforms, abstinence, and education. As its president for 19 years, she focused on moral reform of prostitutes and prison reform as well as woman's suffrage. With the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920, Willard's predictions that women voters "would come into government and purify it, into politics and cleanse the Stygian pool" could be tested. Frances Willard died in February 1898 at the age of 58 in New York City. A
plaque commemorating Willard's election to president of the WCTU in 1879 by
Lorado Taft
Lorado Zadok Taft (April 29, 1860, in Elmwood, Illinois – October 30, 1936, in Chicago) was an American sculptor, writer and educator. His 1903 book, ''The History of American Sculpture,'' was the first survey of the subject and stood for deca ...
is in the
Indiana Statehouse
The Indiana Statehouse is the state capitol building of the U.S. state of Indiana. It houses the Indiana General Assembly, the office of the Governor of Indiana, the Indiana Supreme Court, and other state officials. The Statehouse is located in ...
,
Indianapolis, Indiana
Indianapolis (), colloquially known as Indy, is the List of U.S. state and territorial capitals, state capital and List of U.S. states' largest cities by population, most populous city of the U.S. state of Indiana and the county seat, seat of ...
.
Matilda Bradley Carse
Matilda B. Carse became an activist after her son was killed in 1874 by a drunk wagon driver. She joined the Chicago Central Christian Woman's Temperance Union to try to eliminate alcohol consumption. In 1878 she became the president of the Chicago Central Christian Woman's Temperance Union, and in 1880 she helped organize the
Woman's Temperance Publishing Association, selling the stock to rich women. That same year she also started ''The Signal;'' three years later it merged with another newspaper to become ''
The Union Signal''.
[ Judy Barrett Litoff, Judith McDonnell.''European Immigrant Women in the United States'', Taylor & Francis (1994), 51.] It became the most important woman's newspaper and soon sold more copies than any other newspaper. It was Carse who was driving force behind the construction of Chicago's
Temperance Temple.
[ ]
During her time as president, Carse founded many charities and managed to raise approximately $60,000,000 a year to support them. She started the Bethesda Day Nursery for working mothers, two
kindergarten
Kindergarten is a preschool educational approach based on playing, singing, practical activities such as drawing, and social interaction as part of the transition from home to school. Such institutions were originally made in the late 18th cent ...
schools, the
Anchorage
Anchorage () is the largest city in the U.S. state of Alaska by population. With a population of 291,247 in 2020, it contains nearly 40% of the state's population. The Anchorage metropolitan area, which includes Anchorage and the neighboring ...
Mission for erring girls, two dispensaries, two industrial schools, an employment bureau,
Sunday school
A Sunday school is an educational institution, usually (but not always) Christian in character. Other religions including Buddhism, Islam, and Judaism have also organised Sunday schools in their temples and mosques, particularly in the West.
S ...
s, and temperance reading rooms.
Current status
The WCTU remains an internationally active organization. In American culture, although "temperance norms have lost a great deal of their power"
and there are far fewer dry communities today than before ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment, there is still at least one WCTU chapter in almost every U.S. state and in 36 other countries around the world.
Requirements for joining the WCTU include paying membership dues and signing a pledge to
abstain from
alcohol
Alcohol most commonly refers to:
* Alcohol (chemistry), an organic compound in which a hydroxyl group is bound to a carbon atom
* Alcohol (drug), an intoxicant found in alcoholic drinks
Alcohol may also refer to:
Chemicals
* Ethanol, one of sev ...
.
The pledge of the Southern Californian WCTU, for example, is "I hereby solemnly promise, God helping me, to abstain from all distilled, fermented, and malt liquors, including beer, wine, and hard cider, and to employ all proper means to discourage the use of and traffic in the same." Current issues for the WCTU include alcohol, which the
organization
An organization or organisation (Commonwealth English; see spelling differences), is an entity—such as a company, an institution, or an association—comprising one or more people and having a particular purpose.
The word is derived fro ...
considers to be
North America's number one
drug
A drug is any chemical substance that causes a change in an organism's physiology or psychology when consumed. Drugs are typically distinguished from food and substances that provide nutritional support. Consumption of drugs can be via inhal ...
problem, as well as
illegal drugs
The prohibition of drugs through sumptuary legislation or religious law is a common means of attempting to prevent the recreational use of certain intoxicating substances.
While some drugs are illegal to possess, many governments regulate th ...
, and
abortion
Abortion is the termination of a pregnancy by removal or expulsion of an embryo or fetus. An abortion that occurs without intervention is known as a miscarriage or "spontaneous abortion"; these occur in approximately 30% to 40% of pregn ...
. The WCTU has warned against the dangers of
tobacco
Tobacco is the common name of several plants in the genus '' Nicotiana'' of the family Solanaceae, and the general term for any product prepared from the cured leaves of these plants. More than 70 species of tobacco are known, but the ch ...
since 1875. They continue to this day in their fight against those substances they see as harmful to
society
A society is a Social group, group of individuals involved in persistent Social relation, social interaction, or a large social group sharing the same spatial or social territory, typically subject to the same Politics, political authority an ...
.
The last edition of the WCTU's quarterly journal, titled ''The Union Signal'', was published in 2015, the main focus of which was current research and information on drugs. Other national organizations also continue to publish.
The WCTU also attempts to encourage young people to avoid substance abuse through participation in three age-divided suborganizations: White Ribbon Recruits for pre-schoolers, the Loyal Temperance Legion (LTL) for elementary school children, and the Youth Temperance Council (YTC) for teenagers.
The White Ribbon Recruits are mothers who will publicly declare their dedication to keeping their babies drug-free. To do this, they participate in the White Ribbon Ceremony, but their children must be under six years of age. The mother pledges "I promise to teach my child the principles of total abstinence and purity", and the child gets a white ribbon tied to its wrist.
The
Loyal Temperance Legion
The Loyal Temperance Legion was the children's branch of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). Its slogan was "Tremble, King Alcohol, We Shall Grow Up". It published an English-language newspaper for children called ''The Young Crusader' ...
(LTL), is another temperance group aimed at children. It is for children aged six to twelve who are willing to pay dues annually to the LTL. Its motto is "That I may give my best service to home and country, I promise, God helping me, Not to buy, drink, sell, or give alcoholic liquors while I live. From other drugs and tobacco I'll abstain, And never take God's name in vain."
The Youth Temperance Council is the final type of group meant for youths and is aimed at teenagers. Its pledge is "I promise, by the help of God, never to use alcoholic beverages, other narcotics, or tobacco, and to encourage everyone else to do the same, fulfilling the command, 'keep thyself pure'."
The World's WCTU
The World's WCTU (WWCTU) is one of the most prominent examples of internationalism, evidenced by the circulation of the ''Union Signal'' around the globe; the International Conventions that were held with the purpose of focusing "world attention on the temperance and women's questions,
and the appointment of "round-the-world missionaries." Examples of international Conventions include the one in 1893 scheduled to coincide with the
Chicago World's Fair; the London Convention in 1895; the 1897 one in Toronto; and the Glasgow one in 1910. The first six round-the-world missionaries were
Mary C. Leavitt,
Jessie Ackermann,
Alice Palmer,
Mary Allen West
Mary Allen West (July 13, 1837 – December 1, 1892) was an American journalist, editor, educator, philanthropist, superintendent of schools, and temperance worker. A teacher in her early career, she served as superintendent of schools in Knox Coun ...
,
Elizabeth Wheeler Andrew
Elizabeth or Elisabeth may refer to:
People
* Elizabeth (given name), a female given name (including people with that name)
* Elizabeth (biblical figure), mother of John the Baptist
Ships
* HMS ''Elizabeth'', several ships
* ''Elisabeth'' (sch ...
, and Dr
Katharine Bushnell
Katharine Bushnell (born Sophia Caroline Bushnell in Evanston, Illinois) (February 5, 1855 – January 26, 1946) was a medical doctor, Christian writer, Bible scholar, social activist, and forerunner of feminist theology. Her lifelong quest was fo ...
.
The ambition, reach and organizational effort involved in the work undertaken by the World's WCTU leave it open to cynical criticism in the 21st century, but there is little doubt that at the end of the 19th century, "they did believe earnestly in the efficacy of women's temperance as a means for uplifting their sex and transforming the hierarchical relations of gender apparent across a wide range of cultures."
