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Woman's Christian Temperance Union

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The politician and his dupes

The politician and his dupes

A politician agrees with a woman labeled “W.C.T.U.” and a man holding a Bible, who are standing on the right. Behind them are the locked and barricaded doors to a cafe on which is a sign “Closed Sunday.” On the left, behind the politician, is an open door labeled “Family Entrance” from which the cafe owner is placing a bribe in the politician’s right hand. Further to the left is a police officer leaning against the building, pretending not to notice the illegal transaction. Caption: Politician (to Temperance Element) — You’re right! The sanctity of the American Sabbath must be preserved!

comments and context

Comments and Context

The cartoon illustrates an anomaly in long-running debates about “Sunday closings” of saloons. Even today in much of the United States, local ordinances restrict liquor sales on Sundays, so the controversy has only quieted, not ended. At the time of this cartoon, the WCTU (Women’s Christians Temperance Union) and other groups including religious, social, and feminist, advocated a range of reforms from Sunday closings to full-fledged prohibition of spirits (and, often, tobacco). In many places, Sunday-closing laws were circumvented by reclassification of saloons as restaurants or hotels, rebirth as “private clubs,” or by outright bribery of police and judges. Gallaway’s cartoon portrays the depth of hypocrisy — the political establishment that not only enabled circumvention, but its virtue signals to prohibitionists. When Theodore Roosevelt enforced Sunday-closing laws as Police Commissioner of New York City, he endured criticism, for instance, from common laborers and their families, whose only days of rest were Sundays. But he maintained that the remedy was to change the regulations, not condone corruption.

A timely exposure

A timely exposure

Secretary of War Elihu Root holds up a lantern to illuminate a scene in an “Anti-Canteen Saloon” where soldiers have gone to drink and socialize in the absence of a canteen on the army base. It is over-run with drunkenness and violence. Caption: What the W.C.T.U. has effected by abolishing the army canteen.

comments and context

Comments and Context

Reformers argued, eventually with success, that Army canteens, even if liquor was dispensed there, had advantages over saloons and such establishments off military bases.

The canteen or the dive – in the name of decency and common sense, which is best for the American soldier?

The canteen or the dive – in the name of decency and common sense, which is best for the American soldier?

An Army officer stands in a doorway with a woman labeled “W.C.T.U.”, a clergyman, and a man labeled “Timid Legislator.” They are viewing scenes in a canteen, where soldiers are playing chess and reading, and a dive where soldiers are drunk, arguing, and consorting with prostitutes. Includes a lengthy caption about “W.C.T.U.” efforts to close canteens and the government’s unwillingness to reinstate them.

Collection

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs

Creation Date

1913-02-19

One result of abolishing the canteen

One result of abolishing the canteen

An intoxicated African American soldier shoots handguns in a street in front of “The Red Eye Hotel” where another soldier is being thrown out into the street. Caption: Respectfully submitted for the consideration of the W.C.T.U.

comments and context

Comments and Context

Despite the “Brownsville Affair” having occurred five months earlier, Puck‘s cover cartoon responded to the growing controversy. In August of 1906, a drunken melee took place in Brownsville, Texas, at a saloon frequented by “buffalo soldiers,” an all-black regiment stationed nearby. One night, guns were shot off by a mob; a bartender was killed and one local police officer wounded.

Memorandum for the Secretary of War

Memorandum for the Secretary of War

It is “very unusual” for groups or individuals to be granted special permission to enter military posts. While some such permissions were granted during the Spanish-American War, none have been granted since. General Corbin concludes that a general permit for the Women’s Christian Temperance Union to visit military posts should not be granted as other organizations would then expect the same privilege.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1903-03-17

Letter from Archibald McNichol Stevenson to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Archibald McNichol Stevenson to Theodore Roosevelt

Archibald McNichol Stevenson reviews recent events in Colorado politics, where women have already gained suffrage. One of the challenges is to get the “best women” involved in political affairs. Stevenson also discussed the delayed appointment of two postmasters in Colorado. (Pages 2 and 3 of the letter are not included in the Theodore Roosevelt Collection at the Library of Congress.)

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1902-01-03