As the traditional British folk song that the rock group Traffic made famous in the 1970s and that lends its name to this book's title demonstrates, the battle against John Barleycorn was a losing one: "And little Sir John and the nut-brown bowl / Proved the strongest man at last." Ben Johnson's sweeping, highly readable, and extensively illustrated "spirited" overview of Arkansas's efforts to regulate and halt the consumption of alcohol reveals much about the texture of life and politics in the state--and country--as Arkansas grappled with strong opinions on both sides. After early attempts to keep drink from the American Indians during the colonial period, temperance groups' efforts switched to antebellum towns and middle-class citizens. After the Civil War new federal taxes on whiskey production led to violence between revenue agents and moonshiners, and the state joined the growing national movement against saloons that culminated in 1915 when the legislature approved a measure to halt the sale, manufacture, and distribution of alcohol--including that of Arkansas's substantial wine industry. The state supported national prohibition, but people became disillusioned with the widespread violations of the law. However, the state didn't repeal its own prohibition law until a fiscal crisis in 1935 required it in order to raise revenue. The new law only authorized retail liquor stores, not the return of taverns or bars. A final effort to restore laws against John Barleycorn in 1950 was rebuffed by voters. Still, there are a number of counties in Arkansas that remain dry and disputes over the granting of private club licenses continue to make news.
For biographical information about Baynham, see the memoir of his son: James C. Baynham, Where Does My Age Group Meet? ... Arkansas's experience with Prohibition, see Ben F. Johnson III, John Barleycorn Must Die: The War Against Drink ...
Henry, James P. The Arkansas Gazetteer for 1873: An Emigrant's Guide to Arkansas. ... Hobson, Fred C., Jr. Serpent in Eden: H. L. Mencken and the South. ... John Barleycorn Must Die: The War against Drink in Arkansas.
The Asheville meeting had been called by Bishop James Cannon Jr. ... Barton was a native of Jonesboro, Arkansas, and formerly a pastor of a Baptist church in Little Rock and editor of the Baptist Advance. Two hundred sixty-seven ...
... M. Hawkins Sixteenth - Union , Calhoun - R . F. Catterson , Loinski Ivy Seventeenth - Clark , Pike , Sevier - W ... M. Johnson Secretary - R . L. Archer House of Representatives : Speaker - C . W. Tankersley Clerk - J . R. Richards ...
... 36, 41, 59–61, 64–65, 68; and rural conflict, 35–37, 46, 50–55, 63, 70 Moreton, Bethany, 2, 244n22 Morgan, Bobby, 200–202 Morgan, Marvin, 141 Morgan, W.S., 25, 28 Morrison, Stanley, 221 Mountain Home, Ark., 137, 141–43, 152, 156–57, ...
Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 2000 [1979]. Lambert, Roger. “Hoover and the Red Cross in the Arkansas Drought of 1930.” Arkansas Historical Quarterly 29, no. 1 (Spring 1970): 3–19. Lanier, Robert A. Memphis in the Twenties.
Every 3rd issue is a quarterly cumulation.
27 Webb's pay rose to $125, and he received $200 in back pay. Webb, a Californian, could vote and years later he was proud to say that he had done so for McAdoo in the 1932 Senate election.94 McAdoo's belief in racial hierarchy and ...
Includes How to listen to God / by John E. Batterson (pages 63-72) and The seven-day mental diet / by Emmet Fox (pages 73-91).
The character of Eugene Gant is generally believed to be a depiction of Wolfe himself. The novel covers the span of time from Eugene's birth to the age of 19.