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THE
FOUNDATION, PROGRESS AND PRINCIPLES
of the
WASHINGTON
TEMPERANCE SOCIETY
of BALTIMORE,
and
THE INFLUENCE IT HAS HAD ON THE TEMPERANCE
MOVEMENTS IN THE UNITED STATES.
By a Member of the Society
"I regard the origin of the Washington Temperance Society
of Baltimore as the most important event in the history of
the great Temperance movement."
Hon. George N. Briggs.
BALTIMORE
PRINTED BY JOHN D. TROY
1842
DEDICATION
TO
WILLIAM K. MITCHELL, JOHN F.
HOSS,
DAVID ANDERSON, GEORGE STEARS,
ARCHIBALD CAMPBELL, JAMES
M'CURLEY,
THE
FOUNDERS
OF THE
WASHINGTON TEMPERANCE SOCIETY
OF BALTIMORE
THESE PAGES ARE MOST RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED
BY THE AUTHOR.
ENTERED, according to the Act
of Congress, in the
year one thousand eight hundred and forty-two,
by
John Zug, in the Clerk's Office of the
District
Court of Maryland.
PREFACE
The author of the following pages has had no experience in "book- making,"
and this, his first effort has been made during the few leisure hours, which
could be found amid the duties of a laborious profession. This little volume is
therefore recommended to the public, not so much on account of its merits as
a composition, as for the intrinsic importance of the facts stated, and the
principles developed in it. The immediate object in view is to convey correct
information; the ultimate motive is to do good.
This volume was written with the design, not only of accurately
informing the public of the origin of the recent revival of Temperance
throughout the United States, but also of setting forth definitely the foundation
and principles of the "Washington Temperance Society" of Baltimore, with
which this revival mainly originated.
A new era has dawned upon the Temperance cause. A moral revolution,
in the form of the reformation of thousands of drunkards, is now sweeping
over the United States like a whirlwind. It meets with little opposition. All see,
and few will not admit, that it is founded in right and truth. Thousands of the
most abandoned drunkards are being reclaimed from their habits, and are
taking their proper stations, as good and useful members of the community.
Reformed men are visiting the different sections of the country, under the
designation and office of "Temperance Missionaries," - men who have
themselves been but recently reclaimed from intemperance, and who are now
devoting their time, and using their influence, to rescue others from their
degradation, to the same position of safety, which they themselves now
occupy.
All these extraordinary movements are but the developments of a system
established in Baltimore two years ago, and have had their beginning in the
Washington Temperance Society of this city. To trace the foundation, progress
and principles of this society, is the design of the following pages.
The Author.
Baltimore, April 5th, 1842.
WASHINGTON PLEDGE
"We, whose names are annexed, desirous
of forming a society
for our natural benefit, and to guard
against a pernicious practice,
which is injurious to our health, standing
and families - we do
pledge ourselves as gentlemen, not to drink any spirituous
or malt
liquors, wine or cider."
THE
FOUNDATION, PROGRESS AND PRINCIPLES
OF THE
WASHINGTON TEMPERANCE SOCIETY
OF BALTIMORE
CHAPTER
I
FOUNDATION OF THE SOCIETY
The 5th of April, 1840, was an eventful day. Influences were set at work then,
which have been developing and extending ever since, and which promise to
accomplish much for the good of mankind. On the evening of that day, half a
dozen men met in the bar-room of a tavern in Baltimore. They had often met
there before, spent their hours in friendly converse, and mingled in the mutual
drowning of care in the bowl. It was a place of usual resort to them. And now
they had met there as before, to drink together from the poisonous cup, to
which they were all too much addicted. Without having become outcasts or
sots, they had all confessedly suffered severely from the frequent and
intemperate use of intoxicating drinks, - suffered in their health, suffered in
their estates, suffered in their families, their habits, their feelings and their
reputation.
But though these were plain men, they were men of unusual energy. It
is true that alcohol had made its ravages on their characters, their minds, and
their hearts. But the energy of manhood still survived. They were the victims,
rather than merely the votaries of the pleasures of the bowl. They were in
business, and five of them had families. They cared for their business and
loved their families. They had all started out in life when young, with the hopes
which usually beat high in the hearts of youth in every branch of business, or
situation in life, when first entering upon the world. For a time they ran well.
Business was fair. Friends were not few. They had married, and were happy.
Had any man told either of them at eighteen, nineteen, or twenty years
of age, that twenty-five or thirty would find them drunkards, - that, like
thousands around them, they would suffer from the poison of the serpent, and
the sting of the adder in the cup, they would have laughed the insinuation to
scorn, and honestly too. They never dreamed then of being drunkards. They
drank moderately, and freely too. The habits of society at that time, - of all
classes of society, even religious, sanctioned the free use of alcoholic drinks;
and they went with the multitude never for a moment thinking of evil. But the
love of drink particularly of the "social glass," grew upon them gradually and
insensibly, until habit was fixed and appetite strong; and ere they had
suspected it, they found themselves in the power of a monster, bound hand
and foot in chains, - the slaves of their own appetites. And now they
frequented the public taverns; and oft at night, or during the day, and even on
the Sabbath, instead of being at their business, or with their families, or at
church, they were to be found at the Hotel or Grogshop. They knew it was
wrong. They saw the evil; they felt it; they lamented it; and times without
number did they promise wife and friend and self, that they would drink no
more. They were sincere. They meant to be sober. But at some fatal hour they
would take one glass again, "just one glass;" and they found themselves as
powerless and debased as ever.
It was on the evening of the day on which we have introduced them to
the reader, that these six men were once more together at the tavern. Their
families were forsaken at home. Their business for the day was done. But
neither was entirely forgotten. The bar with its temptations was near them.
Their habits were to contend with. And the cravings of an unnatural appetite
within were against all good resolves. But these men had not lost all their
principle, their energy, or their feeling. They looked to their homes, and they
saw that much of domestic bliss, which should gather round the fireside, was
banished by the inebriating cup. They looked to their business, and they knew
they had suffered there. They counted the cost, and they were astonished at
the amount of money they threw away in visiting the dram-shop. They looked
back to the days of their youth, when with free hearts and bounding hopes,
they had leaped into life, and had looked forward into the future never
dreaming of such a slavery. They looked to their reputation, their influence,
their health, their feelings, and their energy of character; and they felt that they
would lose all these, if they prosecuted much longer the way in which they
were hurrying down to death. They looked into the future, and all was clouds
and darkness. They deliberately weighed the movement about to be made; and
then rising in the energy of their still surviving manhood, they resolved that
hour they would drink no more of the poisonous draught forever; and that to
carry out their resolutions, they would form a society with a pledge to that
effect, and bind themselves under it to each other for life.
This is no fancy sketch. The circumstances have often been stated by
the founders of the society, just as we have detailed them. We do not pretend
to say, that the feelings and reflections above stated were matters of grave
deliberation and discussion among them. The movement had more of a
spontaneous character, and was at once and rather impulsively approved as
soon as suggested. But these were the silent meditations and reflections,
which were working in each individual breast, so that it needed but that the
proper chord should be touched, under the circumstances, and their hearts all
vibrated together: the matter needed but a proposal to meet the approbation
of all. It should also be remarked that the idea of reformation had been
suggested among them at a former meeting, but no conclusion had been
arrived at, as to either the certainty or the manner of the accomplishment of
their purpose.
And now the deed was done. A constitution was agreed upon; and as the
movement was a great and important one, a great name was proposed to be
affixed as the title of the society. It was adopted. And this was the foundation
of the Washington Temperance Society of Baltimore.
From the character of the deed itself, and the extraordinary results,
which have proceeded and are yet proceeding from it, justice requires that the
names of the founders of this association should be recorded, that they may
be handed down in all the future annals of the Temperance cause. William K.
Mitchell, John F. Loss, David Anderson, George Stears, Archibald Campbell
and James McCurley were the "original six," who founded the Washington
Temperance Society of Baltimore, and of course the originators of that new
system of Temperance operations, which has of late attracted the attention of
the country.
Previous to the evening on which the society was formed, we have
intimated that the subject of reformation had been in contemplation among
them for several days. When the adoption of a society and pledge was
proposed, several difficulties were in the way of their successful organization.
These difficulties were mainly the apprehensions of evil influences being
introduced into the action of the society, to divert them from their simple
purpose, if, as might be, the society should ever become efficient and
numerous.
Upon suggestion therefore it was resolved among themselves, that they
would place the temperance cause, so far as they were concerned, in the
position of a unit: that the society, as such, was to recognize no creed of
religion, nor party in politics; and that neither political nor religious action of
any kind, should ever be introduced into the society's operations. Personal
abstinence from all intoxicating drinks was to be the basis, and only requisite
of membership. Moral suasion was to be the only means by which they, as a
body, were to induce others to adopt their principles. As a society, their whole
business was to induce others not to drink intoxicating liquors. They would
thus be less likely to excite the suspicions or prejudices of any class of men,
and have free access to all; this would render Temperance a simple principle
of personal abstinence. It would be, in the language of Father Matthew, "a
green spot in the desert of life, where all could meet in peace and harmony."
Moreover they determined that the regular meetings of the society
should be meetings for the detail of personal experience, and not for debates,
lectures and speeches; that even on matters of necessary business, as few
remarks as possible only would be tolerated. Thus all temperance addresses
were to be in the form of the individual experience of the several members. The
spirit of this rule and common sense were to guide them how far any should
be allowed to go in his remarks. The society was thus based on facts, and not
on an abstraction, and the principle of common honesty was to direct them in
all their movements.
These difficulties being out of the way - the society being now organized,
and the constitution and pledge adopted and signed, the founders resolved to
hold weekly experience meetings for their own encouragement and benefit,
and for the good of others who might be induced to attend.
CHAPTER
II
PROGRESS
AND INFLUENCE OF THE SOCIETY
Immediately after the organization of the society, the several members went
privately to their friends, especially their former drinking associates, and
persuaded them in the spirit of kindness, to abandon strong drink, and join the
society. To every excuse and plea that they could not reform, they would reply
by referring to their own experience. And they generally clung to a man until
they had persuaded him to give up the bottle forever, or at least to go with
them to the next meeting of their society. When such was the condition or
promise, true to his man, each member on the evening of meeting, instead of
going alone and waiting for his friend, would go to his house, or to the
Grogshop, and, if necessary, lead him by the arm away from the bar, and
conduct him in person to the meeting. This has often been done. When the
individual was once within their hall, they regarded him as a easy convert. The
experience of others who had been like him, and the good influences set to
work upon him, soon led him to feel, think and act aright. Such exertions,
judiciously made in the spirit of kindness, have rarely failed of entire success.
