When you write a book, you have to anticipate that not everyone is going to like what you have to say, whether in whole or in part. I've been very fortunate to get some good reviews, from students, friends, and professional colleagues. But in the past week, Prohibition has also come, if not exactly under attack, at least under critique.
The first came from David Kyvig in The Catholic Historical Review (http://www.muse.uq.edu.au/login?uri=/journals/catholic_historical_review/v096/96.2.kyvig.html). Let me say what an honor it was to have Prof. Kyvig write a review. When it comes to experts on the repeal of Prohibition, he is at the top of the list (quite literally having written the book). And he offered up a balanced, in the main, review of the book. However, if I was to critique his critique, it would be that I didn't write the book he wanted me to write. Indeed, his largest issue (and he did make some valid points that I hope to one day be able to redress in a second edition) was that I didn't present a "balanced" view of Prohibition in Indiana. Of course, I wasn't exactly seeking to write such a book. Rather, I was writing the biography of a man (and a movement) who thought Prohibition was a good idea. It wasn't going to be balanced in that sense! I could quibble on some other things, but if that is the worst thing he can say about the book, then so be it. All authors have to take critiques after all (and Kyvig's book once got a similar critique from Jack Blocker). It comes with the territory.
The second critique was a bit more interesting, on a technological level at least. While doing a quick search (yes, I Google the book often, just to try and get a feel for things), I stumbled upon a reader blog, in which someone had made mention of Prohibition. Obviously, I had to see what was said! The post was from 4 days ago and "Nuthatch" from "NW Indiana" was complaining about "slogging" through the book. Indeed, Nuthatch admitted that it was full of information they found of use, but complained the writing was "uninspired." Who knows, maybe Nuthatch will come around the further they get into the book. Perhaps not. I know you can't please everyone all the time. Of course maybe it also had something to do with Nuthatch saying that they were also bored by reading their camera's instruction manual, I don't know!
Here's to hoping that May will bring more good news. It already looks like I'll be speaking to the Marion County Historical Society in August, and who knows, maybe some better reviews are forthcoming!
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Upcoming Book Events
As the semester at Butler winds down (though online, it never ends...and for that, I'm thankful), planning continues on the Summer/Fall-leg of the Prohibition book tour (such as it is). Here is what is for sure, with some other things still in the works:
Thursday, May 27th, Munster Historical Society -- 8pm EST (7pm local)
Saturday, July 10th, Johnson County Historical Society -- time to be announced
Thursday, October 14th, Elkhart County Historical Society -- time to be announced
It also looks quite possible that I'll be speaking to the Marion County Historical Society and Hamilton County Historical Society at some point this summer as well. And who knows, some other historical societies or libraries or bookstores, might come along as well!
Thursday, May 27th, Munster Historical Society -- 8pm EST (7pm local)
Saturday, July 10th, Johnson County Historical Society -- time to be announced
Thursday, October 14th, Elkhart County Historical Society -- time to be announced
It also looks quite possible that I'll be speaking to the Marion County Historical Society and Hamilton County Historical Society at some point this summer as well. And who knows, some other historical societies or libraries or bookstores, might come along as well!
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
On Fleming
During Easter, I was given an op/ed from the Wall Street Journal from back in January (you can read it for yourself here: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704876104574632273709727450.html. It was about Prohibition and its author was Thomas Fleming. Now, at the outset, let me say how much respect I have for Mr. Fleming. His books on the Revolutionary War and the Founding Fathers are top-notch, well written, and well researched. And while I appreciate that he doesn't just "limit" himself to one period (he's written about World War I) -- which is something I wish more historians did, or even one genre (he's done some *gasp* historical fiction), but with this op/ed he missed the mark. In 15 well written paragraphs he committed or repeated 15 fictions about Prohibition.
Now, I realize that people can disagree about Prohibition (just see my last post where I discussed the article by the Cato Institute), and I have no problem with that. What I do have a problem with is when people, including historians, refuse to engage in a discussion based in the facts, but rather repeat old canards, perhaps even ones they were raised on, that rewrite history. So, to set the record straight, even if it is after the passage of 3 months, and while understanding Fleming's own space limitations since he was writing for the Journal, here's what I have to say about Fleming's op/ed:
1. Fleming acknowledges that sin and morality were a driving force for drys, however he seemingly attempts to separate the two. That is he says one group of drys saw drinking as a sin, and another group of drys were moral reformers trying to be just like the abolitionists of old. That they were, in the main, one in the same (as the life of Shumaker shows) he does not seem to want to admit. Why he tries to make this distinction, I don't know. But it implies a lack of understanding of the Protestant reformer tradition in America.