South Africa
Amongst the presidents of the
Cape Colony
The Cape Colony ( nl, Kaapkolonie), also known as the Cape of Good Hope, was a British colony in present-day South Africa named after the Cape of Good Hope, which existed from 1795 to 1802, and again from 1806 to 1910, when it united with t ...
WCTU was
Georgiana Solomon, who eventually became a world vice-president.
New Zealand
As early as 6 August 1884, under the leadership of Eliza Ann Palmer Brown in
Invercargill
Invercargill ( , mi, Waihōpai is the southernmost and westernmost city in New Zealand, and one of the southernmost cities in the world. It is the commercial centre of the Southland region. The city lies in the heart of the wide expanse of ...
, a WCTU branch had started in New Zealand. Arriving in January 1885, a prominent American missionary,
Mary Leavitt, traveled to
Auckland, New Zealand
Auckland (pronounced ) ( mi, Tāmaki Makaurau) is a large metropolitan city in the North Island of New Zealand. The most populous urban area in the country and the fifth largest city in Oceania, Auckland has an urban population of about It ...
to spread the message of the WCTU.
For the next eight years, Leavitt traveled around New Zealand establishing WCTU branches and advocating for women to, "protect their homes and families from liquor, by claiming their rightful voice" and work to end the over-consumption of alcohol through gaining the vote.
Working alongside Leavitt was
Anne Ward, a New Zealand social worker and temperance activist, who served as the first national president of the WCTU in New Zealand.
Māori women were also active members of the WCTU in New Zealand. In 1911, during the presidency of
Fanny Cole,
Hera Stirling Munro, Jean McNeish of
Cambridge
Cambridge ( ) is a university city and the county town in Cambridgeshire, England. It is located on the River Cam approximately north of London. As of the 2021 United Kingdom census, the population of Cambridge was 145,700. Cambridge beca ...
and Rebecca Smith of
Hokianga
The Hokianga is an area surrounding the Hokianga Harbour, also known as the Hokianga River, a long estuarine drowned valley on the west coast in the north of the North Island of New Zealand.
The original name, still used by local Māori, is ...
organised a WCTU convention at
Pakipaki specifically by and for Māori. Many Māori women signed WCTU-initiated national franchise petitions.
Specifically, the 1892 WCTU petition was signed by
Louisa Matahau Louisa may refer to:
Places
;Australia
* Louisa Island (Tasmania)
;Canada
* Louisa or Lac-Louisa, a community in Wentworth, Quebec
;Malaysia
* Louisa Reef, Sabah
;United States
* Louisa, Kentucky
* Louisa, Missouri
* Louisa, Virginia
* Louisa ...
of
Hauraki
Hauraki is a suburb located on the southern North Shore of Auckland, the largest metropolitan city in New Zealand. It is under the local governance of the Auckland Council.
History
The traditional name for the western coastline in Hauraki wa ...
and
Herewaka Poata from
Gisborne, and the 1893 petition was also signed by
Matilda Ngapua from
Napier Napier may refer to:
People
* Napier (surname), including a list of people with that name
* Napier baronets, five baronetcies and lists of the title holders
Given name
* Napier Shaw (1854–1945), British meteorologist
* Napier Waller (1893–19 ...
and four other Māori women using European names instead.
The WCTU played a significant role in New Zealand, because it was the only public organisation in the country that could provide women political and leadership experience and training, and as a result, well over half of suffragists at the time were members of the organisation.
One of the most notable New Zealand suffragists was Kate Sheppard, who was the leader of the WCTU's franchise department, and advised women in the WCTU to work closely with members of Parliament in order to get their ideas in political discourse.
This eventually led to women winning the
right to vote in 1893. Some prominent New Zealand suffragists and WCTU members include
Kate Sheppard
Katherine Wilson Sheppard ( Catherine Wilson Malcolm; 10 March 1848 – 13 July 1934) was the most prominent member of the women's suffrage movement in New Zealand and the country's most famous suffragist. Born in Liverpool, England, she emi ...
,
Learmonth Dalrymple,
Meri Te Tai Mangakāhia,
Elizabeth Caradus,
Kate Milligan Edger,
Christina Henderson
Christina Kirk Henderson (15 August 1861 – 27 September 1953) was a New Zealand teacher, feminist, prohibitionist, social reformer and editor.
Early life
Henderson was born in Emerald Hill, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia on 15 August 186 ...
,
Annie Schnackenberg,
Anne Ward, and
Lily Atkinson.
Canada
The WCTU formed in Canada in 1874, in
Owen Sound, Ontario
Owen Sound ( 2021 Census population 21,612) is a city in Southwestern Ontario, Canada. The county seat of Grey County, it is located at the mouths of the Pottawatomi and Sydenham Rivers on an inlet of Georgian Bay.
The primary tourist attr ...
. and spread across Canada. The Newfoundland branch played an important part in campaigning for women's suffrage on the grounds that women were vital in the struggle for prohibition. In 1885
Letitia Youmans founded an organization which was to become the leading women's society in the national temperance movement. Youmans is often credited with spreading the organization across the country. One notable member was
Edith Archibald
Edith Jessie Archibald (7 April 1854 – 11 May 1936) was a Canadian suffragist and writer who led the Maritime Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), National Council of Women of Canada and the Local Council of Women of Halifax. For her many ...
of Nova Scotia. Notable Canadian feminist
Nellie McClung
Nellie Letitia McClung (; 20 October 18731 September 1951) was a Canadian author, politician, and social activist, who is regarded as one of Canada's most prominent suffragists. She began her career in writing with the 1908 book ''Sowing Seeds ...
was also involved.
Newfoundland
The Newfoundland chapter of the WCTU formed in September 1890. Early supporters included Reverend Mr. A.D. Morton, the Methodist minister of Gower Street Church, and local women such as Emma Peters,
Lady Jeanette Thorburn
The word ''lady'' is a term for a girl or woman, with various connotations. Once used to describe only women of a high social class or status, the equivalent of lord, now it may refer to any adult woman, as gentleman can be used for men. Inform ...
,
Jessie Ohman, Maria C. Williams,
Elizabeth Neyle, Margaret Chancey,
Ceclia Fraser,
Rev. Mrs. Morton,
Mrs. E.H. Bulley
Mrs. (American English) or Mrs (British English; standard English pronunciation: ) is a commonly used English honorific for women, usually for those who are married and who do not instead use another title (or rank), such as '' Doctor'', ''Prof ...
,
Tryphenia Duley, Sarah (Rowsell) Wright and
Fanny Stowe
Fanny may refer to:
Given name
* Fanny (name), a feminine given name or a nickname, often for Frances
In slang
* A term for the vulva, in Britain and many other parts of the English-speaking world
* A term for the buttocks, in the United States
...
.
The WCTU agitated for women's suffrage in the Dominion especially in the wake of the sacrifices of WW1, but did not see this realized until 1925.
India
The WCTU formed in
India
India, officially the Republic of India ( Hindi: ), is a country in South Asia. It is the seventh-largest country by area, the second-most populous country, and the most populous democracy in the world. Bounded by the Indian Ocean on the ...
was formed in the 1880s.
It publishes ''Temperance Record and White Ribbon'', remaining very active today.
Australia
The WCTU began in Australia following visits from
Jessie Ackermann in 1889 and 1891; a number of other Christian Temperance and Abstinence Societies existed throughout Australia before that time.
Jessie Ackermann acted as the round the world missionary for the American-based World's WCTU, and became the inaugural president of the federated Australasian WCTU, Australia's largest women's reform group. They were active in the struggle for the extension of the franchise to women through promoting suffrage societies, collecting signatures for petitions and lobbying members of parliament. (See, for example,
Women's suffrage in Australia
Women's suffrage in Australia was one of the early achievements of Australian democracy. Following the progressive establishment of male suffrage in the Australian colonies from the 1840s to the 1890s, an organised push for women's enfranchi ...