In the course of some months, the society gradually increased in
numbers and interest. The aggressive principle, or missionary spirit, once at
work, grew and spread with the growth and extension of the society. In the
meantime, the members had the benefit of several months' experience in the
use of cold water. They began to feel better, to look better, and in every
respect to be satisfied with the change in their habits. As some of them
expressed it: "They were just waking up from a long sleep of many years, and
now only beginning to live." The "experiences" of the members were now
more and more interesting, and began to attract somewhat the attention of the
public; and through their influence many of the most desperate and hopeless
subjects of intemperance were redeemed. By the truly Samaritan conduct of
these sacrificing men, many a poor inebriate, whose friends had long given
him over as beyond the reach of hope, was rescued from his chains, and
elevated from the depths of degradation, to which strong drink had reduced
him. Each of these was not only a new experience man, but virtually another
missionary.
In six months after its formation, the society numbered eighty or ninety,
many of whom were reformed drunkards. And no man could attend their
meetings, as the author then first did without seeing that there was a spirit
among them which would not die - a principle which would diffuse itself
abroad in the community, and pour the richest blessings on the heads of many
a family in Baltimore; - and even spread to the farthest borders of the land. As
yet, however, their meetings were held in their own private hall, which they
had rented for the purpose. The citizens did not generally know of the
movement; and such as did, hardly had confidence in the permanency of the
reformations.
In November, 1840, their first public meeting was held in the Masonic
Hall, which was crowded on the occasion. As this was their first public effort
however, and as the object was rather intended to be an introduction to the
public, very little experience was given. In addition to these remarks made by
gentlemen invited to address the meeting, the President simply stated the
principles of the society, that they might be understood by the community. Not
long after this another public meeting was called in one of the churches of
the city, on which occasion several of the members of the society publicly told
their tale of woe and warning, counsel and advice, and with thrilling effect.
Numbers were induced to sign the pledge; many of them victims of
intemperance. And in the bosom of the society they found a home, and friends
to counsel and defend them.
Frequent public experience meetings now followed, and were continued
week after week during the entire winter. Public attention was now fully
arrested. The meetings, though held in the largest churches of the city, were
crowded to excess. Every family that had a poor miserable inebriate connected
with it, hailed with joy and hope the influence which this society was exerting
in reforming the intemperate, and used every exertion to induce such persons
to attend the meetings of the Washington Society, and sign the pledge. And
many a good-hearted, yea, noble-hearted man, who had long found the chains
of appetite galling to him, and had often wished and tried in vain to shake them
off, now went to this society, signed the pledge, and found him-self a free man.
Many reformed, whose friends and the community had long since given them
over as irrecoverable, - many even from the lowest depths of disgrace and
reproach. Some were almost literally dug up out of the earth, - who had not
only been abandoned as beyond hope, but who had been forgotten by their
early friends, or reckoned among the dead. Many such were brought out of
their hiding-places, and to the surprise of their friends, soon after their
reformation, they were found "clothed and in their right mind," and prepared
to occupy that position in society, which they had forfeited only by dissipation.
Insomuch that the society was familiarly known by the expressive title of the
"Resurrection Society."
The society was now increasing in numbers so fast, that their regular
place of meeting was becoming too small to accommodate them all. A division
was contemplated. But it was at length resolved, the branches should be
formed in the various sections of the city; this was accordingly done. In the
meantime other societies began to spring up in the city, on the same general
principles with the Washington; some auxiliary, and others independent. All
of these societies under their present organization, (with two or three
exceptions,) owe their origin directly or indirectly to the influence of the parent
Washington Society, and have borrowed most of their features, as well as
obtained most of their life from it. Many of these associations have been very
prosperous, and have done incalculable good in reclaiming the intemperate,
confirming the temperate, and advancing the common cause. If our assigned
limits would allow, it would afford us pleasure to make honourable mention of
some of these societies; but as it is, we can not go into any detail respecting
them. We hail them as fellow-labourers in a common cause, take them by the
hand, and bid them "God speed." We call upon them to rival us in good works,
and in adhering to first principles, - and then our motto is: "We be brethren;
let us not fall out by the way."
It should be observed that most of the Temperance societies, in
existence in this city previous to the formation of the Washington, have either
been remodelled or discontinued, and their places filled up by more energetic
ones. Many of the societies admit only of grown men as members; but there
are others connected with the various churches, or composed entirely of
female or youth, where such may join as choose to do so.
CHAPTER
III
MISSIONARIES.
In the progress of time, the news of our doings in Baltimore had gone abroad.
The friends of Temperance in other sections of the country, by means of the
Maryland Temperance Herald, the city papers generally, and private and
published letters, had heard of our extraordinary operations, and were looking
with hope to the spread of that flame, which had been first kindled among us.
By several letters written to individuals in New York, which were published in
the daily, as well as Temperance press of that city; and subsequently by the
statements made at a public meeting there by a citizen of Baltimore, the New
York Temperance Society was led to write to the Washington Society for a
delegation of her reformed men, who might go on to that city, and by relating
their experience, give a new impulse to the cause, and awaken a fresh interest
among them; and especially that they might reach those, who hitherto had
been almost beyond their influence - the drunkards.
Accordingly in March, 1841, a delegation, consisting of Messrs. Hawkins,
Casey, Pollard, Shaw, and subsequently President Mitchell himself, went to
New York, and the abundant and glorious success with which they met, is a
matter of public history. Thousands flocked to the meetings held on the
occasion in the largest churches in the city. In the space of several weeks,
hundreds of the most debased and unfortunate drunkards were reformed, and
an impulse given to the cause there, which has not died or diminished; nor is
it likely to do so soon. There the second Washington Temperance Society was
formed on the model of the first; and under the presidency of Captain Wisdom
and his zealous compeers, they have reaped the same glorious harvest, which
we were reaping before them. The recent splendid Temperance Procession in
New York has shown the country that the cause is still onward there as
elsewhere.
The 5th of April, 1841, the anniversary of the formation of the original
Washington Society, was celebrated in Baltimore by a grand Procession. This
Procession was admitted by all to have been one of the most splendid affairs
ever witnessed in Baltimore. It was estimated that at least six or eight
thousand persons were in the ranks. The Procession moved through the
principal streets of the city, with bands of music, and numerous magnificent
banners, and countless badges - with at least fifty mounted marshals, besides
hundreds of marshals on foot, with their various insignia. One of the 'original
six,' Captain John F. Loss, was the Chief Marshal of the day. President William
K. Mitchell and the remaining four, in company with distinguished strangers,
and the orator and chaplains of the day, rode in open barouches drawn each
by four grey horses. It was a proud and happy day to many a heart, and many
a family ; and will be remembered by the citizens of Baltimore, as one of the
greatest days ever celebrated in this city.
This celebration and procession, as well as the unexampled success of
our delegates in New York, produced a deep impression on the public mind of
the country. It was evident that a moral revolution was beginning to work, and
all eyes were now directed to the Washington Temperance Society of
Baltimore, as the centre of all its operations. Missionaries were now applied
for from almost every quarter of the land, and the Missionary operations of the
society began to be developed on a large scale. Messrs. Hawkins and Wright
in New England, and the Eastern and Middle States generally - Pollard and
Wright in New York - Vickers in the valley of the Ohio - Carey, Stansbury,
Morrison, Mules and Michael in various parts of Pennsylvania and Maryland -
Carey in North and South Carolina - Michael in Virginia, with numerous others,
have engraven their memories on the hearts of many redeemed and disenthralled men. By their influence tens of thousands, yea, we may say hundreds
of thousands, have been induced to sign the pledge - many of them the most
unhappy inebriates.
Even now, while we write, our Missionaries are in
the field in the North, in the South, in the East, and in the West. Everywhere
the labors of these Reformed Reformers have been crowned with the most
abundant and glorious success. And still "the work goes bravely on." Washington
Temperance Societies are springing up all over the land. The right spirit is
at work, and it must develop good. Truth in the hands of honest and energetic
men will have sway. The fire has begun to spread. May Heaven grant energy and
speed to the flames, that they may spread all over the land, to every city,
town, hamlet and family; until intemperance,
and all its concomitant evils, be banished from our borders.
CHAPTER
IV
THE
TEMPERANCE CAUSE BEFORE
We pause here for a moment to look back upon the past. Let us place
ourselves back in the Spring of 1840. The Temperance cause had been for
some twelve or fifteen years in successful operation. And though errors have
doubtlessly been committed in the beginning of the reform, experience had
taught wisdom; and "Total Abstinence" had now been for several years the
motto of most of those, who professed to be real temperance men. The
inconsistency and inefficiency of the old pledge had been proved. Under the
new and comprehensive pledge much good had been done, much evil had
been prevented; and even many drunkards had been reformed, at different
times during the progress of the cause. In general however the exertions of
temperance men had been rather preventive, than directly reforming. Indeed
it cannot be denied, that many of the honest friends of the cause, despaired
of reforming those who were confirmed in habits of intemperance. Their
doctrine was : "Let us secure the sober and the youth of this generation, and
when the present race of confirmed drunkards shall have passed into their
graves, we shall have an entire generation of temperate, cold-water men."
This, it is true, was a cold and hard calculation, but we believe it was an
honest one with many. Nevertheless some few did entertain and argue the
possibility of any and every drunkard's reformation, on the simple and only
principle of entire abstinence. But the great difficulty was, they had no access
to the victim of drink; they understood not how to reach his sympathies, and
bid him be a man.
Far be it from us to cast any reproach or censure upon the old
Temperance men, or deprive them of one merited laurel. Much, very much had
been done previous to this recent extraordinary revival of the cause. They
have proved by statistics the great and astounding evils of intemperance, in
reference to the pauperism and crime of the country. They were not only
shown that alcoholic drinks were unnecessary, but proved them to be
absolutely poisonous, and of course destructive. The manufacture and traffic
had been greatly diminished in some places, and in others almost abandoned.
In thousands and tens of thousands of families, the bottle had been banished
from the cupboard, and both from the table. Instead of the universal use of
alcoholic drinks by old and young, male and female, religious and irreligious,
hundreds of thousands had signed the total abstinence pledge; and of course,
so far as they were consistent, these were safe from the possibility of
becoming drunkards. Numerous vessels on our seas, bays and rivers, sailed
on strictly Temperance principles. Thousands of men of business had ceased
to give liquor to those in their employ. Many farmers had gathered in their
harvests, without one drop of alcohol being distributed in the fields. The grog-rations had been abolished in the army. Many drunkards had been saved. In
a word, much good had been done, and much evil prevented.
In this reform many of the ablest and best men were engaged. In
Maryland, through the zealous and self-sacrificing labors of a few men, much
had been done. And though others have merited praise, we can not, in giving
a fair history of the past, fail to refer to the zeal and perseverance of one man,
who for years has stood foremost in the front ranks of the Temperance men
of his State. Than this man, the cause has not had a more devoted, ardent and
constant friend. His time, his talents, his counsel, his purse, his pen, and his
voice have all been for years disinterestedly bestowed upon the welfare of his
City and State, in the promotion of this great reform. He had faith in it, when
even his friends hardly presumed to hope. He weathered the storm sometime
almost alone, and rested in hope of a brighter day. And now he has the
satisfaction of seeing the day, when few men do not admit that he was correct,
at least in his general principles. Many of those, who once ridiculed or hated
him, have come into his general measures, and now regard him in his true
light, as an ardent and devoted philanthropist. No man, at least in Maryland,
can fail to anticipate us in saying, that this man is CHRISTIAN KEENER.