2. Fleming introduces readers to one of the top American drys and economists of the early 20th century, Irving Fisher, who asserted that introducing Prohibition was going to increase American industrial productivity and help America's workers. Fleming seems to dismiss Fisher's claims and work, but doesn't counter them. Here in lies the problem, he can't. Fisher was writing at a time when large numbers of workers came to the job hungover and possibly even drunk. Fleming does not. The world pre-Prohibition was both similar to the one we live in today and very very different. What the drys did with their reform helped create the modern American we have today.
3. Fleming introduces readers to eugenics (the science of the "well born"), which like many other reformers (both dry and not) of the Progressive Era, Fisher subscribed to. And indeed, perhaps many drys were both narrowly and even broadly eugenicists. But what does that prove? If Fleming is trying to use subtext to link dry eugenicists to the Nazis, he is on dangerous ground indeed. If he is trying to imply that some reformers saw alcohol as inhibiting "race betterment" (to use the language of the time), or even that alcohol might have promoted crime etc, does that discredit those ideas just because eugenicists held them? Eugenicists were also among the first and leading advocates of genes and heredity, and I assume that Fleming isn't discounting those scientific facts just because eugenicists subscribed to them.
4. Fleming talks about how drys (including the Anti Saloon League) used democracy at the local level (via local option laws) to enact Prohibition. I'm confident he isn't implying that political activism is a bad thing. Why shouldn't concerned citizens get involved? But what I find more interesting is the lack of mention as to WHY those drys were organizing. Fleming fails to mention wet/brewer corruption of local politics, nor does he talk about the violence and vice that were part of saloon life. Even beyond drinking for the sake of drink, drys had good reason to want to deal with alcohol and the industry behind its production.
5. Drys soon moved their activism from the local to the state level, and then on to the national level. In part, this had to do with the ease of transportation of alcohol from wet areas into dry ones (the advent of the automobile, not to mention the use of inter-urbans and trains). Fleming decries this imposition on wets, making it into a monumental hardship. Doesn't what drys did make sense? And furthermore, what they were doing in seeking to put limits on interstate commerce was little more than what other reformers were doing (such as with prostitution via the Mann Act).
6. There is no doubt that World War I (and the associated anti-German sentiment) aided drys in achieving Prohibition on the national level. What Fleming fails to note for his readers is that the dry crusade was something of a cultural struggle wets and drys. There was, in other words, plenty of animosity between many wet German-Americans and many native born American drys BEFORE the war. That drys would use World War I to their advantage is really not surprising, nor is was it unexpected.
7. By April of 1917, a majority of states were dry (including Shumaker's Indiana, which went dry that very month), and all of them had some legal limit to alcohol on the books. Fleming, however, implies, that World War I made national Prohibition possible, when in fact all it did was speed up the dry timetable. If they were guilty of anything it was being opportunistic. But if you were a dry in 1917, could you be blamed for acting when everything seemed to be going your way?
8. Fleming devotes an entire paragraph to attempts by drys to make the Army dry and to halting the use of grain to make alcohol, both as a war measure. But he doesn't explain why this is troubling. Nor does he mention that most of the other combatant nations either pondered or attempted similar actions.
9. Anti-German sentiment was hardly the sole province of drys during the war, which is something Fleming seems to imply. After all, the restriction on the German language was hardly a dry idea.
10. Fleming does a disservice to the discussion of the ratification of the 18th Amendment. At the time, it was the fastest ratified amendment in American History. Fleming never mentions its ratification, instead implying that it all but bogged down.
11. To say that Wilson's signing of full Wartime Prohibition cost him German and Irish voes (for the 1918 mid-term election), as Fleming does, seems to ignore that the nation was now at war against Germany and allied to Great Britain! The Democrats, spearheaded by Wilson, had run in 1916 on the promise that they would keep the nation out of the Great War. Indeed, Democrats attempted to paint Republicans from the top down as "war mongers" for talking about preparedness. This was part of a re-election strategy to keep German and Irish voters in the Democratic fold. Wilson waited roughly a month after being sworn in for his second term to ask for a declaration of war, which is probably something the Anglophile president had wanted to do since 1914. German and Irish voters had a much larger reason to turn on the Democrats than wartime Prohibition.