.) After visiting New Zealand, Miss Ackermann came to Hobart in May 1889, then toured the mainland for almost 12 months, stopping in Adelaide, Port Augusta, Clare, Kapunda and Burra in June to August, Mount Gambier, Brisbane, Sydney, and Bathurst. She returned for a further visit, including Melbourne in 1891.
In Victoria, weekly temperance conferences were held at the East Melbourne home of
Margaret McLean
Margaret McLean (; 7 April 1845 – 14 February 1923) was a Scottish Australian temperance and women's rights advocate.
Early life
She was born Margaret Arnot in 1845 at Irvine, North Ayrshire, Scotland. She was the eldest child of Andrew Arnot ...
,
a founding member and coordinator of the Melbourne branch of the WCTU of Victoria; she was president of the organisation for two periods, 1892–93 and 1899–1907.
The
Queensland
)
, nickname = Sunshine State
, image_map = Queensland in Australia.svg
, map_caption = Location of Queensland in Australia
, subdivision_type = Country
, subdivision_name = Australia
, established_title = Before federation
, established_ ...
chapter established itself by 1928 at
Willard House, River Road (now Coronation Drive), North Quay, near the Brisbane River. The state organiser in 1930 was
Zara Dare who went on to become one of the first female police officers in Queensland in 1931.
Sweden
The Swedish WCTU, known as ''Vita Bandet'' (White Ribbon) was founded by
Emilie Rathou in Östermalm in Stockholm in 1900.
[Emilie Rathou, https://sok.riksarkivet.se/sbl/Presentation.aspx?id=7563 , urn:sbl:7563, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (art av Hjördis Levin), hämtad 2015-05-30.] Rathou was a leading member of the
International Organisation of Good Templars, and the pioneer for organizing the WCTU and its local branches in Sweden.
Woman's Temperance Publishing Association
The Woman's Temperance Publishing Association was started in Indianapolis by Wallace but thought up by Matilda B. Carse. They thought there was a need for a weekly temperance paper for women of color. The creators wanted the first board of directors to be seven women who had the same vision as Carse.
[Rachel Foster Avery, ''Transactions of the National Council of Women of the United States'', National Council of Women of the United States (Washington, D.C., February 22 to 25, 1891).]
Conventions
#
1874, Cleveland, Ohio
# 1875, Cincinnati, Ohio
# 1876, Newark, New Jersey
# 1877, Chicago, Illinois
# 1878, Baltimore, Maryland
# 1879, Indianapolis, Indiana
# 1880, Boston, Massachusetts
# 1881, Washington, D.C.
# 1882, Louisville, Kentucky
# 1883, Detroit, Michigan
# 1884, St. Louis, Missouri
# 1885, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
# 1886, Minneapolis, Minnesota
# 1887, Nashville, Tennessee
# 1888, New York, New York
# 1889, Chicago, Illinois
# 1890, Atlanta, Georgia
# 1891, Boston, Massachusetts
# 1892, Denver, Colorado
# 1893, Chicago, Illinois
# 1894, Cleveland, Ohio
# 1895, Baltimore, Maryland
# 1896, St. Louis, Missouri
# 1897, Buffalo, New York
# 1898, St. Paul, Minnesota
# 1899, Seattle, Washington
# 1900, Washington, D.C.
# 1901, Fort Worth, Texas
# 1902, Portland, Maine
# 1903, Cincinnati, Ohio
# 1904, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
# 1905, Los Angeles, California
# 1906, Hartford, Connecticut
# 1907, Nashville, Tennessee
# 1908, Denver, Colorado
# 1909, Omaha, Nebraska
# 1910, Baltimore, Maryland
# 1911, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
# 1912, Portland, Oregon
# 1913, Asbury Park, New Jersey
# 1914, Atlanta, Georgia
# 1915, Seattle, Washington
# 1916, Indianapolis, Indiana
# 1917, Washington, D. C.
# 1918, St. Louis, Missouri
# 1919, St. Louis, Missouri
# 1920, Washington, D.C.
# 1921, San Francisco, California
# 1922, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
# 1923, Columbus, Ohio
# 1924
# 1925, Detroit, Michigan
# 1926
# 1927
# 1928, Boston, Massachusetts
Presidents
The presidents of the WCTU and their terms of office are:
# 1874 - 1879 -
Annie Turner Wittenmyer
# 1879 - 1898 -
Frances Willard
# 1898 - 1914 -
Lillian M. N. Stevens
# 1914 - 1925 -
Anna Adams Gordon
# 1925 - 1933 -
Ella A. Boole
Ella Alexander Boole (July 26, 1858 – March 13, 1952) was an American temperance leader and social reformer. She served as president of the World's Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) from 1931 to 1947, after serving as president of ...
# 1933 - 1944 -
Ida B. Wise
# 1944 - 1953 -
Mamie White Colvin
# 1953 - 1959 -
Agnes Dubbs Hays
Agnes or Agness may refer to:
People
*Agnes (name), the given name, and a list of people named Agnes or Agness
*Wilfrid Marcel Agnès (1920–2008), Canadian diplomat
Places
*Agnes, Georgia, United States, a ghost town
*Agnes, Missouri, United S ...
# 1959 - 1974 -
Ruth Tibbets Tooze
Ruth (or its variants) may refer to:
Places
France
* Château de Ruthie, castle in the commune of Aussurucq in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques département of France
Switzerland
* Ruth, a hamlet in Cologny
United States
* Ruth, Alabama
* Ruth, Ark ...
# 1974 - 1980 -
Edith Kirkendall Stanley
Edith is a feminine given name derived from the Old English words ēad, meaning 'riches or blessed', and is in common usage in this form in English, German, many Scandinavian languages and Dutch. Its French form is Édith. Contractions and var ...
# 1980 - 1988 -
Martha Greer Edgar
Martha (Hebrew: מָרְתָא) is a biblical figure described in the Gospels of Luke and John. Together with her siblings Lazarus and Mary of Bethany, she is described as living in the village of Bethany near Jerusalem. She was witness to ...
# 1988 - 1996 -
Rachel Bubar Kelly
# 1996 - 2006 -
Sarah Frances Ward
Sarah (born Sarai) is a biblical matriarch and prophetess, a major figure in Abrahamic religions. While different Abrahamic faiths portray her differently, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all depict her character similarly, as that of a piou ...
# 2006 - 2014 -
Rita Kaye Wert
Rita may refer to:
People
* Rita (given name)
* Rita (Indian singer) (born 1984)
* Rita (Israeli singer) (born 1962)
* Rita (Japanese singer)
* Eliza Humphreys (1850–1938), wrote under the pseudonym Rita
Places
* Djarrit, also known as Rita ...
# 2014 - 2019 -
Sarah Frances Ward
Sarah (born Sarai) is a biblical matriarch and prophetess, a major figure in Abrahamic religions. While different Abrahamic faiths portray her differently, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all depict her character similarly, as that of a piou ...
# 2019 - Current -
Merry Lee Powell
Merry may refer to:
A happy person with a jolly personality People
* Merry (given name)
* Merry (surname)
Music
* Merry (band), a Japanese rock band
* ''Merry'' (EP), an EP by Gregory Douglass
* "Merry" (song), by American power pop band Mag ...
Notable people
A-C
*
Sarah C. Acheson
Sarah C. Acheson (February 20, 1844 – January 16, 1899) was an American temperance activist, born in Washington, Pennsylvania, on 20 February 1844.
Biography
Sarah Cooke Acheson was born in Washington, Pennsylvania on February 20, 1844. She was ...
*
Jessie Ackermann
*
Lucia H. Faxon Additon
*
Mary Osburn Adkinson
*
Mary Jane Aldrich
Mary Jane Aldrich (, Johnston; March 19, 1833 – April 27, 1909) was an American temperance reformer, lecturer, and essayist of the long nineteenth century. She served as vice-president of the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) an ...
*
Eunice Gibbs Allyn
Eunice Gibbs Allyn (, Gibbs; pen names, (multiple); 1847 – June 30, 1916) was an American correspondent, author, songwriter, illustrator, and painter. She intended to become a teacher, but her mother dissuaded her so she remained at home, enter ...
*
Edith Archibald
Edith Jessie Archibald (7 April 1854 – 11 May 1936) was a Canadian suffragist and writer who led the Maritime Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), National Council of Women of Canada and the Local Council of Women of Halifax. For her many ...