But notwithstanding much had been done, much remained to be done.
Especially had the efforts of temperance men been rather directed to prevent
than to cure. They seemed to have no access to those, who most of all needed
aid and counsel - the unfortunate victims of the curse of drunkenness. Very
little systematic effort was made to reclaim them. The fact is, the poor
drunkard was regarded as an object of contempt, of denunciation, or of
ridicule, rather than an object of sympathy. He was looked upon as a wicked
man, rather than as a weak man. When he did form the theme of the
deliberations and speeches of the old Temperance men, it was often only by
way of exciting the ridicule or the indignation of the audience against him.
Instead of being regarded as an unfortunate brother, the victim of violent
passions and appetites, he was too often presented and regarded as a
monster too degraded or two heinous to excite our sympathies. To these
opinions, and to this course there were honorable exceptions. But it cannot
be denied, that the tendency was rather to drive away the drunkard, than to
seek him out and reform him.
Moreover it is questionable whether the cause was not retarded in its
influence upon the mass of the world, by at least a seeming connection with
politics on the one hand, and the church on the other. We refer to the
systematic efforts made by many Temperance societies, to bring about
changes in the laws, and often by the influence of the polls - and those
changes too intended to affect long established usages and supposed rights.
Again, most of the Temperance societies were identified, in name or otherwise,
with some church or other; Temperance speeches too often partook of the
nature of sermons, or general lectures on morals, which however much they
might influence the conscientious part of the community, it is not to be
expected that the intemperate would be influenced by such operations. And
then again, the same pledge, which was to reform a man from drunkenness,
required him not only to have no connection with the manufacture or sale of
intoxicating liquors, but frequently also to proscribe those who had this
connection, by refusing a business intercourse with them. Thus prejudices
were excited against the Temperance Reform on all sides, from the drunkard,
the dealer and his friends. Now the author has no design to defend either the
manufacture or traffic. He himself had signed such a pledge as is here spoken
of, and still abides by it; and he is not prepared to say, that he would have all
such societies and pledges abolished. But it can not be a question, whether
with such instrumentalities we are as likely to reach the intemperate drinker
and trafficker, as by a system, the only requisite of which is to abstain
personally.
In addition to this, there was a general lethargy on the part of the
Temperance societies of this State and elsewhere. A recent number of the
"Temperance Herald," speaking of the period to which we refer, says: "A short
time since, and the cause of Temperance seemed almost naked of support.
Those who had been its warm advocates, by that time had nearly all departed,
and one by one had left it."
These then were the circumstances, under which this wonderful and
glorious revival of the Temperance cause, was ushered upon the world; and
now what, in two years, have been the results!
CHAPTER
V.
RESULTS
If the amount of good done by this recent reformation was to be estimated
only in dollars and cents - in property saved and property gained - then
something of a calculation might perhaps be made of its benefits. But while
it has blessed thousands, by supplying the comforts of life, where they were
wanting before, it has filled thousands of households with joy, and given
peace and contentment to many a weary, burdened and distracted heart.
These are blessings which no measures can estimate, no calculations
compute. Many a family fireside has been made thrice joyous and happy, the
abode of peace and plenty, where once the "household gods were shivered on
the hearth," and Poverty and Misery sat in ghastly forms. Hard-drinking men,
whose only fault, in the eyes of the world, was that they "would drink," have
been led to abandon their cups entirely; and the perfect renewal of their
comfort, tempers and feelings, has been a matter of astonishment even to
themselves. Many of the most abandoned and outcast of the intemperate have
been rescued literally from "wretchedness and rags," restored to their friends
and society, and now promise to become good and useful members of the
community.
Oh! could you enter into the deep-feeling heart of the reformed, and read
the thoughts and sensations written there, you would find enough to
compensate for all the toil and care bestowed upon this enterprise, from its
commencement until this hour. How oft had he struggled with his habits and
appetites, and vowed to drink no more, - kept his promise for a day, a week or
perhaps a month, and then fallen again as deep as ever. At last despair had
well nigh taken possession of his soul, - and drowned in drink, he forgot for
a time all his former feelings, and hopes, and vows. Wretchedness perhaps
followed him day and night, except when so steeped in poison, that he had no
feeling left. His self-respect almost gone - ashamed to meet those he knew -
despised - cast off perhaps by his own family - he is met by some kind
Washingtonian, who, like a friend, takes him by the hand, and soon wins him
into his confidence, and conducts him to a meeting, where in hearing the
experience of others, he learns that he too may be a sober and a free man, -
and summoning all the energy of his almost expiring manhood, he signs the
pledge. And though with throbbing heart and trembling hand he seizes the
pen, yet no sooner has his name been finished, and the pen dropped from his
hand, than he feels as though the burden of a mountain were rolled off his
heart. His word, his honor, have now passed; and he finds himself not
standing alone on an individual promise, or a vow to his own heart; but
pledged to and with his fellows, who now welcome him to their circle, take him
by the hand, and endeavour to encourage and support him in this effort to be
free. Now every thing tends to strengthen him in his purpose; and hand to
hand, and heart to heart with his compeers. he feels himself delivered from the
most galling slavery that ever enchained the body and the mind. Oh! who can
tell the drunkard's joy, when he feels that he is a drunkard now no more
forever. And when he has been sobered for a while, and has had time to
reflect, he finds new joys daily springing up around him on every hand. When
he looks to his home, now so changed, or meets the countenances of his
family, now so differently fixed upon him, as he returns noon and night from
business or labor, joys spring up in his heart, he had never known before - no,
not even before he had been a drunkard.
But these are blessings which cannot be estimated.
The restoration of a single drunkard is, so far as he is concerned, the removal
of all those ills, which cling to the victims of the "damming bowl." What then
must be the change, when hundreds and thousands, and tens of thousands reform!
In fine on this head, by way of stating the general
results of this extraordinary moral revolution, we would simply remark: that
vigorous and flourishing Washington Societies have been organized not only in
all parts of the state of Maryland, but also over the New England, Middle, Southern
and Western States. Several hundred thousands have voluntarily pledged themselves
against the use of all intoxicating drinks. From fifty one hundred thousand
drunkards at least have been reclaimed. From a recent statistical report, it
appears that there are two hundred and fifty thousand Washingtonians in
the single state of Ohio. Missionaries are now laboring in the North, East,
South and West; and who shall presume to say where this work shall cease? An
impetus has been given to the cause, such as has never been known before in
this country, and such as promises not soon to die.
Some new principles and modes of operation have been
developed, which have particularly characterized this movement from its commencement.
Some of these are merely the stronger developments of old features. For others
we claim originality for the Washington Society. And that our true principles
may be clearly understood, we pray the reader's attention to the next chapter.
CHAPTER
VI.
PRINCIPLES
OF THE WASHINGTON SOCIETY
EXPERIENCE
We have already intimated that experience was clearly the groundwork of the
operations of this society. We also mentioned some reasons why this course
was adopted. Heretofore the appeals of the friends of temperance were, as a
general thing, directed to the moderate drinker, or the strictly temperate.
Efforts were made rather to prevent men from becoming intemperate, than to
reform them from intemperance. Many doubted the possibility of the
reformation of the drunkard; and even those who did not, made but little effort
to rescue him. The addresses made at temperance meetings, were rather of a
tendency to drive away the drinking man, and those engaged in the
manufacture and traffic in intoxicating liquors. And even if the ridicule or
denunciation of drunkenness did not constitute the burden of the temperance
speeches, mere general lectures on moral duty however just in themselves,
were not likely to reach the man, whose mind was beclouded, and whose heart
was seared by strong drink. It was of little avail to argue with him of the moral
obligation of setting a good example - of the operation of Christian charity, in
inducing a willingness to make sacrifices for our own good, and the good of
others - to prove that the Bible sanctioned neither drunkenness, nor even the
moderate use of alcoholic drinks - to present to him the chemical and
physiological view of the question, and show him that alcohol was poison, &c.
&c. He cared not for these things. Nay more, you could not induce him to listen
to them. Even a calculation of the expenses of intemperance, or a graphic
description of the drunkard and the drunkard's home, had too little effect on
him, as they were made from observation rather than from experience; and too
often were the result of a mere speech-making spirit, coming from the head
rather than the heart.
It must be admitted, however, that efforts were made by some of the
ardent friends of the cause, to enlist the sympathies of the unfortunate, win
their confidence, and lead them to the signature of the pledge. And not a few
had been recovered since the commencement of the reform. But after all, it
cannot be denied that the Temperance men of former times, as a general rule,
had no access to the drunkard, or to those connected with the manufacture
and sale of alcohol.
The difficulty then was, either that the drunkard would not go near a
temperance meeting; or, if he did attend, he was likely to be either held up to
ridicule, or denounced, or perhaps turned out of doors. Too often he would
hear that which he could not appreciate, or which was calculated to embitter
him the more against the cause. Mere general lectures on any subject, and
more particularly on the subject of drinking, fall unheeded on the ear of the
intemperate man. And you steel against yourself all his confidence and
sympathies, if you either scold, mock or denounce him for his intemperance.
He feels conscious within himself that he is deserving of sympathy, rather
than ridicule or denunciation - that he is not so much the willing votary, as the
unwilling slave and victim of an unnatural appetite - that he drinks not so
much because he is wicked, as because he is weak. He became a drunkard
unintentionally, wrongly it is true, yet still unintentionally; he will not defend
himself; but he knows and feels that drunkenness with him is rather a disease
than a vice. And the cold scorn or ridicule of the world, can have but a bad
effect on such a man; it is calculated to drive him to madness and despair by
drinking deeper of the cup, that he may forget his degradation; or to embitter
his heart against all the alleged sympathies of his fellow men.
There were other difficulties in the way: as for instance, the impression
that the Temperance reformation was a 'Church movement,' and that the
pledge required more than the abandonment of the personal use of alcohol.
On these points we shall remark in their proper places.
There is yet another view: there are dishonest men everywhere,
hypocrites in every association; and no enterprise is so righteous, but that
designing men, from corrupt and selfish motives, will embrace it, and use their
influence in its promotion. Even the Church has not escaped this
contamination. No enterprise perhaps had been more injured in this respect
than the Temperance cause. It has too often been made a hobby by designing
men, seeking popularity and influence - ambitious, aspiring men - broken-down politicians - religious hypocrites - mere babblers, who wished to gain the
reputation of speech-makers, by riding the Temperance hobby. From the
influence of such men, in one garb or other, this good cause has been much
retarded.
