The Depression Dilemmas of Rural Iowa, 1929-1933 by Lisa L. Ossian
Author:Lisa L. Ossian
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: University of Missouri Press
CHAPTER SEVEN
POLICY
Prohibition Possibly Prohibited: Voicing Temperance Concerns
Some day historians will taste of the prohibition pottage cooked on our present political cook stove, smack their lips and tell our grandchildren or great grandchildren students exactly what the recipe was and how it could have been improved had their forefathers (ourselves) not been so utterly blind and woefully stupid.
Prohibition is with us cloaked in a garb that is angel white or smeary with awful grime according to the kind of glasses one is peering through.
âFred A. Hinrichsen, Davenport, Iowa (1930)
Mrs. Albert G. Ossian, president of a local Women's Christian Temperance Union, delivered a short talk at the annual reception for the school faculty in Stanton on November 7, 1929. Mrs. Ossian (or Bessie) welcomed the teachers and explained the âScientific Temperance Instructionâ that the WCTU followed for school essay and poster contests. Another WCTU member, Mrs. Marie Ossian, then served the two-course luncheon. Three teenagers from the young people's branch (Misses Elva Ossian, Florence Anderson, and Marveline Reed) passed the plates while the forty-five members of this local chapter entertained their guests with renditions of pop songs.
And so continued a long tradition of local, state, and national participation of the still-active WCTU in 1929, almost a decade since the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment. Prohibition voices continued to support their cause in a variety of community social events as well as public speeches and political debates during the next three years, but the trend of the temperance tide was turning terribly quickly after the stock market crash, more than Mrs. Ossian or any other Prohibition leader could have imagined.1
The WCTU of Iowa had organized in November 1874, the same month as the national organization, and continued with strong membership numbers for each year until the 1930s. The union described its methods as evangelistic, educational, preventative, social, and legal. It promoted abstinence of all alcohol with various watchwords such as agitate, educate, and organize along with inspirations of love, loyalty, and light. The dues remained a $1 a year with a badge of knotted white ribbon as membership symbol, and the state records listed 60,000 Iowa women as paid members. Its official publication became The Iowa Champion, its songbook gleaned from The Loyal Temperance Legion, and its current motto rang with the phrase, âThe Eighteenth Amendment forever!â2
In 1930 this author's step-great-grandmother (Mrs. Albert Ossian) and other local residents still deeply believed in the Eighteenth Amendment, that Prohibition would continue until certainly their grandchildren or great-grandchildren came of age. Yet just three years into the new decade this delightful promise or dreadful experiment suddenly ended with the ratification of the Twenty-First Amendment, although repeal when the Eighteenth Amendment became official in 1920 had not seemed probable much less possible. An amendment to the Constitution of the United States implied constancy; certainly none had ever faced consideration for repeal.
In Iowa the dilemma of prohibition did not easily resolve itself nor did it simply fade away. Many devoted activists and average citizens continued to believe in their cause with a combination of a social, moral, or economic reasoning.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
| Africa | Americas |
| Arctic & Antarctica | Asia |
| Australia & Oceania | Europe |
| Middle East | Russia |
| United States | World |
| Ancient Civilizations | Military |
| Historical Study & Educational Resources |
The Dawn of Everything by David Graeber & David Wengrow(1685)
The Bomber Mafia by Malcolm Gladwell(1617)
Facing the Mountain by Daniel James Brown(1542)
Submerged Prehistory by Benjamin Jonathan; & Clive Bonsall & Catriona Pickard & Anders Fischer(1444)
Wandering in Strange Lands by Morgan Jerkins(1406)
Tip Top by Bill James(1401)
Driving While Brown: Sheriff Joe Arpaio Versus the Latino Resistance by Terry Greene Sterling & Jude Joffe-Block(1361)
Red Roulette : An Insider's Story of Wealth, Power, Corruption, and Vengeance in Today's China (9781982156176) by Shum Desmond(1344)
Evil Geniuses: The Unmaking of America: A Recent History by Kurt Andersen(1338)
The Way of Fire and Ice: The Living Tradition of Norse Paganism by Ryan Smith(1322)
American Kompromat by Craig Unger(1304)
It Was All a Lie by Stuart Stevens;(1291)
F*cking History by The Captain(1288)
American Dreams by Unknown(1277)
Treasure Islands: Tax Havens and the Men who Stole the World by Nicholas Shaxson(1251)
Evil Geniuses by Kurt Andersen(1247)
White House Inc. by Dan Alexander(1204)
The First Conspiracy by Brad Meltzer & Josh Mensch(1165)
The Fifteen Biggest Lies about the Economy: And Everything Else the Right Doesn't Want You to Know about Taxes, Jobs, and Corporate America by Joshua Holland(1112)