12. The Volstead Act was the enforcement law for the 18th Amendment, the Constitutional amendment that Fleming never acknowledges had passed. Wilson's veto measure, which was quickly overridden, was penned after his famous stroke and in the midst of his "recovery." We actually don't know what Wilson thought about Volstead at the time. It is highly likely that his wife penned the veto measure, not the president himself. But Fleming is content with discussion of Volstead, he goes on to assert that "tens of thousands" of people suddenly found themselves unemployed once the law went into effect in 1920. That's not exactly true either. Many brewers converted into other businesses, as did many saloons. The net unemployment of Prohibition is almost zero, as American industry boomed during the 1920s. Those who did lose their jobs quickly found new ones.
13. Fleming virtually repeats the old line that during Prohibition "everybody" was drinking. The evidence, simply put, does not support such wet propaganda. Had Fleming consulted Norman Clark's work, he'd have seen that most studies indicate that drinking dropped nearly 90% and that most people never saw the inside of a bootleg saloon or engaged in home brew experimentation. Furthermore, drinking levels AFTER repeal don't return to pre-Prohibition levels until the 1960s. In short, most people weren't drinking and most people didn't return to drinking after repeal. Indeed, Fleming seems to miss the point of the 18th Amendment's ratification: minorities don't pass Constitutional Amendments. Wets may have blamed Prohibition for the Great Depression, but surely Fleming doesn't actually believe that (though he does imply it). After all, that would discount the international loan/monetary system, over production, banking abuse, and the stock market (not to mention problems with American agriculture and the rebound of European economies).
14. Franklin Roosevelt NEEDED repeal, the 21st Amendment was proof that he and his New Deal were doing something. Furthermore, he was just as opportunistic in 1932/1933 as drys had been in 1918, and could cite good reasons for bringing about the repeal of Prohibition. But leaving no wet propaganda unrepeated, Fleming asserts that FDR's repeal was a blow to the Mafia, all but implying that the Mob and gangsters had been born because of Prohibition. This shows a lack of understanding the history of organized crime in America, and is simply wrong when it comes to the Mob's finances and future. For one, while the Mob did make millions from bootlegging, that was simply more money the Mob was making. It was already making millions from gambling, prostitution, and the start of influence within unions. Furthermore, the Mob didn't "die" because of repeal, it kept going quite strong right up to the 1970s and 1980s, when the Federal Government finally broke the back of the Italian Mafia (only to have to face off against the Russian and Chinese organized crime families).
15. In his final paragraph, Fleming links Prohibition (as an attempt at economic restructuring) to events today (with the Federal Government increasingly active in automobile production, health care, and banking), and sees it as a warning to us today. But he'd do better to go back and reread his first paragraph. Prohibition's goal was not to restructure the economy, it was about sin and public morals. Asserting otherwise is to not give drys their due, nor to say that they unintentionally attempted such a restructuring is a misreading of the historical record.
There is other news to spread, but I think I've written enough for now. But if you want to read about how Prohibition actually happened in Indiana, then pick up:
http://undpress.nd.edu/book/P01293
Now, I realize that people can disagree about Prohibition (just see my last post where I discussed the article by the Cato Institute), and I have no problem with that. What I do have a problem with is when people, including historians, refuse to engage in a discussion based in the facts, but rather repeat old canards, perhaps even ones they were raised on, that rewrite history. So, to set the record straight, even if it is after the passage of 3 months, and while understanding Fleming's own space limitations since he was writing for the Journal, here's what I have to say about Fleming's op/ed:
1. Fleming acknowledges that sin and morality were a driving force for drys, however he seemingly attempts to separate the two. That is he says one group of drys saw drinking as a sin, and another group of drys were moral reformers trying to be just like the abolitionists of old. That they were, in the main, one in the same (as the life of Shumaker shows) he does not seem to want to admit. Why he tries to make this distinction, I don't know. But it implies a lack of understanding of the Protestant reformer tradition in America.
2. Fleming introduces readers to one of the top American drys and economists of the early 20th century, Irving Fisher, who asserted that introducing Prohibition was going to increase American industrial productivity and help America's workers. Fleming seems to dismiss Fisher's claims and work, but doesn't counter them. Here in lies the problem, he can't. Fisher was writing at a time when large numbers of workers came to the job hungover and possibly even drunk. Fleming does not. The world pre-Prohibition was both similar to the one we live in today and very very different. What the drys did with their reform helped create the modern American we have today.