In order then to avoid all these difficulties mentioned, and be rid of these
hobby-riders, the Washington Temperance Society was founded on the
principle, that the statement of personal experience should be substituted for
debates, lectures and speeches in their meetings, while the only requisite to
membership should be personal abstinence. This at once placed them in a
single and invulnerable attitude, and not one of warfare against any man, or
class of men. No man could be offended, or find fault. It attacked or excited no
man's prejudices. It rendered the reform, so far as they were concerned, a
simple unit, and that unit principle was the simple idea of personal abstinence.
Behind that, they made no further inquiries. By means of their experience
meetings, they at once reached the cases of many of the most unfortunate
inebriates. They not only could induce them to attend their meetings; but when
there, they interested their feelings, excited their sympathies, by details of
their own personal experience; and proved to them that they could reform, by
setting before them living examples.
It can not be denied, that the most eloquent and glowing speech on a
matter abstract from the speaker, no matter how deeply it concerns us, is less
powerful, than a simple, honest statement of a man's own experience on the
same subject, however unlearned may be the man who gives the experience.
Such a one speaks the thoughts and feelings written. it may be in fire, on his
own heart; and they reach the hearts of his hearers. The difference is as great
as that between mere abstract theory and practice. The principle is an
admitted one in human nature. How much more influence then has the man,
who stands before an audience to persuade them to abandon the use of
strong drink, when he can himself tell them of its ruinous and blasting effects
on his own life and character - trace the progress of his own habits of
intemperance, - and warn others to avoid the rock on which he split. A
reformed man has the best access to a drunkard's mind and heart, because he
best knows, and can enter into all a drunkard's feelings. And such appeals
from such sources, properly directed, can rarely fail of entire success.
It should perhaps be remarked here that there is some
limitation to this general rule of the society, in reference to experience speeches.
There are many staunch friends of the Temperance cause, who have never been
so unfortunate as to be victims of intemperance. We would not close their mouths,
nor preclude them from usefulness. On the contrary, when there is occasion,
at the regular or special meetings of the society, permission to speak has been
given, by common consent, to such friends of the cause, as are known
to understand the true principles of the society, and to be prudent and successful
speakers. Hence such persons have frequently been heard, and most enthusiastically
received by the Washington Society. The rule was adopted not only with the design
of having the benefit of experience, spoken in burning words from the heart;
but also to close the mouths of designing men - mere talkers - men lacking either
common sense on the one hand, or common honesty on the other.
No sensible man, honest in his motives, has ever
been precluded the opportunity of communicating directly with the society.
We have been charged as a society with advancing the notion, that no
good was ever accomplished in this cause before we did it; and that no person
is a suitable Temperance speaker, unless he is a reformed drunkard. The
charge is without foundation. We have been greatly misunderstood, and
doubtless greatly misrepresented. For individual opinions, casually expressed,
the society is not accountable. Our true doctrine is: that to operate on the
intemperate, experience speakers are the best; and indeed if a sufficient
number of them can be obtained, of proper sense and character, let them do
most, if not all, the labour of speaking, especially where the object is, solely
or in part, directly to influence the intemperate. Moreover, let them for their
own encouragement, and in order to reach others, fill the offices, and control
the affairs of the societies, as much as possible. The true and honest friends
of the cause understand this, and hence, wherever it has been practicable,
they have stood aside, and given place to proper persons among the reformed
men, thus placing them as high as possible, that they may exert the more
influence on others. We do not hold, that everyman who has had the
misfortune to have been a drunkard, is fit to be either an officer of a
Temperance society, or an experience speaker, as soon as he has been
reformed. He should have common sense and common honesty, and this is
all about the qualification he needs, except it be some capacity to express
himself readily. But there are drunkards, and reformed men, as well as sober
men, who may lack one or both of these qualifications; and such men of
course are not to have, indeed they cannot have, any influence in this cause.
We stand upon common honesty in this matter.
If then, in any place there be not reformed men enough, or not of the
proper stamp, to take the most prominent parts in this enterprise, let the true
friends of the cause, who have not suffered, act and that with all their might.
We do not exclude them. And even where there are reformed men in
abundance, all true disinterested friends of the cause have work to do in both
counsel and labour, and we give them the right hand of the fellowship in this
matter. There are places and circumstances, where it may be judicious to
merge all the Temperance movements in the Washington system; there are
other circumstances, which may make it judicious and necessary for the old
Temperance men to retain their organization; and others again, where it may
be best to have every kind of instrumentality at work at the same time. In
Baltimore, so far from the opposite being of the case, the reformed men and
the old friends of the cause, frequently labour side by side at public meetings
in the city, as well as in visiting the surrounding country to advance the
common cause. There should be perfect harmony among all true disinterested
friends of this common enterprise.
Again, we have been represented as holding that clergymen should not
take any part in the Temperance cause. This is no doctrine of ours. Let them
in their pulpits or elsewhere say as much in favour of Temperance as they
please or can. Ministers of the Gospel have, on more than one occasion,
addressed the Washington Society. But when they come among us, we want
not sermons but COLDWATER SPEECHES. Let them lay aside their pontificals,
and talk to us as MEN, not as preachers. This is not a DISTINCTION without a
DIFFERENCE. Why should religious men, whether preachers are not,
introduce their religion into all their discourses? Religious men can address
a political, agricultural or literary meeting, and confine themselves solely to
these matters, without lugging in their religious tenets at ever corner. Why not
on the Temperance question? We have had men address us, in whose piety
all men had confidence, and yet the burden of their remarks was Temperance,
- cold-water, and they did not once introduce foreign matters, in which they
might be certain their audience did not think alike. These are the kind of
speeches that are acceptable to the Washington Society, because they are in
point.
Let it not be forgotten, that where it can be had, it is better to have
experience the burden of the Temperance speaking that is done. The
Washington Society have had no occasion to regret the adoption of this wise
and salutary provision. Thousands of unfortunate drunkards have been saved
by hearing the experience of others, who never would have been saved by a
mere sermon or address on Temperance, however eloquent. In the same way
thousands more will be reformed.
THE
MISSIONARY SPIRIT
Early in the history of the Washington Society, indeed in its very inception,
was developed that feature, which has since given it such a commanding
position, and so salutary an influence in the country. We refer to its missionary
spirit. This is exhibited not merely in the exertions of those who have gone
abroad on missions to various parts of the country; but, in one sense, every
member of the society is, or ought to be a missionary. One of the many
excellent mottoes of President Mitchell, was expressed and acted on from the
beginning: "Let every man be present, and every man bring a man."
Immediately after the foundation of the society, the "original six" went
privately to their friends, especially their former drinking associates, and
endeavoured to persuade them to sign the pledge with them. At all events they
used their influence to bring them to the society's meetings. By this personal
effort the drinking acquaintances of most of the reformed men in the society
have been reclaimed. Men have gone into bar-rooms and led their friends away
from the bottle by the arm, and persuaded them to accompany them to their
meetings. Even the tavern-keeper himself has thus been taken from his bar by
his former customer, conducted to the society, and induced to sign the pledge.
Very few that have attended our meetings have ever gone away drunkards. The
very atmosphere they breathed in these meetings, was that of reformation; and
it inspired them with new hopes of again regaining their position in the
community. Very few men, if any, are beyond the reach of reformation from
intemperance, if the proper judicious means are used for their recovery.
One great secret of the success of the Washington Society has been,
that it is emphatically a society of working men, - that is: the society
constitutes a grand "committee of the whole;" and the business of each
member is constantly to seek out all cases of intemperance within their reach,
and to do what can be done to bring such to the society. Heretofore most
Temperance societies were confined in their operations to annual, semi-annual, or quarterly meetings; on which occasions the societies met, heard a
report and a speech or two, and then adjourned, too often to remain inactive
until the next regular meeting. To this there were some honorable exceptions.
But after all, the toil and labor rested mainly on the shoulders of one or two
men in each society.
The Washington Society meets every Monday night, at which time the
pledge is read as often as called for, and the different members, as there may
be occasion, or as they may be called on, relate their experience. Thus a
constant interest is kept up, being renewed each week, and carried out into
the daily intercourse of life.
Of the Delegations or Missions of this society, the manner in which they
came to be instituted, and the glorious results of all these missionary labours,
we have spoken before. These are but the developments of the aggressive
principles, which at the very foundation of the society. All these great and
glorious results were actually foreseen and predicted by the author of these
pages, several months before any of our missionaries had left his city. Our
true motto should be: action, constant untiring action on the part of every
member. What has the Temperance cause not done for us! Let us extend its
blessings to every member of the human family; and if the drunkard will not
come to us, let us seek him out in his wretchedness, and strive to bring him
to reformation by every means in our power.
OUR
PLEDGE
The pledge of the Washington Society, though strictly a total abstinence
pledge, differs, in several particulars, from that of the American Temperance
Union, and from abstinence pledges in general. We require but one thing of
our members; and that is personal abstinence. We so not require a man to
pledge himself that he will abandon all interest in the manufacture or traffic,
nor proscribe those who are engaged in these pursuits. This is a matter we
leave to each individual man, as we do every other matter of duty. We do not
pass resolutions of non-intercourse with men who traffic in intoxicating
liquors; nor proscribe them in any way, further than advising men not to drink
their liquors, may be proscription. This course of the Washington Society we
think perfectly defensible.
There are many men who have for years been pecuniarily interested in
making and selling liquors. It is their only business. These men have their
family connections and friends. Many of them are intemperate. How are they
to be reformed? They are to be reformed mainly through the influence of
Temperance Societies, and the instrumentality of a pledge; and few men are
reformed from intemperance by any other means. If then all the societies are
barred against those, whose hands are not clean in this respect, unless they
first wash their hands from the uncleanness, where is the intemperate dealer
to go for reformation? Your societies are all closed against him. Your pledge
excludes him, unless he abandons the traffic; and few will give up the traffic
until after they have personally reformed. His ears are closed, and his heart is
steeled against all your advances, because he considers your very
constitution as proscribing not so much him personally, as his business.
These prejudices extend not only to the manufacturer and trafficker, but also
to their families and friends. A. will not sign the pledge, lest by so doing he
proscribes his kind neighbour B., who is engaged in the trade. C. will not sign,
because his brother D. is a distiller, and he cannot array himself against his
own kindred. These things have occurred frequently. We do not justify these
men. We are only stating facts. Men should do right, no matter who is
offended. But these men may not be prepared to do so. Shall we therefore
close the door against their personal reformation, because they are not
prepared to do all their duty on the Temperance question? Why not exclude
men unless they pledge themselves also to quit swearing, or gambling, or any
thing else that is wrong, and that may have a connection with drinking? Why
not require them to abandon every other immoral pursuit in life, which they
follow from the love of gain?
The first and main object of the Washington Society is to induce men to
quit drinking alcoholic liquors. When they have done this, the rest must
regulate itself, and in most cases it will regulate itself. We have no sympathy
with this trade in ruin. But we do not array ourselves as the proscribers of all
engaged in the business. We beseech all men to give up the traffic; but if they
will not, and yet are willing to sign our pledge and reform, we receive them
among us; and let the truth work its own way upon their hearts in this, as in
every other reformation of their lives.
