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Woman Suffrage and the Liquor Interests, 1915
Courtesy,
New Jersey Historical Society
"Yearbook, Women’s
Political Union," 1916
Click on image to enlarge. |
"Well, boys, we saved the home."
"The
Literary Digest, 51 (October 30, 1915)
Click on image to enlarge. |
In the early 20th century, New Jersey’s
liquor interests were opposed to woman suffrage, a view shared by liquor
interests across the nation. Distillers and retailers of liquor believed
that woman suffrage would bring about prohibition, owing to the many
efforts since the late 19th century, by such groups as the
Women’s Christian Temperance Union in New Jersey and elsewhere, to
gain women the vote. The national WCTU was the first large women’s
organization in the country to endorse woman suffrage. In New Jersey,
Sarah Corson Downs led the New Jersey branch of the WCTU to greater
membership and activities in favor of both temperance and suffrage. It
was assumed that liquor interests had much to do with the defeat of the
New Jersey woman suffrage referendum of 1915. Ironically, the 18th
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution establishing prohibition was ratified
by male legislators early in 1919 before women nationwide had the vote.
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