3. Fleming introduces readers to eugenics (the science of the "well born"), which like many other reformers (both dry and not) of the Progressive Era, Fisher subscribed to. And indeed, perhaps many drys were both narrowly and even broadly eugenicists. But what does that prove? If Fleming is trying to use subtext to link dry eugenicists to the Nazis, he is on dangerous ground indeed. If he is trying to imply that some reformers saw alcohol as inhibiting "race betterment" (to use the language of the time), or even that alcohol might have promoted crime etc, does that discredit those ideas just because eugenicists held them? Eugenicists were also among the first and leading advocates of genes and heredity, and I assume that Fleming isn't discounting those scientific facts just because eugenicists subscribed to them.
4. Fleming talks about how drys (including the Anti Saloon League) used democracy at the local level (via local option laws) to enact Prohibition. I'm confident he isn't implying that political activism is a bad thing. Why shouldn't concerned citizens get involved? But what I find more interesting is the lack of mention as to WHY those drys were organizing. Fleming fails to mention wet/brewer corruption of local politics, nor does he talk about the violence and vice that were part of saloon life. Even beyond drinking for the sake of drink, drys had good reason to want to deal with alcohol and the industry behind its production.
5. Drys soon moved their activism from the local to the state level, and then on to the national level. In part, this had to do with the ease of transportation of alcohol from wet areas into dry ones (the advent of the automobile, not to mention the use of inter-urbans and trains). Fleming decries this imposition on wets, making it into a monumental hardship. Doesn't what drys did make sense? And furthermore, what they were doing in seeking to put limits on interstate commerce was little more than what other reformers were doing (such as with prostitution via the Mann Act).
6. There is no doubt that World War I (and the associated anti-German sentiment) aided drys in achieving Prohibition on the national level. What Fleming fails to note for his readers is that the dry crusade was something of a cultural struggle wets and drys. There was, in other words, plenty of animosity between many wet German-Americans and many native born American drys BEFORE the war. That drys would use World War I to their advantage is really not surprising, nor is was it unexpected.
7. By April of 1917, a majority of states were dry (including Shumaker's Indiana, which went dry that very month), and all of them had some legal limit to alcohol on the books. Fleming, however, implies, that World War I made national Prohibition possible, when in fact all it did was speed up the dry timetable. If they were guilty of anything it was being opportunistic. But if you were a dry in 1917, could you be blamed for acting when everything seemed to be going your way?
8. Fleming devotes an entire paragraph to attempts by drys to make the Army dry and to halting the use of grain to make alcohol, both as a war measure. But he doesn't explain why this is troubling. Nor does he mention that most of the other combatant nations either pondered or attempted similar actions.
9. Anti-German sentiment was hardly the sole province of drys during the war, which is something Fleming seems to imply. After all, the restriction on the German language was hardly a dry idea.
10. Fleming does a disservice to the discussion of the ratification of the 18th Amendment. At the time, it was the fastest ratified amendment in American History. Fleming never mentions its ratification, instead implying that it all but bogged down.
11. To say that Wilson's signing of full Wartime Prohibition cost him German and Irish voes (for the 1918 mid-term election), as Fleming does, seems to ignore that the nation was now at war against Germany and allied to Great Britain! The Democrats, spearheaded by Wilson, had run in 1916 on the promise that they would keep the nation out of the Great War. Indeed, Democrats attempted to paint Republicans from the top down as "war mongers" for talking about preparedness. This was part of a re-election strategy to keep German and Irish voters in the Democratic fold. Wilson waited roughly a month after being sworn in for his second term to ask for a declaration of war, which is probably something the Anglophile president had wanted to do since 1914. German and Irish voters had a much larger reason to turn on the Democrats than wartime Prohibition.
12. The Volstead Act was the enforcement law for the 18th Amendment, the Constitutional amendment that Fleming never acknowledges had passed. Wilson's veto measure, which was quickly overridden, was penned after his famous stroke and in the midst of his "recovery." We actually don't know what Wilson thought about Volstead at the time. It is highly likely that his wife penned the veto measure, not the president himself. But Fleming is content with discussion of Volstead, he goes on to assert that "tens of thousands" of people suddenly found themselves unemployed once the law went into effect in 1920. That's not exactly true either. Many brewers converted into other businesses, as did many saloons. The net unemployment of Prohibition is almost zero, as American industry boomed during the 1920s. Those who did lose their jobs quickly found new ones.