*
Ida A. T. Arms
*
Lily Atkinson
*
Clara Babcock
*
Lepha Eliza Bailey
Lepha Eliza Bailey (, Dunton; January 21, 1845 − May 1, 1924) was an American author, lecturer, and social reformer.
Her girlhood was passed in Wisconsin when that part of the country was a wilderness. Afterwards, she became a lecturer of natio ...
*
Helen Morton Barker
Helen Morton Barker (, Morton; December 7, 1834 – May 6, 1910) was an American social reformer active in the temperance movement. For twelve years, she served as treasurer of the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU).
Early life a ...
*
Frances Julia Barnes
*
Susan Hammond Barney
*
Emma Curtiss Bascom
*
Josephine Cushman Bateham
Josephine Cushman Bateham (, Penfield; after first marriage, Cushman, after second marriage, Bateham; pen name, Mrs. J. C. Bateham; November 1, 1829 – March 15, 1901) was an American social reformer, editor, and writer in the temperance movement. ...
*
Marion Babcock Baxter
*
Frances Estill Beauchamp
Frances Estill Beauchamp (, Estill; June 27, 1860 – April 11, 1923) was an American temperance activist, social reformer, and lecturer. In 1886, Beauchamp took active responsibilities of leadership in the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU ...
*
Emma Lee Benedict
*
Anna Smeed Benjamin
*
Mary Crowell Van Benschoten
*
Martia L. Davis Berry
Martia L. Davis Berry (, Davis; January 22, 1844 – January 13, 1894) was a 19th-century American social reformer. From her childhood, she took for her life motto and work, "God and home and native land" in whatever opportunities might be availabl ...
*
Belle G. Bigelow
Isabelle Gabriel Green Bigelow (February 16, 1851 – January 11, 1925) was an American suffragist and prohibitionist.
Early life and education
Isabelle ( nickname "Belle") Gabriel Green was born on a farm in Gilead Township, Michigan, on Februa ...
*
Lettie S. Bigelow
Lettie S. Bigelow (July 30, 1849 – March 1, 1906; pen name, Aunt Dorothy) was an American poet and author of the long nineteenth century. She was affiliated with the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.) in Massachusetts.
Early life ...
*
Suessa Baldridge Blaine
*
Ellen A. Dayton Blair
*
Emily Rose Bleby
*
Astrid Blume
Astrid Blume (May 12, 1872 – 1924) was a Danish educator and temperance advocate.
Biography
Astrid Blume was born in Jutland, May 12, 1872. She was president of the Danish branch of the World's Woman's Christian Temperance Union and editor of it ...
*
Mary Shuttleworth Boden
Mary Shuttleworth Boden (25 March 1840 – 21 July 1922) was an activist in the British temperance movement. She was affiliated with the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W. C. T. U.), British Women's Temperance Association (B. W. T. A.), Bri ...
*
Lizzie Borden
Lizzie Andrew Borden (July 19, 1860 – June 1, 1927) was an American woman tried and acquitted of the August 4, 1892 axe murders of her father and stepmother in Fall River, Massachusetts. No one else was charged in the murders, and despite ost ...
*
Caroline G. Boughton
Caroline Greenhank Boughton (August 9, 1854 - 1905) was an American educator and philanthropist.
Early life
Caroline Greenhank was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on August 9, 1854. She was the second daughter of Judge Thomas Greenbank of th ...
*
Emma E. Bower
Emma E. Bower (1852 – October 11, 1937) was an American physician, and a newspaper owner, publisher, and editor. She was also an active clubwoman. Bower practiced medicine in Detroit, Michigan before returning to Ann Arbor, Michigan where, from ...
*
Euphemia Bridges Bowes
*
Ada Chastina Bowles
*
Leah Belle Kepner Boyce
*
Kate Parker Scott Boyd
*
Caroline Brown Buell
*
Helen Louise Bullock
Helen Louise Bullock (née Helen Louise Chapel; April 29, 1836 – 1927) was a music educator, social reformer, suffragist, and philanthropist from the U.S. state of New York (state), New York. For 35 years, she taught piano, organ and guitar. Sh ...
*
Annie Babbitt Bulyea
*
Adda Burch
*
Nelle G. Burger
*
Emeline S. Burlingame
*
Cynthia S. Burnett
Cynthia S. Burnett (after marriage, Cynthia Burnett-Haney; May 1, 1840 - July 24, 1932) was an American educator, temperance reformer, and newspaper editor. She passed her early life in Ohio, but her first temperance movement work was done in Illi ...
*
Woodnut S. Burr
Woodnut Conwell Stilwell Burr (August 28, 1861 – December 19, 1952) was an ardent worker for women's suffrage in the United States.
Early life
Woodnut Conwell Stilwell Burr was born on August 28, 1861, in Anderson, Indiana, the daughter of Thom ...
*
Mary Towne Burt
Mary Towne Burt (, Towne; March 28, 1842 – April 29, 1898) was a 19th-century American Temperance movement, temperance reformer, newspaper publisher, and Benefactor (law), benefactor from Ohio. Burt was identified with temperance work nearly all ...
*
Lucy Wood Butler
*
Alice Sudduth Byerly
*
Alice A. W. Cadwallader
*
Emor L. Calkins
Emor L. Calkins ( Capron; October 3, 1853 – January 24, 1933) was an American temperance leader and lecturer. After uniting with the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.), she served in several capacities including State vice-president ...
*
Matilda Carse
*
Annie Carvosso
*
Jennie Casseday
Jennie Casseday (June 9, 1840 – February 8, 1893) was a 19th-century American philanthropist, social reformer, school founder, and letter writer. Born in Louisville, Kentucky, in 1840, her girlhood passed amid the surroundings of a wealthy Christ ...
*
Rebecca Ballard Chambers
*
Nettie Sanford Chapin
Nettie Sanford Chapin (, Skiff; after first marriage, Sanford; after second marriage, Chapin; pseudonym, E. N. Chapin; March 28, 1830 – August 20, 1901) was a 19th-century American teacher, historian, author, newspaper publisher, suffragist, an ...
*
Sallie F. Chapin
*
Fanny DuBois Chase
*
Louise L. Chase
Louise L. Chase ( Bond; September 2, 1840 – September 19, 1906) was an American social reformer. She was elected president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.) of Middletown, Rhode Island, and elected president of the Woman's Fore ...
*
Annetta R. Chipp
Annetta R. Chipp ( Biggs; after first marriage, Klingensmith; after second marriage, Chipp; May 2, 1866 – March 25, 1961) was an American temperance leader and prison evangelist. She served as president of the South Idaho Woman's Christian Temp ...
*
Mamie Claflin
Mamie Claflin ( Perkins; March 8, 1867 – December 1, 1929) was an American temperance and woman suffrage leader. In addition to serving six years as president of the Nebraska Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.) (1912–18), for 16 years ...
*
Annie W. Clark
Annie W. Clark (August 21, 1843 – July 3, 1907) was an American social reformer and leader in the temperance movement. She served as president of the Ohio Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU).
Early life and education
Annie Wood Clark was ...
*
Clara Amelia Rankin Coblentz
Clara Rankin Coblentz (, Rankin; August 19, 1863 – March 6, 1933) was an American temperance reformer and clubwoman. Coblentz held leadership positions in a number of organizations including president of the Non-Partisan National Women's Christi ...
*
Cordelia Throop Cole
Cordelia Throop Cole (, Throop; November 17, 1833 – April 29, 1900) was a 19th-century American social reformer, who lectured, wrote, and edited on behalf the temperance crusade and social purity movement. She made valuable contributions with h ...
*
Julia Colman
Julia Colman (pen name, Aunt Julia; February 16, 1828 – January 10, 1909) was an American temperance educator, activist, editor and writer of the long nineteenth century. She served as superintendent of literature in the Woman's Christian Temp ...
*
Sara Jane Crafts
Sara Jane Crafts (, Timanus; pen name, Mrs. Wilbur F. Crafts; August 15, 1845 – May 2, 1930) was an American social reformer, author, lecturer, and teacher. She lectured and taught at Chautauquas, as well as a lecturer at State and International ...