Of one thing we are certain: if an intemperate rum-seller joins the
Washington Society, keeps his pledge, and attends our meetings, he will hear
enough to induce him in a short time to abandon the business. The
atmosphere of the Washington Society would be rather unpalatable to him, so
long as he continues to sell rum. While therefore we do not require it, the most
necessary consequence is, that he will voluntarily abandon it himself, after he
has been for some time connected with the society.
If then there be any inconsistency in this matter, it is not with the
society. We require but one thing; when that is accomplished, our work is
done. If a man signs our pledge, and keeps it, we retain him, and are
consistent; for that is all we require of him. The society does not set itself up
as a censor of morals. It occupies but one position. It has to do only with
drinking. If men will be inconsistent in making and selling intoxicating drinks,
be it so. To their God and their own consciences they must render an account
not only for this, but for every other improper pursuit. We will not be
accountable for them; nor shall we plead their cause.
A number of dealers in intoxicating liquors have already signed our
pledge. Many of them are reformed men. And, with several exceptions, they
have abandoned the traffic soon after their reformation. Now with the old
pledge these men might have been arrayed against us, and we might not have
reached one of them. They might still be both intemperate, and engaged in the
traffic. It is a matter of public record that the number of licences for the sale
of liquors taken out in this city last year, were one hundred and sixty-six less
than those of the preceding year - about one-fifth of the whole number; and
while other societies and other influences have operated in bringing about this
result, the Washington Society claims to have contributed directly and
indirectly a considerable share of this influence.
On the same principles, we, as a society, do not wish to identify
ourselves with any political movements, intended to result in legislative
enactments on this subject. The members individually may entertain what
sentiments they please on that question. They are known to entertain different
sentiments respecting it. But as a society, we have nothing to do with it. The
general impression of the society seems to be, that all legislation bearing on
matters of morals, and the habits of the people, is premature, until the great
mass of the public mind is prepared for it. When that takes place, such
legislation, as enlightened public opinion may consider judicious, will no
doubt be adopted. But the few, even though they be right, should not press
legislation, so long as there is a danger of exciting prejudices and interests,
which may produce a still more violent reaction. The public are perhaps not yet
prepared for anything more than a judicious modification of the present
license system.
In all these matters, therefore, - the manufacture, the traffic, and
legislative enactments designed to limit or prevent the same, the Washington
Society occupies no offensive ground; because she occupies neutral ground.
And thus not attacking the supposed rights and interests of any, we win the
confidence of all; and having access to them, we have the means of doing
good to all. But let us be understood. This position is taken by the society, on
the most prudential considerations. We would gladly see every bar and
distillery in the land closed forever. But more can be done by persuasion, than
by the law.
Moreover we do not object to other societies, with pledges formed on
the model of the American Temperance Union. Many of our members have
signed such pledges in other societies. These societies with the
comprehensive pledge have doubtless done much good. If others prefer it, we
wish them all success with it. We only wish the Washington Society, with its
peculiar organization, to steer clear of all these questions. We occupy our
own ground. Let others enjoy the same privilege. We need not quarrel. Yet we
venture to say that our pledge will obtain as many signatures, as if it were
more comprehensive; and that in addition, we shall secure the reformation and
final abandonment of the traffic, of many, who never would have signed the
old pledge.
There is a prevalent impression, that none but reformed drunkards are
admitted as members of the Washington Society. This is a mistake. Any man
may become a member by signing the pledge, and continue so by adhering to
it. Many of the best men in the city of Baltimore belong to the society.
We should perhaps make another remark here in reference to our
pledge; and it is this. The practice of the WASHINGTON Society is, not to
abandon at once the reformed man, who in an evil hour of strong temptation,
has violated his pledge; but to bear with him, and try to reclaim him again - and
if he comes back penitent, to forgive "seven times" - "yea, seventy times
seven." By this mild course many have been ultimately saved, who by harsh
measures would have returned again to their old habits. We cannot be too
cautious or kind to the unfortunate victim of intemperance. He needs kind
treatment; and by means of it, we can generally calculate on his final
reformation. It gives us pleasure to remark, however, that comparatively very
few have ever violated our pledge.
POLITICS
AND RELIGION
As previously observed, the Washington Society occupies a strictly neutral
position on these subjects. All our efforts are devoted to the one single object
of inducing all, the temperate and intemperate, to sign a total-abstinence
pledge, and to drink no more while the world stands.
On the subject of political action, we have previously stated the
principles of the society. Perhaps our relation to the matter of religion is of
more importance, and less understood. We have been represented as being
adverse to religion - as arraying ourselves against the Church - as declaring
our labors to be higher and holier than those of the Christian ministry - as
substituting Temperance for religion. In all these charges we are wholly and
entirely misrepresented or misunderstood. Our true principles on this subject
are as follows: as a body, retaining our original position as a unit, we have
nothing to do whatever with religion or politics; any more than a political party
has to do with religion or temperance. If a man will only comply with our
constitution he may be a Catholic, a Protestant, or an Infidel, if he chooses. We
do not enquire into his creed or notions. This is not our business. He may be
anything or nothing in this respect. But he must not bring his creed or party
into the society. When he comes into the Washington Temperance Hall, he
leaves his church creed and party politics at home; and meet all his fellow-members not as Democrats or Whigs, not as Presbyterians, Methodists,
Catholics, or anything else - no, not even as Christians, (for they may not all
be such,) but as his fellow-men, on the one common platform of total-abstinence. We do not mean that anyone is to so any thing in the society, or
as a member of the same, contrary to his religious creed and obligations, or
his political notions; but he is not to introduce them to the society. No matter
then who the man may be, we give him the hand of a brother Washingtonian,
if he signs our pledge and keeps it, and conducts himself becomingly among
us, - and few cold-water men are other than gentlemen.
Constituted thus, how then could the society, as such,
legitimately have anything to do with
religion. The members, as individuals, have to do with religion as they had
before they joined. If they were drunkards and have reformed, this only places
them back in their original position as men; and to their God and their own
consciences must they stand or fall.
With these sentiments, the society does not have any religious worship
connected with their regular meetings in their Hall. Yet when they are
permitted to occupy, for their public meetings, any usual place of worship,
they are in the habit of requesting some minister or religious person to open
the meeting with prayer, according to the mode and form in use where they
meet.
If a clergyman join the society, he is precisely on the same footing with
all the other members; and his ministerial character is not recognized among
us.
All this neutrality is necessary in order to combine the heterogeneous
elements, that make up the Washington Society. The object is not only to avoid
all sectarianism, but even the appearance or suspicion of sectarianism. Indeed
we have more in view. The design is to prevent all suspicion that the
Temperance cause is a church affair; and that with this wise and benevolent
design; we wish to reach and save all men from intemperance, even those who
are embittered against the church. Heretofore most of the Temperance
societies were connected more or less, nominally or otherwise, with some
church or other; the meetings were usually held in churches, conducted with
religious exercises, and more or less under the direction of ministers; many
of the addresses were made by ministers, and partook of the nature of
sermons rather than Temperance speeches. All this was very well, so far as it
went. It had its designed effect; but only on a portion of the community. While
these arrangements were calculated to accomplish much with the upright and
religious, they were strongly calculated to make the impression upon the
drinking man, that the Temperance reform was a church affair, and that joining
a Temperance society, was more or less a religious business.
Now anyone who knows anything of drunkenness, knows that most
drunkards are strongly averse to religion, if not infidel at heart. They want to
hear nothing about "moral reform" and "church societies." Hence this class
of men rarely went near a temperance meeting formerly. Indeed many of them
in their degradation and wretchedness, would not have gained admission to
a church. It was to reconcile such feelings and aversions, that this strongly
neutral ground was taken in the first place, and is still held by the Washington
Temperance Society.
The drunkard is prejudiced against the church and
her ministers. Satisfy him that these have nothing to do with your society,
and he will listen to you. When he joins and is reformed, and has come to his
proper senses and his conscience, no
one can doubt the effect of his reformation will have on his notions of church
matters. Cold water clears the head; and though it does not regenerate, it greatly
unwraps the heart. And though a man reformed from intemperance, may still be
an unconverted man so far as religion is concerned, yet he is now prepared to
view matters in their true light, with a cool head; and now, if ever, he will
be likely to attend religious worship and become a Christian. Religious influences
now have access to him; before they had not.
These statements will explain much in which the society has been
wrongly represented. When the president and the members, after the
foundation of the society, over and over again said to the public:"We have
nothing to do with religion," they meant as we have explained above, and do
not array themselves against religion. Indeed there are now men in the
Washington Society of as much piety as any men in the city of Baltimore. As
regards being opposed to Clergymen, the society has shown no such feeling.
We number among our members several of the principal evangelical ministers
of the city; which is sufficient evidence that all is right on that score.
The true position of the Washington Society is this: as a body we
recognize no creed of religion. Our members may be as much or as little
religious as they please, provided they do not violate our pledge. We do not
substitute temperance for religion, nor place temperance above religion. On
the contrary we hold that a man's reformation from intemperance only places
him in his original position, and leaves him to deal with the Church and his
God, according to the dictates of his own conscience. Of one thing we are
certain: sober men are more likely to be religious than drinking men; and the
church will gain more members where there is a Washington Temperance
Society, than where there is none.
In conclusion on this subject, instead of the society being infidel, and
setting itself up as independent of all divine influence, we have often heard its
founders remark, that such has been the result of their efforts, beyond all they
could have anticipated, that they cannot but believe that the hand of GOD has
been in this reform; and that they have been made the humble instruments in
the hands of Providence, of accomplishing these great things.
CONCLUSION
From the preceding pages we learn that the principal causes of the
extraordinary influence of the Washington Temperance Society, are as follow:
1. The drunkard is now regarded in a new light by the Washingtonians.
Instead of being considered a cruel monster - a loathsome brute - an object of
ridicule, contempt and indignation, as formerly, we are now taught to look
upon him as a brother - as more weak perhaps than wicked - as a slave to
appetite, and debased by passion - yet still as a man, our own brother. Thus
all the sympathies of the public are excited in his behalf.
2. The substitution of personal experience for addresses and lectures,
has had the same effect of exciting the sympathy of the community in behalf
of the intemperate. A reformed drunkard's experience touches a chord, that
vibrates in every human breast. Moreover the drunkard when reformed best
knows how to reach the drunkard's heart; for he best understands his
feelings.
3. Another cause lies in the simplicity and unity of the pledge, requiring
but one thing - personal abstinence. To this add the neutrality of the society,
as we have explained it in the preceding pages, and the whole matter is
explained on the common principles of human nature.
Kind reader, have you signed the pledge? You have read our history.
