For God and Home and Native Land
Title: For God and Home and Native Land
Category: History
Details: Words: 1177 | Pages: 5.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
For God and Home and Native Land
For God and Home and Native Land
In Illinois during the year 1900, temperance and prohibition were prominent issues on the social and political stage. The temperance movement found most of its adherents in middle-class women. Urban women saw the linkages between poverty and alcoholism, while many rural women were aware of how the isolation of farm life amplified the horrors of alcohol abuse. The temperance movement was directly related to the women's suffrage movement going
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State Journal. 16 May 1900:4
“Early Women’s Christian Temperance Union.” http://www.wctu.org/earlyhistory.htm. 18 November 2000
“Hanna on Woman Suffrage.” Du Quoin Weekly Tribune. 6 July 1900: 2
“Not a Foe to the Canteen.” Du Quoin Weekly Tribune. 5 October 1900: 1
Schwarz, Frederic D. “The Time Machine.” American Heritage. May 2000: 107-110
“Temperance Movement to Meet.” Chicago Tribune. 16 November 1900: 1
“Temperance Union: Local Organization Entertained at Home of Mrs. Aaron Anthony.” Illinois State Journal. 18 May 1900: 6
“Women and Home.” Du Quoin Weekly Tribune. 23 March 1900: 3
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