*
Mary Helen Peck Crane
*
Ella D. Crawford
*
Belle Caldwell Culbertson
Belle Caldwell Culbertson (, Caldwell; February 23, 1857 – August 4, 1934) was an American author and philanthropist, active in social and religious reforms. She served as president, Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Presbytery of Washi ...
*
Mary Ann Cunningham
*
Nannie Webb Curtis
Nannie Webb Curtis (, Austin; after first marriage, Webb; after second marriage, Curtis; June 22, 1861 - March 29, 1920) was an American lecturer and temperance activist, widely-known as a clubwoman. She wrote essays on the topic and edited a mag ...
D-K
*
Frances Brackett Damon
Frances Brackett Damon (, Brackett; pen name, Percy Larkin; May 21, 1857 – December 13, 1939) was an American writer of poetry, short stories, essays, playlets, and novels. She was also an editor of the literary magazines, ''The Quiet Hours'' a ...
*
Mary L. Doe
Mary Lydia Doe (née Mary Lydia Thompson; 1836–1913) was a 19th-century American suffragist, temperance reformer, teacher, and author from the U.S. state of Ohio. She served as the first president of the Michigan State Equal Suffrage Association, ...
*
Sara J. Dorr
Sara J. Dorr (June 17, 1855 – December 31, 1924) was an American temperance leader. She served as California state president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). Aside from her anti-liquor activities, Dorr had been prominent in r ...
*
Eva Craig Graves Doughty
Eva C. Doughty (, Graves; December 1, 1852 – November 4, 1929) was an American journalist, newspaper editor, and suffragist. She was the co-founder of the Michigan Woman's Press Association and the Mt. Pleasant Library, Literary and Musical Ass ...
*
Alice May Douglas
Alice May Douglas (June 28, 1865 – January 6, 1943) was an American author of poetry, children's literature, and non-fiction, as well as a newspaper editor.
Biography
Alice May Douglas was born in Bath, Maine, June 28, 1865, which remained her ...
*
Lavantia Densmore Douglass
*
Cornelia M. Dow
Cornelia Maria Dow (November 10, 1842 – October 12, 1905) was an American philanthropist and temperance leader, interested in charitable, philanthropic, and reformatory work in her home state of Maine. She was affiliated with the Woman's Chr ...
*
Marion Howard Dunham
Marion Howard Dunham (, Howard; December 6, 1842 – December 27, 1921) was an American teacher, temperance activist, and suffragist. She entered upon the temperance field in 1877 with the inauguration of the red ribbon movement in her state of Io ...
*
Harriet Ball Dunlap
*
Julia Knowlton Dyer
*
Ida Horton East
*
Mary G. Charlton Edholm
Mary G. Charlton Edholm (October 28, 1854 – November 29, 1935) was an American reformer and journalist. She worked as a journalist for twenty years.
Edholm was appointed World's Superintendent of Press work, at the Boston Convention of th ...
*
Margaret Dye Ellis
*
Nellie Blessing Eyster
Nellie Blessing Eyster (, Blessing; December 7, 1836 – February 21, 1922) was an American journalist, writer, lecturer, and social reformer. She was a grand-niece of Barbara Fritchie.
Eyster was the first President of the Pacific Coast Women's ...
*
Susan Frances Nelson Ferree
Susan F. Ferree (, Nelson; January 14, 1844 - September 6, 1919) was an American journalist and social reformer from Iowa. Ferree served as a Washington, D.C. newspaper correspondent. She favored women's suffrage and women's rights; she also affil ...
*
Susan Fessenden
Susan Fessenden (, Snowden; December 10, 1840 – September 12, 1932) was an American temperance worker, characterized as a progressive thinker upon all lines of reform. She served as president of the Massachusetts Woman's Christian Temperance Un ...
*
Jessie Forsyth
Jessie Forsyth (1847/49 – 1937) was a British-American temperance advocate. She joined the International Organisation of Good Templars (IOGT) in London in 1872, relocated to New England for decades, and celebrated her Jubilee while residing in ...
*
Bertha Fowler
*
Susanna M. D. Fry
Susanna M. D. Fry (, Davidson; February 4, 1841 – October 10, 1920) was an American educator and temperance worker. Her teaching career began in the primary department of the village school, but her superior ability as a teacher led her swiftly ...
*
Harriet E. Garrison
Harriet E. Garrison (October 20, 1848 – October 3, 1930) was an American physician and medical writer whose practice was based in Dixon, Illinois. She traveled widely and wrote on medical topics, presenting papers at medical conferences.
Early ...
*
Ella M. George
Ella M. George (, Martin; December 4, 1850 – March 31, 1938) was an American teacher, lecturer, and social reformer. For 25 years, she was a teacher in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. A long-time leader in temperance and other moral reforms, George se ...
*
Anna Adams Gordon
*
Elizabeth Putnam Gordon
*
Eva Kinney Griffith
Eva Kinney Griffith Miller (, Kinney; after first marriage, Griffith; after second marriage, Miller; November 8, 1852 – 1918) was an American journalist, temperance activist, novelist, newspaper editor, and journal publisher.
Griffith was lect ...
*
Hattie Tyng Griswold
Hattie Tyng Griswold ( Tyng; January 26, 1842 – January 22, 1909) was an American author of the long nineteenth century. She wrote many stories, sketches, and poems. Born in Boston, Griswold relocated with her family to Columbus, Wisconsin, in ...
*
Sophronia Farrington Naylor Grubb
Sophie Naylor Grubb (, Naylor; November 28, 1834 – November 5, 1902) was a 19th-century American activist. During the civil war, she began to manifest the ability, energy and enthusiasm for activism that distinguished her through life. She publi ...
*
Anna M. Hammer
*
Utako Hayashi
was a Japanese educator and social worker. As head of the Osaka branch of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, she led campaigns against businesses serving alcohol in 1909, 1912, and 1916. She was also active in the international woman's peace ...
*
Rebecca Naylor Hazard
*
S. M. I. Henry
Sarepta Myrenda Irish Henry (November 4, 1839 – January 16, 1900) was an American evangelist, temperance reformer, poet and author. She also wrote under the pen name Dina Linwood.
Henry was among the first to join the Women's Crusade. From the b ...
*
Eliza Trask Hill
*
Emily Caroline Chandler Hodgin
Emily Caroline Chandler Hodgin (April 12, 1838 – November 13, 1907) was an American temperance reformer. She was one of the leaders in the temperance crusade of Terre Haute, Indiana, in 1872, and was a delegate to the convention in Cleveland, Ohi ...
*
Clara Cleghorn Hoffman
*
Lillian Hollister
*
Jennie Florella Holmes
Jennie Florella Holmes (, Hurd; February 26, 1842 – March 20, 1892) was an American temperance activist and suffragist.
Biography
Jennie Florella Hurd was born on February 26, 1842 on a farm in Jersey County, Illinois, where she spent her ...
*
Mary Emma Holmes
*
Annabel Morris Holvey
*
Esther Housh
*
Emeline Harriet Howe
Emeline Harriet Howe (, Siggins; pen name, Emeline Harriet Siggins Howe; January 2, 1844 – February 28, 1934) was an American poet, writer and social activist. She was a graduate of the first class of Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle (C ...
*
Mary Hunt
Mary may refer to:
People
* Mary (name), a feminine given name (includes a list of people with the name)
Religious contexts
* New Testament people named Mary, overview article linking to many of those below
* Mary, mother of Jesus, also ca ...
*
Mary Bigelow Ingham
Mary Bigelow Ingham (, Janes; pen name, Anne Hathaway; March 10, 1832 - 17 November 1923) was an American author, educator, and religious worker. Dedicated to teaching, missionary work, and temperance reform, she served as professor of French and ' ...
*
Eliza Buckley Ingalls
Eliza Buckley Ingalls (August 24, 1848 – February 9, 1918) was an American temperance activist. Active in local and national activities of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), for twenty-seven years (1891-1918), Ingalls served as pres ...
*
Mary E. Ireland
Mary E. Ireland (, Haines; pen name, Marie Norman; January 9, 1834 – October 29, 1927) was an American author and translator. Born in Maryland, she lived a busy life in Washington, D.C., looking upon her literary labors as a recreation. Though ...