You have seen how the intemperate have fallen; and you have seen how they
have reformed. Now there are but three classes of mankind in this respect - the
strictly abstinent, the moderate drinker, and the intemperate. To which class
do you belong? If to the first, we hail you as a brother. If to the last, read our
history over again, see how others have reformed, and "go and do likewise."
You may be free. No man is reduced so far that he may not be reclaimed. If you
belong to the second class, remember three things - first, every reformed
drunkard in the land will tell you he was once what you are, and equally
confident he never would go farther; yet he fell; - second, you are giving no
encouragement to the poor unfortunate drunkard to reform, but the influence
of your example is all against him; - third, you are setting such an example to
your neighbours, friends and family, that if they follow it, you know some of
them will be drunkards ere they die.
For the sake then of yourself; for the sake of those who may be
influenced by your example; and for the sake of the unfortunate drunkards
who are struggling to be free all over the land, come with us. Save yourself,
and save others. Remember that you are accountable, here and hereafter, for
the man who stumbles over your example into a drunkard's grave!
QUART.
J. STUD. ALC., VOL. 11, 410-452, 1950.
THE
WASHINGTONIAN MOVEMENT
By Milton A. Maxwell, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Sociology
State College of Washington, Pullman, Washington
INTRODUCTION
Certain similarities between the Washingtonian movement of the
nineteenth century and the present day fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous
have been commented upon by a number of observers. In view of this
resemblance there is more than historical interest in an account of the first
movement in the United States which brought about a large-scale rehabilitation
of alcoholics. The phenomenal rise and spread of the Washingtonian
movement throughout the land in the early 1940's was the occasion of much
discussion, exciting a deep interest. The cause of its equally rapid decline have
been a subject of much speculation and are still of concern to the members of
Alcoholics Anonymous who may wonder whether or not their movement is
destined to a similar fate. This article, therefore, will present not merely a
description and history of the movement but also an analysis of the similarities
and differences between the Washingtonians and Alcoholics Anonymous.
Since the Washingtonian movement is so intimately linked to the larger
temperance movement, it may be well to recall the developments which
preceded 1840. Before the 1830's, "temperance" was hardly a popular cause.
Even in 1812, when Lyman Beecher proposed to his fellow Congregational
ministers that they formulate a program for combating intemperance, "... the
regular committee reported that 'after faithful and prayerful inquiry' it was
convinced that nothing could be done to check the growth of
intemperance..."(1). The custom of serving liquor at ecclesiastical meetings
probably influenced the outcome of this "prayerful inquiry." But Lyman
Beecher was not to be stopped. He headed a new committee that
recommended the following steps:
.... that district assemblies
abstain from the use of ardent spirits (not wine) at ecclesiastical meetings,
that members of churches abstain from unlawful vending or purchase (not from
lawful vending and purchase) of liquor, that farmers, mechanics and manufacturers
substitute monetary compensation for the ration of spirits, that voluntary associations
aid the civil magistrates to enforce the laws, and that the pamphlet of Dr.
Rush (2) be printed and circulated
(1).The fact that these proposals were regarded as radical by the
custodians of the New England conscience is a sufficient clue to the state of
public opinion in 1812.
It was not until 1825 that Lyman Beecher preached his famous Six
Sermons (3), in which he defined intemperance not merely as drunkenness but
as the "daily use of ardent spirits." In 1826, in Boston, Beecher and Justin
Edwards spearheaded the founding of the first national society, "The American
Society for the Promotion of Temperance" (American Temperance Society)
which sought, according to its constitution, "...to produce such a change of
public sentiment, and such a renovation of the habits of individuals and the
customs of the community, that in the end temperance, with all its attendant
blessings, may universally prevail(4)."
The temperance movement began to take hold. In 1829 there were about
1,000 societies with a membership of approximately 100,000. By 1834 there
were 5,000 local societies claiming 11000,000 members, a gain of 500 per cent
in 5 years. A temperance press had been established. Effective literature had
emerged. Politicians were taking notice. In 1836 the American Temperance
Society was merged into the new and more inclusive "American Temperance
Union," which decided to take the stand of "total abstinence from all that can
intoxicate(5)."
This step required an entirely new orientation. It is therefore not
surprising that sone 2,000 societies and countless individuals were not ready
to go along. Many wealthy contributors, unwilling to forgo wine, withdrew their
support. Some leaders were discouraged by the resistance to the new pledge
and became inactive. Various controversial issues added to the dissension.
The movement fell upon lean years. Its leaders, in 1840, were wondering what
could be done to restore the momentum of the years preceding 1836. Their
effort were groping and limited.
As for the alcoholic, it was the prevailing opinion, up to 1840, that nothing
could be done to help him. Occasionally a "drunkard" did "reform," but this did
not erase the general pessimism as to the possibility of rehabilitating
drunkards. Since alcohol was held to be the "cause" of alcoholism, the
temperance movement was aimed solely at keeping the nonalcoholic from
becoming an alcoholic. This implied indifference to the alcoholic was
epitomized by Justin Edwards in 1822: "Keep the temperate people temperate;
the drunkards will soon die, and the land be free(6)."
Thus the stage was set for the emergence of the Washingtonian
movement.
THE
BALTIMORE ORIGINS
One Thursday evening, April 2, 1840, six friends were drinking, as they
were wont to do almost every evening, in Chasels Tavern, on Liberty Street,
in Baltimore. They were William K. Mitchell, a tailor; John F. Hoss, a carpenter;
David Anderson and George Steers, both blacksmiths; James McCurley, a coachmaker; and Archibald Campbell, a silversmith(7). Their conversation
turned to the temperance lecture which was to be given that evening by a
visiting lecturer, the Rev. Matthew Hale Smith. In a spirit of fun it was
proposed that some of them go to hear the lecture and report back. Four of
them went and, after their return, all discussed the lecture.
... one of their company
remarked that, "after all, temperance is a good thing." "0," said the host,
"they're all a parcel of hypocrites." "O yes," replied McCurley, "I'll be bound
for you; it's your interest to cry them down, anyhow." "I'll tell you what,
boys," says Steers, "Let's form a society and make Bill Mitchell president."..
The idea seemed to take wonderfully; and the more they laughed and talked it
over, the more they were pleased with it(8).
On Sunday, April 5, while the six were strolling and drinking, the
suggestion crystallized into a decision to quit drinking and to organize a total
abstinence society. It was agreed that Mitchell should be the president;
Campbell the vice-president; Hoss, the secretary; McCurley, the treasurer; and
Steers and Anderson, the standing committee. The membership fee was to be
twenty-five cents; the monthly dues, 12½ cents. The proposal that they name
the society in honour of Thomas Jefferson was finally rejected and it was
decided that the president and the secretary, since they were to be the
committee to draft the constitution, should also decide upon the name. It was
agreed that each man should bring a man to the next meeting. And it was left
to the president to compose the pledge which they would all sign the next day.
The pledge was formulated by Mitchell as follows:
"We whose names are annexed,
desirous of forming a society for our mutual benefit, and to guard against a
pernicious practice which is injurious to our health, standing, and families,
do pledge ourselves as gentlemen that we will not drink any spirituous or malt
liquors, wine or cider."
He went with it, about nine
o'clock, to Anderson's house and found him still in bed, sick from the effects
of his Sunday adventure. He rose, however, dressed himself, and after hearing
the pledge read, went down to his shop for pen and ink, and there did himself
the honour of being the first man who signed the Washington pledge. After obtaining
the names of the other four, the worthy president finished this noble achievement
by adding his own(8).
The name, "Washington Temperance Society, 11 was selected in honour
of George Washington. Two new members were brought to the second
meeting. Strangely enough, they continued to meet for a number of weeks at
their accustomed place in Chase's Tavern. When the tavern owner's wife
objected to the increasing loss of their best customers, Mitchell's wife
suggested that they meet in their home. This they did until the group grew too
large, whereupon they moved to a carpenter's shop on Little Sharp Street.
Eventually, they rented a hall of their own.
As they grew in membership they faced the problem of making their
weekly meetings interesting. Their resourceful president made the suggestion
that each member relate his own experience. He started off with his story of
15 years of excessive drinking, adding his reactions to his newly gained
freedom. Others followed suit. This procedure proved to be so interesting and
effective that it became a permanent feature of their programs. Interest and
membership mounted.
In November the society resolved to try a public meeting in which
Mitchell and others would tell their personal experiences. The first such
meeting, held on November 19, 1840, in the Masonic Hall on St. Paul Street,
was a decided success. Not only did it bring in additional members but it also
called the movement to the interested attention of the people of Baltimore. It
was decided to repeat these public meetings about once a month in addition
to the regular weekly meetings of the society.
John Zug, a citizen of Baltimore who probably had his interest aroused
by the first public meeting, made further inquiry and, on December 12, 1840,
wrote a letter to the Rev. John Marsh, executive secretary of the American
Temperance Union, in New York City, informing him of the new society in
Baltimore. In it he told about the growth of the group:
These half a dozen men immediately
interested themselves to persuade their old bottle-companions to unite with
them, and they in a short time numbered nearly one hundred members, a majority
of whom were reformed drunkards. By their unprecedented exertions from the beginning,
they have been growing in numbers, extending their influence, and increasing
in interest, until now they number about three hundred members, upwards of two
hundred of whom are reformed drunkards - reformed, too, within the last eight
months. Many of these had been drunkards of many years' standing, - notorious
for their dissipation. indeed, the society has done wonders in the reformation
of scores whose friends and the community had despaired of long since(9).
So rapidly did the society grow during the following months that on the
first anniversary of the society, April 5, 1841, there were about 1,000 reformed
drunkards and 5,000 other members and friends in the parade to celebrate the
occasion. This demonstration made a deep impression upon the 40,000 or so
Baltimoreans who witnessed the event.
Additional information on the pattern of activities which made this
growth possible, and on the components of the therapeutic program which
made the reformation of alcoholics possible in the first place, is given in the
writings of contemporary observers. John Zug, in his first letter to John Marsh,
included the following description:
The interest connected with
this society is maintained by the continued active exertions of its members,
the peculiar character of their operations and the frequency of their meetings.
The whole society is considered a "grand committee of the whole," each member
exerting himself, from week to week, and from day to day, as far as possible,
to persuade his friends to adopt the only safe course, total abstinence; or
at least to accompany him to the next meeting of the "Washington Temperance
Society." It is a motto of their energetic and worthy President, in urging the
attendance of the members at the stated meetings, "Let every man be present,
and every man bring with him a man."
They have rented a public
hall in which they meet every Monday night. At these weekly meetings, after
their regular business is transacted, the several members rise promiscuously
and state their temperance experience for each other' a warning, instruction,
and encouragement. After this, any persons present wishing to unite with them
are invited forward to sign the Constitution and Pledge(9).
Christian Keener, the editor of the Maryland Herald, made these further
first-hand observations:
These men spared neither
their money nor their time in carrying out the principles which they had espoused.