13. Fleming virtually repeats the old line that during Prohibition "everybody" was drinking. The evidence, simply put, does not support such wet propaganda. Had Fleming consulted Norman Clark's work, he'd have seen that most studies indicate that drinking dropped nearly 90% and that most people never saw the inside of a bootleg saloon or engaged in home brew experimentation. Furthermore, drinking levels AFTER repeal don't return to pre-Prohibition levels until the 1960s. In short, most people weren't drinking and most people didn't return to drinking after repeal. Indeed, Fleming seems to miss the point of the 18th Amendment's ratification: minorities don't pass Constitutional Amendments. Wets may have blamed Prohibition for the Great Depression, but surely Fleming doesn't actually believe that (though he does imply it). After all, that would discount the international loan/monetary system, over production, banking abuse, and the stock market (not to mention problems with American agriculture and the rebound of European economies).
14. Franklin Roosevelt NEEDED repeal, the 21st Amendment was proof that he and his New Deal were doing something. Furthermore, he was just as opportunistic in 1932/1933 as drys had been in 1918, and could cite good reasons for bringing about the repeal of Prohibition. But leaving no wet propaganda unrepeated, Fleming asserts that FDR's repeal was a blow to the Mafia, all but implying that the Mob and gangsters had been born because of Prohibition. This shows a lack of understanding the history of organized crime in America, and is simply wrong when it comes to the Mob's finances and future. For one, while the Mob did make millions from bootlegging, that was simply more money the Mob was making. It was already making millions from gambling, prostitution, and the start of influence within unions. Furthermore, the Mob didn't "die" because of repeal, it kept going quite strong right up to the 1970s and 1980s, when the Federal Government finally broke the back of the Italian Mafia (only to have to face off against the Russian and Chinese organized crime families).
15. In his final paragraph, Fleming links Prohibition (as an attempt at economic restructuring) to events today (with the Federal Government increasingly active in automobile production, health care, and banking), and sees it as a warning to us today. But he'd do better to go back and reread his first paragraph. Prohibition's goal was not to restructure the economy, it was about sin and public morals. Asserting otherwise is to not give drys their due, nor to say that they unintentionally attempted such a restructuring is a misreading of the historical record.
There is other news to spread, but I think I've written enough for now. But if you want to read about how Prohibition actually happened in Indiana, then pick up:
http://undpress.nd.edu/book/P01293
Labels:
Butler University,
Cato Institute,
Fleming,
politics,
Prohibition,
Wilson
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
As March Ends, the Madness Begins!
The end of March marks an important chapter in the history of Prohibition is Here to Stay. A year ago, Russ Pulliam of the Indianapolis Star published a wonderful editorial on the book (which he has reissued in other forms since). And then, at the start of April 2009, I got in the mail my author's copies of the book. Of course, looking back, it was in March of 2005 that I defended my dissertation which became the book to begin with! But as March 2010 comes to close, there is much to think about and look forward to!
For starters, Prohibition (and some of the myths about it) remains in the news. Yesterday the Cato Institute ran the following story on their website about debates over the legalization of marijuana in California (http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2010/03/29/pot-protectionism-and-unions/). In doing so, they pointed out how bootleggers "supported" Prohibition because of the profit motive involved (just like pot growers today are often found at the lead of anti-legalization efforts). Economic arguments, and to some extent personal liberty arguments, aside what is often missing in such discussion with my friends who are Libertarians is the morality of a given law. That is, like the Baptists mentioned in the Cato article (and the Methodists I write about in Prohibition) many people don't just weigh if something "makes sense" from a monetary standpoint or if people "should" be allowed to do things, but if such an activity is "good" for both the individual and for society. Of course one might argue about how we are to determine if something is "good" or not, but moving a discussion simply into money or rights, while ignoring the morality of a choice doesn't get us very far. Saying that Prohibition of alcohol "failed" because it was repealed misses the point of both what it actually accomplished, why it was enacted, and why it was actually repealed. Using it as an argument to talk about legalizing drugs also misses the differences between alcohol (as a chemical substance) and illegal drugs (not to mention the difference between those drugs, and the potential of a slippery slope of legalization). Some of this I discuss in the book, some of it I'm working on for other projects.