*
Hannah M. Underhill Isaac
*
Katharine Johnson Jackson
Katharine Johnson Jackson (better known as Kate J. Jackson; April 7, 1841 – 1921) was an American physician affiliated with the water cure movement at the Jackson Sanatorium in Dansville, Livingston County, New York. Earlier in her life, she ...
*
Frances C. Jenkins
*
Therese A. Jenkins
*
Laura M. Johns
Laura M. Johns (, Mitchell; December 18, 1849 – July 22, 1935) was an Women's suffrage in the United States, American suffragist and journalist. She served as president of the Kansas State Suffrage Association six times, and her great work was ...
*
Carrie Ashton Johnson
*
Mary Coffin Johnson
Mary Coffin Johnson (, Coffin; July 15, 1834 - August 10, 1928) was an American activist and writer. She was acquainted with Abraham Lincoln, and was a friend of Henry Ward Beecher and his wife Eunice.
Biography
Mary Carol Coffin was born in North ...
*
Ella Eaton Kellogg
Ella Eaton Kellogg (April 7, 1853 – June 14, 1920) was an American dietitian known for her work on home economics and vegetarian cooking. She was educated at Alfred University (B.A. 1872, A.M. 1875); and the American School Household Economics ...
*
Agnes Kemp
Agnes Nininger Saunders Kemp (November 4, 1823 – 1908) was a 19th-century American physician who was a national leader in the temperance movement as well as the first woman to practice medicine in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Family and education
...
*
Narcissa Edith White Kinney
*
Janette Hill Knox
Janette Hill Knox (January 24, 1845 – July 28, 1920) was an American temperance reformer, suffragist, teacher, author and editor.
Biography
Janette Hill was born in Londonderry, Vermont, January 24, 1845. She was the daughter of Lewis Hill, a r ...
L-R
*
Imogen LaChance
Imogen LaChance (, Hanscom; November 22, 1853 – August 1938) was an American social reformer active in the temperance movement for 60 years. She served as president of the Arizona State Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.). She was also ...
*
Sarah Doan La Fetra
Sarah Doan La Fetra (June 11, 1843 - May 7, 1919) was an American temperance worker.
Biography
Sarah Doan was born in Sabina, Ohio, on June 11, 1843, the fourth daughter of the Rev. Timothy Doan (1814–1891) and Mary Ann Custis (1811–1898). H ...
*
Mary Torrans Lathrap
Mary Lathrap ( Torrans; April 25, 1838 - January 3, 1895), pen name: Lena; known as "The Daniel Webster of Prohibition", was a 19th-century American author, preacher, suffragist, and temperance reformer. For 20 years, she was identified with the ...
*
Maria Elise Turner Lauder
Maria Elise Turner Lauder (pen name Toofie Lauder, also known as Maria Elise Turner de Touffe Lauder; 20 February 1833 – 1 June 1922) was a Canadian teacher, linguist, and author who travelled extensively in Europe. She published novels and poe ...
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Louisa Lawson
Louisa Lawson (née Albury) (17 February 1848 – 12 August 1920) was an Australian poet, writer, publisher, suffragist, and feminist. She was the mother of the poet and author Henry Lawson.
Early life
Louisa Albury was born on 17 February ...
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Olive Moorman Leader
Olive Ann Moorman Leader (July 28, 1852 – April 9, 1930) was a Temperance movement, temperance reformer.
Early life
Olive Ann Moorman was born in Franklin, Ohio, on July 28, 1852, the daughter of Thomas J. Moorman (1810-1883) and Mary Yates (18 ...
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Mary Greenleaf Clement Leavitt
Mary Greenleaf Clement Leavitt (September 22, 1830 – February 5, 1912) was an educator and successful orator who became the first round-the-world missionary for the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). Setting out on virtually non-stop wo ...
*
Lilah Denton Lindsey
Lilah Denton Lindsey (October 21, 1860 - 1943, Muscogee/Cherokee) was a Native American philanthropist, civic leader, women's community organizer, temperance worker, and teacher. She was the first Muscogee woman to earn a college degree. She led ...
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Margaret Bright Lucas
Margaret Bright Lucas (14 July 1818 – 4 February 1890) was a British temperance activist and suffragist. She served as president of the British Women's Temperance Association (BWTA), the World's Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), and ...
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Nellie V. Mark
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Abbie K. Mason
Abbie K. Mason (September 1861 – August 7, 1908) was a Black American suffragist. She was known as the president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) and taught the lessons of Frederick Douglass at the Memorial African Methodist Episc ...
*
Asa Matsuoka
was a Japanese philanthropist and cultural ambassador best known as the founder and first chairman of the List of UNICEF national committees, UNICEF National Committee for Japan. She was born in Kyōbashi, Tokyo, Kyōbashi-ku, Tokyo (now part of ...
*
Harriet Calista Clark McCabe
Harriet Calista Clark McCabe (1827 - September 25, 1919) was a philanthropist, a pioneer in women's work for temperance and missions.
Early life
Harriet Calista Clark McCabe was born in Sidney Plains, Delaware County, New York. Her parents were ...
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Mary A. McCurdy
Martha "Mary" A. Harris Mason McCurdy (August 10, 1852 – 1934) was an African-American Temperance movement, temperance advocate and suffragist. She had a career in journalism that included editing the newspaper "Women's World".
Biography
McCu ...
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Elizabeth McCracken
Elizabeth McCracken (born 1966) is an American author. She is a recipient of the PEN New England Award.
Life and career
McCracken, a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, graduated from Newton North High ...
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Olive Dickerson McHugh
Olive Eva Dickerson McHugh (October 3, 1885 - April 5, 1978), instructor of piano and voice, was the President of the Federated Woman's Club of Mullan.
Early life
Olive Eva Dickerson was born in Guide Rock, Nebraska, on October 3, 1885, the daugh ...
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Margaret McLean
Margaret McLean (; 7 April 1845 – 14 February 1923) was a Scottish Australian temperance and women's rights advocate.
Early life
She was born Margaret Arnot in 1845 at Irvine, North Ayrshire, Scotland. She was the eldest child of Andrew Arnot ...
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Jeanette DuBois Meech
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Caroline Elizabeth Merrick
Caroline Elizabeth Merrick (November 24, 1825 – March 29, 1908) was an American writer and temperance worker. She is the author of ''Old Times in Dixie Land: a Southern Matron's Memories'' (1901). Taking an active part in the charitable and phi ...
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Cornelia Moore Chillson Moots
Cornelia Moore Chillson Moots ( nickname, “Mother Moots”; October 14, 1843 – 1929) was an American missionary and temperance evangelist. She was one of four pioneer missionaries of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Epi ...
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Mary L. Moreland
Mary L. Moreland (December 23, 1859 – March 17, 1918) was an Congregationalism in the United States, American Congregational minister as well as a teacher and a writer. Among her publications can be counted ''Which, Right or Wrong?'' (1883) and ...
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Carrie Nation
Caroline Amelia Nation (November 25, 1846June 9, 1911), often referred to by Carrie, Carry Nation, Carrie A. Nation, or Hatchet Granny, was a radical member of the temperance movement, which opposed alcohol before the advent of Prohibition. N ...
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A. Viola Neblett
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Angelia Thurston Newman
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Della Whitney Norton
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Hannah Borden Palmer
Hannah Borden Palmer (October 8, 1843 - January 26, 1940) was a temperance reformer.
Early life and family
Hannah Chambers Borden was born in Battle Creek, Michigan, on October 8, 1843. Her father was a Presbyterian clergyman, Edmund Woodmanse ...
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Sarah Maria Clinton Perkins
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Alice E. Heckler Peters
Alice E. Heckler Peters (March 13, 1845 - April 11, 1921) was an American social reformer, educator, writer, and poet. She was involved in several women's religious, reform and social organizations of her era including the Woman's Christian Temper ...
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Belle L. Pettigrew
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Esther Pugh
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Jennie Phelps Purvis
Jennie Phelps Purvis (, Phelps; pen name, Hagar; February 23, 1831 – November 16, 1924) was an American writer, suffragist, temperance reformer, and a California pioneer. She was well-known in literary circles in her early life -counting Bret H ...
