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  2. Women in the United States Prohibition movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_the_United_States...

    The Women's Christian Temperance Union was organized on November 18, 1874, in Cleveland, Ohio. [3] It quickly became the largest women's organization in the United States. The women in the movement were inspired by the serious drinking problem in the United States and the disproportionate ills that befell women whose husbands were drunkards. It ...

  3. Pauline Sabin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pauline_Sabin

    Pauline Morton Sabin (April 23, 1887 – December 27, 1955) was an American prohibition repeal leader and Republican party official. Born in Chicago, she was a New Yorker who founded the Women's Organization for National Prohibition Reform (WONPR).

  4. Georgia Hopley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgia_Hopley

    Georgia Hopley was born April 29, 1858, in Bucyrus, Ohio. [1] Her father, John P. Hopley (1821–1904), was longtime editor of the Bucyrus Evening Journal, and her mother, Georgianna (Rochester) Hopley was active in the temperance movement of the 1870s.

  5. Frances Willard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Willard

    Frances Elizabeth Caroline Willard (September 28, 1839 – February 17, 1898) was an American educator, temperance reformer, and women's suffragist.Willard became the national president of Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) in 1879 and remained president until her death in 1898.

  6. Carrie Nation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrie_Nation

    Caroline Amelia Nation (November 25, 1846 – June 9, 1911), often referred to by Carrie, Carry Nation, [1] Carrie A. Nation, or Hatchet Granny, [2] [3] was an American who was a radical member of the temperance movement, which opposed alcohol before the advent of Prohibition.

  7. Woodrow Wilson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodrow_Wilson

    In October 1919, Wilson vetoed the Volstead Act, legislation designed to enforce Prohibition, but his veto was overridden by Congress. [276] [277] Wilson opposed women's suffrage in 1911 because he believed women lacked the public experience needed to be good voters. The actual evidence of how women voters behaved in the western states changed ...

  8. Prohibition (miniseries) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prohibition_(miniseries)

    Prohibition describes how the consumption and effect of alcoholic beverages in the United States were connected to many different cultural forces including immigration, women's suffrage, and the income tax. Eventually the Temperance movement led to the passing of Prohibition, the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

  9. Woman's Christian Temperance Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woman's_Christian...

    The Newfoundland branch played an important part in campaigning for women's suffrage on the grounds that women were vital in the struggle for prohibition. [53] In 1885 Letitia Youmans founded an organization which was to become the leading women's society in the national temperance movement.