Secondly, the end of March holds out much promise for the future -- when it comes to the book tours. Contacts have been made with several conferences and book fairs, which may bear fruit in the next year. I've also been asked to prepare a manuscript on Prohibition from a trans-national perspective. Likewise, it looks as though I'll be speaking to the Elkhart County Historical Society in October, possibly the Marion County Historical Society this summer, and I'm talking with the Johnson County Historical Society today about a speaking date. Perhaps other spots will open up as well (I've been in contact with the Munster Historical Society as well). Here's hoping that the tour around Indiana will continue, as the event at the Whitley County Historical Society (http://talkofthetownwc.com/blog/2010/03/snapshots_discovering_the_proh.html) was GREAT!
Lastly, a word needs to be said about March Madness! For the past three years I've been proudly employed by Butler University. I'm very proud to see the Dawgs in the Final Four, very happy that I made the decision to include BU on the back of the book cover, and very honored that students (both past and present) have enjoyed the book and have even gone to the mat with the bookstore to get it put on the faculty shelf! Its a great school to be affiliated with in so many respects, and an honor to get to teach such a bright group of students.
For starters, Prohibition (and some of the myths about it) remains in the news. Yesterday the Cato Institute ran the following story on their website about debates over the legalization of marijuana in California (http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2010/03/29/pot-protectionism-and-unions/). In doing so, they pointed out how bootleggers "supported" Prohibition because of the profit motive involved (just like pot growers today are often found at the lead of anti-legalization efforts). Economic arguments, and to some extent personal liberty arguments, aside what is often missing in such discussion with my friends who are Libertarians is the morality of a given law. That is, like the Baptists mentioned in the Cato article (and the Methodists I write about in Prohibition) many people don't just weigh if something "makes sense" from a monetary standpoint or if people "should" be allowed to do things, but if such an activity is "good" for both the individual and for society. Of course one might argue about how we are to determine if something is "good" or not, but moving a discussion simply into money or rights, while ignoring the morality of a choice doesn't get us very far. Saying that Prohibition of alcohol "failed" because it was repealed misses the point of both what it actually accomplished, why it was enacted, and why it was actually repealed. Using it as an argument to talk about legalizing drugs also misses the differences between alcohol (as a chemical substance) and illegal drugs (not to mention the difference between those drugs, and the potential of a slippery slope of legalization). Some of this I discuss in the book, some of it I'm working on for other projects.
Secondly, the end of March holds out much promise for the future -- when it comes to the book tours. Contacts have been made with several conferences and book fairs, which may bear fruit in the next year. I've also been asked to prepare a manuscript on Prohibition from a trans-national perspective. Likewise, it looks as though I'll be speaking to the Elkhart County Historical Society in October, possibly the Marion County Historical Society this summer, and I'm talking with the Johnson County Historical Society today about a speaking date. Perhaps other spots will open up as well (I've been in contact with the Munster Historical Society as well). Here's hoping that the tour around Indiana will continue, as the event at the Whitley County Historical Society (http://talkofthetownwc.com/blog/2010/03/snapshots_discovering_the_proh.html) was GREAT!
Lastly, a word needs to be said about March Madness! For the past three years I've been proudly employed by Butler University. I'm very proud to see the Dawgs in the Final Four, very happy that I made the decision to include BU on the back of the book cover, and very honored that students (both past and present) have enjoyed the book and have even gone to the mat with the bookstore to get it put on the faculty shelf! Its a great school to be affiliated with in so many respects, and an honor to get to teach such a bright group of students.
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Shumaker comes to Columbia City
Ever since 1994, Columbia City has been a part of my life. Sure, back in high school I'd been there once or twice (to go to Paige's Crossing), but once Erin entered my life, so did Columbia City. Her dad's family is based there, so I've had the
The Whitley County Historical Society hosts a monthly event called "Second Sundays" in which they have guest speakers come in and give presentations to the public. Last year I contacted the WCHS about bringing Shumaker's story to "the City," and my proposal was accepted. The WCHS is based in the home of Vice President (former governor and Columbia City favorite son) Thomas Marshall. As luck would have it, not only does Marshall play an important role in my book, but March 14 also happens to be his birthday, so it all came together rather nicely as it turned out.