Many a poor fellow who from the effect of liquor had become a burden to his
family and himself was fed and clothed by them, and won by kindness to reform
his life; even more than this, they have supported the families of those who
they had induced to join with them, until the husband and father had procured
work, and was able to support them with his own hands.
The peculiar characteristics
of this great reform are first, a total abstinence pledge .... Secondly, the
telling of others what they know from experience of the evils of intemperance,
and the good which they feel to result from entire abstinence(9).
John W. Hawkins, an early member, had this to say in one of his Boston
speeches:
Drunkard! Come up here!
you can reform. I met a gentleman this morning who reformed four weeks ago,
rejoicing in his reformation; he brought a man with him who took the pledge
and this man brought two others. This is the way we do the business up in Baltimore.
We reformed drunkards are a Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union.
We are all missionaries. We don't slight the drunkard; we love him, we nurse
him, as a mother does her infant learning to walk(10).
Christian Keener, in another communication, summed up the work as
follows, making at the same time a comparison with the operations of the
regular temperance societies:
The great advantage of the
Washington Temperance Society has been this; they have reached hundreds of men
that would not come out to our churches, nor even temperance meetings; they
go to their old companions and drag them, not by force, but by friendly consideration
of duty, and a sense of self-respect, into their ranks, and watch over them
with the solicitude of friends and brothers...(9).
Such was the character of the original Baltimore "Washington
Temperance Society."
THE
SPREAD OF THE MOVEMENT
A phenomenon like this could not be confined to Baltimore, for the
Washington men had it in their power to meet many pressing needs. First of
all, there were the drunkards in need of reclamation - a need long ignored
because the opinion prevailed that there was no hope for them. The meeting
of this need partook of the miraculous. Secondly, there was the overwhelming
drive on the part of the reformed men to carry their message of hope to other
victims of drink - spilling over into a desire to prevent such suffering by
winning those not addicted to certain sobriety in total abstinence. Finally,
there were the needs of the temperance leaders. Set back by the 1836 decision
to put temperance on a total abstinence basis, they needed a convincing
argument for total abstinence as well as some effective means of rekindling
enthusiasm for their cause. The Washington men were the answer to these
needs, for what could be a better argument for total abstinence that its
apparent power to reclaim even the confirmed drunkard; and what could excite
more interest than the personally told experiences of reformed drunkards?
The first recorded activity outside of Baltimore was the speaking of John
H.W. Hawkins, in February 1841, to the delegates of the Maryland State
Temperance Society, meeting in Annapolis, and to the members of the State
Legislature in the same city.
Hawkins, who was to become the most effective spokesman of the
movement, had joined the Washington Temperance Society on June 14, 1840,
after more than 20 years of excessive drinking. Born in Baltimore on
September 28, 1797, he was apprenticed at an early age to a hatmaker. During
this apprenticeship he developed a dependence on alcohol which was
increased during 3 years in the frontier communities of the West. His religious
conversion at the age of 18 did not eradicate this craving. Resuming his trade
in Baltimore, he battled in vain against his addiction. The panic of 1937 left him
unemployed, reducing him to a pauper on public relief. Guilt and remorse
over his family's destitution only intensified his alcoholism. His own account
of his last drinking days and his reclamation, as given in his first New York
talk, are preserved for us:
"Never," said he, "shall
I forget the 12th of June last. The first two weeks in June I averaged - it
is a cross to acknowledge it - as much as a quart and a pint a day. That morning
I was miserable beyond conception, and was hesitating whether to live or die.
My little daughter came to my bed and said, II hope you won't send me for any
more whiskey today.' I told her to go out of the room. She went weeping. I wounded
her sorely, though I had made up my mind I would drink no more. I suffered all
the horrors of the pit that day, but my wife supported me. She said, "Hold on,
hold on. I Next day I felt better. Monday I wanted to go down and see my old
associates who had joined the Washington Society. I went and signed. I felt
like a free man. What was I now to do to regain my character? My friends took
me by the hand. They encouraged me. They did right. If there is a man on earth
who deserves the sympathy of the world it is the poor drunkard; he is poisoned,
cast out, knows not what to do, and must be helped or be lost... (8).
"It did not take his associates long to discover that he had the qualities
of a leader. A splendid physique and commanding presence, combined with
a gift for extemporaneous speaking, made him an ideal lecturer.(l)" It is not
surprising, therefore, that Hawkins was selected to speak before the Maryland
State Temperance Society and the State Legislature. Christian Keener left an
eyewitness report of the latter occasion which helps to explain Hawkins'
appeal:
.... He commenced his speech
by letting them know that he stood before then a reformed drunkard, less than
twelve months ago taken almost out of the gutter; and now in the Senate chamber
of his native State, addressing hundreds of the best informed and most intelligent
men and women, and they listened with tearful attention. The circumstances had
an almost overpowering effect on his own feelings and those of his audience.
He is a man of plain, good common sense, with a sincerity about him, and easy
way of expressing himself, that every word took like a point-blank shot. His
was the eloquence of the heart; no effort at display(9).
About this time, a Baltimore businessman attended a temperance
meeting in New York City. News of the Baltimore developments having already
been circulated by John Marsh through the Journal of the American
Temperance Union, this visitor was requested to give a brief history and
description of the Washington Soc3ety. A conversation with Dr. Rease, after
the meeting, brought forth the suggestion that some of the Washington men
be invited to New York to relate their experiences. This tentative proposition
was taken to the Baltimore society, accepted by them, and the arrangements
completed for a delegation of five to go. The five were William K. Mitchell, John
W. Hawkins, J.F. Pollard, and two other members, Shaw and Casey.
Their first meeting in New York was held on Tuesday, March 23, 1841, in
the Methodist Episcopal Church on Green Street. The curious throngs were
not disappointed. As in Baltimore, the experiences of these "reformed
drunkards" deeply moved and inspired all those who came to hear. Not only
that, but real-life drama was enacted at the meeting. The New York Commercial
Advertiser reported the next morning:
During the first speech
a young man rose in the gallery and, though intoxicated, begged to know if there
was any hope for him; declaring his readiness to bind himself, from that hour,
to drink no more. He was invited to come down and sign the pledge, which he
did forthwith, in the presence of the audience, under deep emotion, which seemed
to be contagious, for others followed; and during each of the speeches they
continued to come forward and sign, until more than a hundred pledges were obtained;
a large portion of which were intemperate persons, some of whom were old and
grey headed. Such a scene as was beheld at the secretary's table while they
were signing, and the unaffected tears that were flowing, and the cordial greetings
of the recruits by the Baltimore delegates, was never before witnessed in New
York(8).
All the subsequent meetings were equally successful. John Marsh and
the other temperance leaders who were promoting the meetings were
delighted. With no church large enough to hold the curious crowds, it was
decided to hold an open air meeting in City Hall Park. More than 4,000 turned
out for this. The speakers, mounted on upturned rum kegs, again enthraled the
crowd. This impressive occasion was merely the climax of a triumphant
campaign: about 2,000 were converted to the total abstinence pledge,
including many confirmed drunkards with whom the men worked between
meetings. At this time the Washington Temperance Society of New York was
organized.
The delegation returned to Baltimore in time for the first anniversary
parade and celebration, an April 5th. With the memory of the New York
success still fresh in their minds, this must have been a very happy and
meaningful occasion - not merely the recognition of a year's achievement, but
also a portent of things to come.
Things began to happen rapidly now. While the New York meetings were
in progress, John Marsh wrote to the Boston temperance leaders about the
power of the Washingtonian appeal. Arrangements were quickly made so that
within a week after the first anniversary celebration Hawkins and William E.
Wright were on their way to Boston for a series of meetings in the churches.
There were those who doubted that Bostonians would respond as
enthusiastically as New Yorkers, but the coming of these speakers was well
published and even larger crowds than in New York greeted them. The first
meeting was held on April 15, 1841. The Daily Mail had this report the following
morning:
The Odeon was filled to
its utmost capacity, last evening, by a promiscuous audience of temperance men,
distillers, wholesalers and retail dealers in ardent spirits, conformed inebriates,
moderate drinkers, lovers of the social glass, teetotallers, etc., to listen
to the speeches of the famous "Reformed Drunkards," delegates from the Washington
Temperance Society of Baltimore, who have excited such a deep interest in the
cause of temperance in other places...Mr. Hawkins of Baltimore, was the second
of the "Reformed Drunkards" introduced to the meeting. He was a man of forty-four
years of age - of fine manly form - and he said he had been more than twenty
years a confirmed inebriate. He spoke with rather more fluency, force and effect,
than his predecessor, but in the same vein of free and easy, off-hand, direct,
bang-up style; at times in a single conversational manner, then earnest and
vehement, then pathetic, then humorous - but always manly and reasonable. Mr.
Hawkins succeeded in "working up" his audience finely. Now the house was as
quiet and still as a deserted church, and anon the high dome rang with violent
bursts of laughter and applause. Now he assumed the melting mood, and pictured
the scenes of a drunkard's home, and that home his own, and fountains of generous
feelings, in many hearts, gushed forth in tears - and again, in a moment, as
he related, some ludicrous story, these tearful eyes glistened with delight,
sighs changed to hearty shouts, and long faces were convulsed with broad grins
and glorious smiles(1).
The Boston Mercantile Journal reported the same meeting in the
following manner:
The exercises at the temperance
meeting at the Odeon last evening possessed a deep and thrilling interest. The
hall was crowded and Messrs. Hawkins and Wright...spoke with great eloquence
and power for more than two hours, and when, at ten o'clock, they proposed abridging
somewhat they had to say, shouts of "Go on! Go on!" were heard from all parts
of the house. We believe more tears were never shed by an audience in one evening
than flowed last night...Old grey haired men sobbed like children, and the noble
and honourable bowed their heads and wept. Three hundred and seventy-seven came
forward and made "the second declaration of independence," by pledging themselves
to touch no intoxicating drink; among them were noticed many bloated countenances,
familiar as common drunkards; and we promise them health, prosperity, honour,
and happiness in the pursuance of their new principles(9).
When even the standing room in Faneuil Hall was filled, a few evenings
later, and the crowd responded with unrestrained enthusiasm, several
hundred coming forward to sign the pledge at the close of the meeting, there
was no longer any doubt that the Washingtonian reformers had a universally
potent appeal. Here was "human interest" material par excellence. No fiction
could be more exciting or dramatic. These true-life narratives pulled at the
heartstrings. They aroused awe and wonder at the "miracle of rebirth." Formal
religious beliefs had flesh and blood put on dry bones. And, to the victim of
drink, the Washingtonian message was like a promise of life to a doomed man.
It was the impossible come true.
During these meetings, a Washington Total-Abstinence Society was
formed in Boston. Hawkins was also engaged as the paid secretary of the
Massachusetts Temperance Society, and on June 1, 1841, returned from
Baltimore with his family. Within a short space of time, he and his Boston
associates succeeded in carrying the Washingtonian movement into 160 New
England towns.