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Emily Lee Sherwood Ragan
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Anna Rankin Riggs
Anna Rankin Riggs (January 25, 1835 – May 7, 1908) was an American social reformer of the long nineteenth century. Active in the temperance movement, she began her work in Bloomington, Illinois, where she was one of early board of managers of '' ...
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Mary A. Ripley
Mary A. Ripley (January 11, 1831 – June 3, 1893) was an American author, lecturer, and teacher. She taught in the schools of Buffalo, New York for 40 years, including 13 in the grammar schools and 27 in the high school. The Mary A. Ripley Memo ...
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Laura Jacinta Rittenhouse
Laura J. Rittenhouse (, Arter; April 30, 1841 – July 11, 1911) was an American temperance activist, juvenile literature author, poet, businesswoman, and club-woman of the long nineteenth century. She was the author of the poem, "Out of the Dept ...
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Elizabeth Lownes Rust
Elizabeth Lownes Rust (, Lownes; 1835 – October 3, 1899) was a 19th-century American philanthropist, humanitarian, and Christian missionary. She conceived the idea of the Woman's Home Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and a ...
S-Z
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Susanna M. Salter
Susanna Madora Salter (; March 2, 1860 – March 17, 1961) was an American politician and activist. She served as mayor of Argonia, Kansas, becoming the first woman elected to serve as mayor in the United States and one of the first women to ...
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Semane Setlhoko Khama
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Kate Sheppard
Katherine Wilson Sheppard ( Catherine Wilson Malcolm; 10 March 1848 – 13 July 1934) was the most prominent member of the women's suffrage movement in New Zealand and the country's most famous suffragist. Born in Liverpool, England, she emi ...
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Katherine Call Simonds
Katherine Call Simonds (, Call; December 12, 1865 – January 28, 1946) was an American musician, dramatic soprano, composer, songwriter, and social reformer. She gave entire concert programs of her own songs, conducted many choruses and did muc ...
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Henrietta Skelton
Henrietta Skelton (, Hedderich; pen names, H. S.; Madame Skelton; November 5, 1839/1842 – August 22, 1900) was a 19th-century German-born Canadian-American social reformer, writer, organizer, and lecturer in the German Spanish, and English langu ...
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Eva Munson Smith
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Olive White Smith
Alice Matilda "Olive" White Smith (December 25, 1846 - August 26, 1918) was an American writer and poet.
Early life
Alice Matilda "Olive" White was born in Clarendon, Vermont, on December 25, 1846. Her ancestors were among the early settlers of ...
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Georgiana Solomon
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Ruth Hinshaw Spray
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Amelia Minerva Starkweather
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Susan J. Swift Steele
Susan J. Swift Steele (December 25, 1822 – September 4, 1895) was an American social reformer. She was affiliated with the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), and the ...
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Emily Pitts Stevens
Emily Pitts Stevens (, Pitts; 1841/44 – September 13, 1906) was an American educator, temperance activist, and early San Francisco suffragist. She was the editor and publisher of ''The Pioneer'', the first women’s suffrage journal in the West C ...
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Lillian M. N. Stevens
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Katharine Lente Stevenson
Katharine Lent Stevenson (, Lent; May 8, 1853 – 1919) was an American temperance reformer, missionary, and editor. She was a successful platform speaker, writer and officer of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) on whose behalf she al ...
*
Eliza Daniel Stewart
Eliza Daniel Stewart (April 25, 1816 – August 6, 1908) was an American early temperance movement leader. She sometimes referred to herself as "Mother Stewart".
Biography
Eliza Daniel Stewart was born in Piketon, Ohio on April 25, 1816.
Stewart ...
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Jane Agnes Stewart
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Mary Ingram Stille
Mary Ingram Stille (July 1, 1854 – November 4, 1935) was an American historian, journalist, and temperance reformer. The early success of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.) in Pennsylvania was largely due through her efforts.
E ...
*
Missouri H. Stokes
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Maria Straub
*
Flora E. Strout
Flora Effie Strout (April 28, 1867 – November 5, 1962) was an American teacher and social reformer. Early on, she taught at Lyman School for Boys in Massachusetts and then at Morgan College (now Morgan State University), where she also served ...
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Margaret Ashmore Sudduth
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Lucy Robbins Messer Switzer
Lucy Switzer (, Robbins; after first marriage, Messer; after second marriage, Switzer; March 28, 1844 - May 24, 1922) was an American temperance and suffrage activist. She wrote many articles for ''Pacific Christian Advocate'' and the ''Christian H ...
*
Hannah E. Taylor
Hannah E. Barker Taylor (born August 18, 1835) was a poet and active member of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union.
Early life
Hannah E. Barker was born in Fredericton, New Brunswick, on August 18, 1835. She was of English descent and Native ...
*
Eva Griffith Thompson
Eva Griffith Thompson (, Griffith; pen name, Eva G.; June 30, 1842 – February 6, 1925) was an American newspaper editor who conducted the ''Indiana Times'', the ''Indiana Messenger'', and the ''News'', of Indiana, Pennsylvania. First married and ...
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Mandana Coleman Thorp
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Lydia H. Tilton
Lydia H. Tilton (, Heath; July 10, 1839 – July 26, 1915) was an American journalist and temperance worker. Also a poet, she was well known in literary circles. "Old Glory", lyrics by Tilton, set to the tune of " Dixie", was the national song ...
*
Anna Augusta Truitt
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Alice Bellvadore Sams Turner
Alice Bellvadore Sams Turner (or Sams-Turner; also known as Alice B. S. Turner; March 13/18, 1859 – July 10, 1915) was an American physician, who also taught school, and was a frequent contributor to the public press. She graduated with the Clas ...
*
Phoebe Jane Babcock Wait
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Anne Ward
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Elizabeth Jane Ward
Elizabeth Jane Ward (27 March 1842 – 29 May 1908) was an Australian evangelist and active parish worker for the Church of England known for her involvement in various women's Christian organisations and campaigning for women's suffrage.
Ea ...
*
Lala Fay Watts
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Mary Allen West
Mary Allen West (July 13, 1837 – December 1, 1892) was an American journalist, editor, educator, philanthropist, superintendent of schools, and temperance worker. A teacher in her early career, she served as superintendent of schools in Knox Coun ...
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M. Ella Whipple
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Reah Whitehead
Reah Mary Whitehead (April 11, 1883 – October 13, 1972) was one of the first female lawyers in Washington state and the first female Justice of the Peace in King County and Washington state.
Early life
Reah Mary Whitehead was born on April 11 ...
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Sophronia Wilson Wagoner
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Mary A. Hitchcock Wakelin
Mary A. Hitchcock Wakelin (, Barnes; after first marriage, Hitchcock; after second marriage, Wakelin; April 28, 1834 – February 25, 1900) was a 19th-century American educator and temperance reformer. In 1874, she started the movement that res ...
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Adelaide Cilley Waldron
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Mary Evalin Warren
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Lucy Hall Washington
Lucy H. Washington (, Walker; January 4, 1835 – September 2, 1913) was an American poet and social reformer of the long nineteenth century, active in the temperance movement. For many years, she was engaged in Woman's Christian Temperance Union ...
*
Laura Moore Westbrook
Laura A. Moore Westbrook (1859-1894) was an American educator, lecturer, and activist.
Early life and education
Laura A. Moore was born to enslaved parents Amelia and Richard Moore in Tipton County, Tennessee and likely spent the first several y ...
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Agnes Weston
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Mary Sparkes Wheeler
Mary Sparkes Wheeler (, Sparkes; 21 June 1835 – 21 January 1919) was a British-born American author, poet, and lecturer. She wrote the lyrics to several hymns, including two well-known soldiers' decoration hymns. Her poems were set to music by ...
*
Dora V. Wheelock
Dora V. Wheelock (, Palmer; August 26, 1847 – February 3, 1923) was an American activist and writer involved in the temperance movement. She served as president of the Nebraska state branch of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), the N ...
*
Laura Rosamond White
Laura Rosamond White (October 23, 1844 – July 4, 1922) was an American author and editor whose work was affiliated with the Woman's Relief Corps, Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.), and the Non-Partisan National Woman's Christian Tem ...