The WCHS went all out. There was good publicity in the Ft. Wayne papers and a presence on the internet beyond my own efforts on Facebook and Twitter. In addition to PR, they also put together a nice display, complete with artifacts from a brewery that had operated in CC, some clippings on Prohibition raids on stills, and lots of things from the WCTU. The centerpiece by far was the Francis Willard memorial window from the old Methodist Church. The PR paid off, as the hall was filled, and not just because I had 7 family members in attendance, there were about 30 other people there I'm not related to!
My talk itself centered on Shumaker (of course) but also on the 1908 election cycle, when Shumaker and Marshall first went head-to-head. It went well, the questions after I was done were great, as was the discussion I had (actually before as well as) after the talk with folks who were there. This included the grandson of the woman for whom that aforementioned memorial window had been dedicated (who also passed along that his grandfather had been saved at a revival in town and had taken the temperance pledge, which helped him land the aforementioned grandmother as his wife), the grandson of Attorney General Arthur Gilliom (whose father I had the honor to interview), a member of the ABC board for Whitley County, and a local oral historian who recently interviewed a man in the southern part of the county who told about a brewing operation that never closed when Prohibition became law, and was never shut down during Prohibition.
All in all, it was just a great time! I was very happy that Erin, Kate, and Nick got to watch me in action, and very pleased that my CC in-laws and my parents were in attendance to boot. I hope there are more days like this for the book, it was a very nice way to cap off the spring set of Shumaker talks.
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Shumaker comes to Anderson
Today I took part in the 30th Annual Indiana Association of Historians conference. It was a snowy trip up to Anderson (where this year's conference was held), but well worth it. The conference was at Anderson University's "off site" MBA building (which is a partnership with Purdue). It was a nice place to hold a conference, and right off of I-69, so very easy to get in and out of (and probably a bit easier than going on to the Ravens' campus proper).
It was good to see some my IUPUI profs, who are now colleagues, as well as colleagues from Butler, as well as meet others from the University of Indianapolis and Anderson University (these were the Big 4 at the conference this year). I was part of a panel that looked at Religious History. A colleague from Butler gave a paper on the rise of the Methodists in Indiana, I talked about Shumaker (re-introducing him to the state), and a prof from Anderson talked about missionary activity in the Belgian Congo. It was a good panel, and of course we went long! The comments were good (though basically everything he questioned is in the book), and I got a question on Catholics and wine for the Eucharist. So, as professional presentations went, I thought it was good. We had a full room, which is always nice too! We'll see if that translates into any more book sales or not! In the meantime, I was asked to be part of a Peace and Justice panel at the end of March (but we'll have to see if that can happen or not).
Up next is taking Shumaker to Columbia City. There is a possible "road trip" to talk about Shumaker at NorthWood High School in Nappanee, but we'll see about that. And who knows, maybe something else will open up as well! In the meantime, I enjoyed my trip to A-Town and am thankful that my parents were able (and willing) to make the trek down to watch the kids so that I could.
It was good to see some my IUPUI profs, who are now colleagues, as well as colleagues from Butler, as well as meet others from the University of Indianapolis and Anderson University (these were the Big 4 at the conference this year). I was part of a panel that looked at Religious History. A colleague from Butler gave a paper on the rise of the Methodists in Indiana, I talked about Shumaker (re-introducing him to the state), and a prof from Anderson talked about missionary activity in the Belgian Congo. It was a good panel, and of course we went long! The comments were good (though basically everything he questioned is in the book), and I got a question on Catholics and wine for the Eucharist. So, as professional presentations went, I thought it was good. We had a full room, which is always nice too! We'll see if that translates into any more book sales or not! In the meantime, I was asked to be part of a Peace and Justice panel at the end of March (but we'll have to see if that can happen or not).
Up next is taking Shumaker to Columbia City. There is a possible "road trip" to talk about Shumaker at NorthWood High School in Nappanee, but we'll see about that. And who knows, maybe something else will open up as well! In the meantime, I enjoyed my trip to A-Town and am thankful that my parents were able (and willing) to make the trek down to watch the kids so that I could.
Labels:
Anderson University,
Butler University,
IUPUI,
Prohibition,
Shumaker
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
HEAR and There, Drys are Everywhere
Tonight I had the pleasure of meeting and talking with HEAR (http://www.hoosierexploration.com/hear/portal.php?np=16) about the book. It was a nice chat (well, you know if you give a professor a platform, he's going to fill up time....so maybe I got on a roll!)....with lots of good questions. It was a great time in Noblesville!
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