On May 11, 1841, the executive committee of the American Temperance
Union, on the occasion of its anniversary meeting in New York City, paid high
tribute to the Washingtonians. In July at the national convention of the Union,
at Saratoga Springs, this praise was even more fulsome. John Marsh and
many of the other leaders saw in the Washingtonians the possibilities of a
great forward advance for the temperance movement. None of them, however,
even in their most optimistic moments, sensed the vitality that was to be
manifested by the Washingtonian movement that very summer and autumn.
Even before the Saratoga convention, two of the most famous of the
many Washingtonian deputation teams, Pollard and Wright, and Vickers and
Small, had begun extensive tours. By autumn, many teams and individuals
were in the field. From the 1842 Report of the American Temperance Union, it
is possible to trace the rapid spread of the movement throughout the country.
J.F. Pollard and W.E. Wright, both of Baltimore - the former having
accompanied Hawkins to New York, and the latter to Boston - began their work
early in the summer of 1841 in Hudson, New York. Their first efforts were
discouraging, but soon they got attention and in a few weeks nearly 3,000 of
the 5,500 inhabitants of Hudson had signed the pledge. A Hudson resident has
left this account of their type of meeting:
Some of the meeting took
the air of deep religious solemnity, eyes that never wept before were suffused...the
simple tale of the ruined inebriate, interrupted by a silence that told of emotions
too big for utterance, would awaken general sympathy, and dissolve a large portion
of the audience in tears. The spell which had bound so many seemed to dissolve
under the magic eloquence of those unlettered men. They spoke from the heart
to the heart. The drunkard found himself unexpectedly an object of interest.
He was no longer an outcast. There were some who still looked upon him as a
man. A chord was reached which had long since ceased to respond to other influences
less kind in their nature...The social principle operated with great power.
A few leaders in the ranks of intemperance having signed the pledge, it appeared
to be the signal for the mass to follow: and on they came, like a torrent sweeping
everything before it. It was for weeks the all-absorbing topic...(7).
Pollard and Wright attended the Saratoga convention and then toured
through central and western New York; and that autumn, through New Jersey
and Pennsylvania. On this tour they obtained 23,340 signatures to the pledge,
"one-fifth of which were supposed to be common drunkards"(7). Late in 1841
they spoke in Maryland and Delaware. They moved in January 1842 into
Virginia, where they worked particularly in Richmond, Petersburg,
Charlottesville and Norfolk, pledging Negroes as well as whites.
The other famous team, Jesse Vickers and Jesse W. Small, also of
Baltimore, began their campaign in June 1841 in Pittsburgh, where "all
classes, all ages, all ranks and denominations, and both sexes, pressed every
night into overflowing churches." In a brief time 10,000 were pledged,
"including a multitude of most hopeless characters"(7). This success was
followed by another in Wheeling, from which place they proceeded to
Cincinnati where Lyman Beecher, now president of Lane Theological
Seminary, had diligently prepared the way for their coming. Large crowds
turned out for the meetings and a strong Washington society was organized
which, by the end of 1841, claimed 8,000 members, 900 of them reformed.
Cincinnati became the chief centre of Washingtonianism in the West, and
Vickers and Small spent a great deal of time preparing the converts who were
to carry on the missionary work. One of these Cincinnati teams, Brown and
Porter, obtained 6,529 signatures in an 8-week campaign in the surrounding
country, 1,630 of them from "hard drinkers" and 700 from confirmed
drunkards. Another Cincinnati team, Turner and Guptill, toured western Ohio
and Michigan. On December 21, 1841, a team of three, probably including
Vickers, began a campaign in St. Louis, laying the foundation for a
Washington society that numbered 7,500 within a few months. Many
communities in Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois were also visited. It is
interesting to note that on February 22, 1842, Abraham Lincoln addressed the
Washington Society of Springfield, Ill. Just how quickly the West was
cultivated by the Washingtonian missionaries, operating chiefly out of
Cincinnati, is shown by the May 1842 claims of 60,000 signatures in Ohio,
30,000 in Kentucky, and 10,000 in Illinois. Of these, it was claimed, "every
seventh man is a reformed drunkard, and every fourth man a reformed
tippler"(7).
The intensity of this cultivation varied with time and place. How intensive
it could be is well portrayed by a citizen of Pittsburgh, in a letter to John
Marsh, in April 1842:
The work has grown in this
city and vicinity...at such a rate as has defied a registration of its triumphs
with anything like statistical accuracy. ...The most active agents and labourers
in the field have been at no time able to report the state of the work in their
own entire province - the work spread us from place to place - running in so
many currents, and meeting in their way so many others arising from other sources,
or springing spontaneously in their pathway, that no one could measure its dimensions
or compass its spread. We have kept some eight or ten missionaries in the field
ever since last June, who have toiled over every part and parcel of every adjoining
country of Pennsylvania, and spread thence into Ohio and Virginia, leaving no
school house, or country church, or little village, cross roads, forge, furnace,
factory, or mills, unvisited; holding meetings wherever two or three could be
gathered together, and organizing as many as from 20 to 30 societies in a single
county...(7).
In the Boston area, Washingtonian activity was intensive from the
beginning. Within 3 months after the first Hawkins and Wright meetings, the
Boston society had this to report:
Since this society went
into operation the delegating committee have sent out two hundred and seventeen
delegations to one hundred and sixty towns in Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Maine, Vermont, and Rhode Island, with wonderful success....Some of those towns
where we have formed societies are now sending out their delegates. The whole
country is now alive to the subject...It is acknowledged on all sides that no
people like ours - although unlearned - could create such a wonderful interest
in the all absorbing cause....
There is no doubt that about
50,000 persons have signed the pledge in the different towns that our delegates
have visited. Where societies were already formed, a more lively interest was
created, - new signers obtained from those who had been inebriates, and thus
a new energy imparted...Where societies had not before existed, new societies
were formed...(8).
Ten months later, in May 1842, the Boston society had 13,000 members,
had sent 260 delegations to 350 towns in New England, and had produced a
number of converts who had become effective missionaries outside of New
England. Benjamin Goodhue, in December 1841, stirred up great interest in
Sag Harbour and the east end of Long Island. A Mr. Cady, during this winter,
toured North Carolina, securing 10,000 signatures. In February 1842 Joseph
J. Johnson and an unnamed fellow Bostonian conducted successful
campaigns in Mobile and New Orleans.
By May 1842 the movement had penetrated every major area of the
country and was going particularly strong in central New York and New
England. The most vigorous urban centres were Baltimore, New York, Boston,
Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Washington, Cincinnati and St. Louis. The city of
Baltimore had 15 societies and 7,842 members. New York and vicinity had 23
societies and 16,000 members. In the Journal of the American Temperance
Union, on April 1, 1842, John Marsh wrote enthusiastically of the New York
activity: "We suppose there are not less than fifty meetings held weekly and
most of them are perfect jams. Our accessions are numerous and often of the
most hopeless characters"(9). In and around Philadelphia, where the societies
took the name of Jefferson, some 20,000 members were enrolled. In the district
of Columbia there were 4,297 members, and another 1,000 in Alexandria, Va.
Later in the year Hawkins visited Washington and was successful in
reactivating the old Congressional Temperance Society and putting it on a
total abstinence basis. Congressman George N. Briggs, soon to be Governor
of Massachusetts, became president of this reorganized society.
To the list of outstanding reformed men who became effective
Washingtonian missionaries during this first year, there should be added the
names of George Haydock, Hudson, N.Y.(8,000 signatures); Col. John Wallis,
Philadelphia (7,000 signatures); Thomas M. Woodruff, New York City; Abel
Bishop, New Haven, Conn.; and Joseph Hayes, Bath, Me.
During 1842 the most outstanding temperance orator of all was won to
the cause. John B. Gough, a bookbinder, was reformed. When his platform
ability was discovered, many Washingtonian societies sponsored his
addresses. As his popularity grew he became a professional free-lance
lecturer; and during the years 1843-47 travelled 6,840 miles, gaining 15,218
signatures to thepledge(11).
Another important development was the organization of women into the
little known "Martha Washington" societies. The first such society was
organized "in a church at the corner of Chrystie and Delancey Streets, New
York, on May 12 of that year [1841], through the efforts of William A. Wisdom
and John W. Oliver"(12). The constitution detailed the purpose:
Whereas, the use of all
intoxicating drinks has caused, and is causing, incalculable evils to individuals
and families, and has a tendency to prostrate all means adapted to the moral,
social and eternal happiness of the whole human family; we, the undersigned
ladies of New York, feeling ourselves especially called upon, not only to refrain
from the use of all intoxicating drinks, but, by our influence and example,
to induce others to do the same, do therefore form ourselves into an association(12).
These Martha Washington societies were organized in many places,
functioning to some extent as auxiliaries of the Washingtonian societies, but
also engaged in the actual rehabilitation of alcoholic women. In the annual
Report of 1843, there is this reference"...the Martha Washington Societies,
feeding the poor, clothing the naked, and reclaiming the intemperate of their
own sex, have been maintained, in most places, with great spirit..."(7).
DURATION
OF THE MOVEMENT
How long the Washingtonian movement continued in full force is a
difficult question to answer. The most dramatic strides were made between the
summers of 1841 and 1842, but apparently the peak of activity was reached in
1843. That year, Gough was touring New England, and Hawkins northern and
western New York as well as sections of Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine.
R.P. Taylor was doing effective work in Georgia. Late that autumn Hawkins
campaigned in North Carolina and Georgia, stimulating great Washingtonian
activity in that region. It was a year of high activity, with the major portion of
the work carried on, as it was through most of the life of the movement, by
numerous Washingtonians whose names are unrecorded.
On May 28,1844, in Boston, the Washingtonians were the sponsors of ,
and leading participants in, the largest temperance demonstration ever held,
up to that time, with nearly 30,000 members of various temperance
organizations participating. Governor George N. Briggs, William K. Mitchell
and John B. Gough were the leading speakers.
In the fall of 1845 Hawkins began one of his most intensive campaigns,
in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, winding up in the spring of 1846 with very
successful meetings in New Orleans and Mobile. During this 8-month period
Hawkins not only spoke daily but also directed the work of many assistants
and helped, as he always did, to organize societies to continue the work. In
much of the territory covered by Hawkins on this campaign the Washingtonian
movement was still at full tide in 1845 and 1846. This tends to corroborate the
generalization of Wooley and Johnson that "for four years it continued to
sweep the country." But in some of the cities which had been reached by the
movement in 1841, a decline had already set in.
In New York City the Sons of Temperance, a total abstinence order which
had been founded with the help and blessing of Washingtonians, had begun,
late in 1842, to receive into its membership many Washingtonians. Slowly but
increasingly it displaced the function of the Washington societies.
In Cincinnati, in January 1845, Lyman Beecher wrote to John Marsh
about the "resurgence of the liquor tide" and of the need for a new type of
temperance appeal. He thought that "though the Washingtonians have
endured and worked well, their thunder is worn out"(13).
Fehlandt (4) states |