*
Hannah Tyler Wilcox
Hannah Tyler Wilcox (August 31, 1838-Nov. 22, 1909) was an American physician.
Early life
Hannah Tyler was born in Boonville, New York, on August 31, 1838. Her father, Amos Tyler, was a cousin of President John Tyler. His liberal ideas on the su ...
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Margaret Ray Wickens
Margaret Ray Wickens (August 3, 1843 – November 24, 1918) was an American public affairs organizer and social reformer. She served as national president of the Woman's Relief Corps (W.R.C.). Eloquent, Wickins was called the "Golden-tongued orator ...
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Frances Willard
*
Mary Bannister Willard
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Jennie Fowler Willing
Jennie Fowler Willing (January 22, 1834 – October 6, 1916) was a Canadian-born American educator, author, preacher, social reformer, and suffragist. She married a lawyer and Methodist pastor at age 19. In 1873, she and her husband became professo ...
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Ella B. Ensor Wilson
Ella B. Ensor Wilson (, Ensor; also known as, Mrs. Augustus Wilson; 1838 – September 11, 1913) was an American social reformer and writer of the long nineteenth century associated with the women's suffrage and temperance movements. She was a stro ...
*
Zara A. Wilson
Zara A. Wilson (born October 8, 1840) was an American reformer and lawyer.
Early life and family
Zara Mahurin was born in Burnettsville, Indiana, on October 8, 1840. She was the fourth in a family of eight children. Her maiden name was Mahur ...
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Ida B. Wise
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Mary A. Brayton Woodbridge
Mary Brayton Woodbridge (April 21, 1830 – October 25, 1894) was an American temperance reformer and editor. She was the first president of the local temperance union of her home town at Ravenna; then for years, president of her state, Ohio; and ...
*
Caroline M. Clark Woodward
Caroline M. Clark Woodward (November 17, 1840 – November 20, 1924) was an American temperance activist, who entered the field in 1882 as a temperance writer. She was affiliated with the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.) in Nebraska ...
*
Lenna Lowe Yost
See also
*
Frances Willard House (Evanston, Illinois)
*
List of Temperance organizations
The Temperance and prohibition movement has taken many organizational forms, from fraternal orders to political parties to activist groups.
Activist groups
* American Temperance Society
* Anti-Saloon League, which was renamed as the American C ...
*
List of suffragists and suffragettes
This list of suffragists and suffragettes includes noted individuals active in the worldwide women's suffrage movement who have campaigned or strongly advocated for women's suffrage, the organisations which they formed or joined, and the public ...
*
Non-Partisan National Woman's Christian Temperance Union Non-Partisan National Women's Christian Temperance Union was an American temperance association organized at Cleveland, Ohio, January 22, 1890, as a protest against the attitude of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.) toward political ...
*
Scientific Temperance Federation {{no footnotes, date=September 2009
The Scientific Temperance Federation was founded in 1906 upon the death of Mary Hunt, head of the Women's Christian Temperance Union's Department of Scientific Temperance Instruction.
Mrs. Hunt had avoided accu ...
*
Temperance movement
The temperance movement is a social movement promoting temperance or complete abstinence from consumption of alcoholic beverages. Participants in the movement typically criticize alcohol intoxication or promote teetotalism, and its leaders emph ...
*
Timeline of women's suffrage
Women's suffrage – the right of women to vote – has been achieved at various times in countries throughout the world. In many nations, women's suffrage was granted before universal suffrage, so women and men from certain classes or races w ...
*
White Ribbon Association, similar British organization
*
Woman's Christian Temperance Union Administration Building
*
Woman's Christian Temperance Union Fountain
*
Women's suffrage organizations
*
Women in the United States Prohibition movement The Temperance movement began long before the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was introduced. Across the country different groups began lobbying for temperance by arguing that alcohol was morally corrupting and hurting familie ...
References
Bibliography
*
Chapin, Clara Christiana Morgan. (1895) '' Thumb Nail Sketches of White Ribbon Women: Official''. Woman's Temperance Publishing Association: Evanston.
* Dannenbaum, Jed. (1984) Drink and Disorder: Temperance Reform in Cincinnati from the Washingtonian Revival to the WCTU'' (University of Illinois Press, 1984).
*
* Lamme, Meg Opdycke. (2011) "Shining a calcium light: The WCTU and public relations history." ''Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly'' 88.2 (2011): 245-266.
* Lappas, Thomas John. (2020) ''In League Against King Alcohol: Native American Women and the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, 1874–1933'' (University of Oklahoma Press, 2020
excerpt* Mattingly, Carol. (1995) "Woman‐tempered rhetoric: Public presentation and the WCTU." ''Rhetoric Review'' 14.1 (1995): 44-61.
* Parker, Alison M. (1999) " 'Hearts Uplifted and Minds Refreshed': The Woman's Christian Temperance Union and the Production of Pure Culture in the United States, 1880-1930." ''Journal of Women's History'' 11.2 (1999): 135-158
online
* Parker, Alison M. (1997). ''Purifying America: Women, Cultural Reform, and Pro-Censorship Activism, 1873-1933,'' (U of Illinois Press).
* Sheehan, Nancy M. (1983) " 'Women helping women': The WCTU and the foreign population in the West, 1905–1930." ''International Journal of Women's Studies'' (1983) 6(5), 395–411
abstract
* Sims, Anastatia. (1987) " 'The Sword of the Spirit': The WCTU and Moral Reform in North Carolina, 1883-1933." ''North Carolina Historical Review'' 64.4 (1987): 394-415
online
* Tyrrell, Ian. (1986) "Temperance, Feminism, and the WCTU: New Interpretations and New Directions." ''Australasian Journal of American Studies'' 5.2 (1986): 27-36
online historiography
* Tyrrell, Ian. (1991) ''Woman's World/Woman's Empire: The Woman's Christian Temperance Union in International Perspective 1880-1930,'' The University of Carolina Press, Chapel Hill and London.
* Tyrrell, Ian. (2010) ''Reforming the World: the creation of America's moral Empire,''
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press is an independent Academic publishing, publisher with close connections to Princeton University. Its mission is to disseminate scholarship within academia and society at large.
The press was founded by Whitney Darrow, ...
,
* Woman's Christian Temperance Union Dept. of Scientific Instruction ''A History of the First Decade of the Department of Scientific Temperance Instruction in Schools and Colleges of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union: In Three Parts''. (1892) Published by G.E. Crosby & Co.
Australia and Canada
*
* 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.
* Hyslop, Anthea. (1976) "Temperance, Christianity and feminism: The woman's Christian temperance union of Victoria, 1887–97." ''Historical studies'' 17.66 (1976): 27-49. in Australia
online
* 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.
* Tyrrell, Ian. (1983) "International Aspects of the Woman's Temperance Movement in Australia: The Influence of the American WCTU, 1882–1914." ''Journal of Religious History'' 12.3 (1983): 284-304.
External links
World Woman's Christian Temperance Union*
ttp://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/WCTU-growth.html Modern History Sourcebook: Woman's Christian Temperance Union: Growth of Membership and of Local, Auxiliary Unions, 1879-1921“We Sang Rock of Ages”: Frances Willard Battles Alcohol in the late 19th century, by Frances Willardat the
Nebraska State Historical Society
History Nebraska, formerly the Nebraska State Historical Society is a Nebraska state agency, founded in 1878 to "encourage historical research and inquiry, spread historical information ... and to embrace alike aboriginal and modern history." I ...
WCTU in Our Heritage
Woman's Christian Temperance Union (Iowa Chapter) records at th
Iowa Women's Archives The University of Iowa Libraries, Iowa City
*
Ruth Tibbits Tooze Papers, 1938-1940 at th
Special Collections and Archives Research Center Oregon State University Libraries
{{Authority control
Temperance organizations in the United States
Anti-abortion organizations in the United States
Conservative organizations in the United States
1873 establishments in Ohio
History of women in the United States
Women's organizations based in the United States
Christian women's organizations
Organizations established in 1873
Christianity and society in the United States
International women's organizations
Christian temperance movement
Voter rights and suffrage organizations
Temperance organizations in Canada