Main content
AP®︎/College US History
The early temperance movement - origins
What started the temperance movement, which attempted to curb the consumption of alcohol in the United States? Becca discusses the temperance movement of the early 19th century.
Want to join the conversation?
- This level of alcohol consumption must have had a very negative effect on productivity. Are there any statistical records that show this impact?(5 votes)
- I was very interested to hear Becca imply that many "artisans" were "drunk while working" and that this then became a problem when these same workers transitioned to wage-labor factory work. I doubt that "drunkenness" was so wide spread. I imagine rather that a "loud minority" of fervent religious persons promoted that story to push an agenda.(14 votes)
- Wow, does anyone know what the average consumption of alcohol was in that period?(3 votes)
- Someone awesome made an entire website over this:https://prohibition.osu.edu/brewing/consumption(4 votes)
- When she said that drunk factory workers where losing fingers, I thought that she was saying that they where being punished by the employers. And that got me thinking, where they (the drunkards) ever punished by the owners/ manages of the factories?(1 vote)
- Today there is lots of work safety regulation, to reduce injuries at work. At early 1800's, there was none or very little regulation.
Machinery was primitive and user safety was often not a priority for the designers. If the workers were not careful (maybe because they were drunk, or tired near the end of their 12-hour shift, or for whatever reason), they could lose fingers or in worst case their lives.
See e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupational_safety_and_health#History(5 votes)
- Was Emily Dickenson in the Temperance movement?(4 votes)
- Atwould xenophobic be more, fitting, for lack of a better word, as xenophobia is an irrational fear of foreigners? 3:20(3 votes)
- Nativism is really a combination of anti-Catholic sentiment, xenophobia, and racism. As you'll learn later on, with the resurgence of nativism in the 1920s, America restricted immigration for everyone that was not "WASPs", or "white Anglo-Saxon Protestants".(3 votes)
- It seems that the Second Great Awakening influenced the temperance movement due to its sac-religious effects on humans. However, in attempting to make the work force and family life sober, riots broke out and a woman named Carrie Nation carried an ax into bars to smash the liquor supply. It seems that these riots and destruction of property don't exactly match up with the religious life that they tried to join. Is there something that I missed? Or is it really as crazy as it sounds?(2 votes)
- Okay. So, the world is a crazy place. Perhaps people like Carrie Nation thought that the short term effect of destroying the alcohol would be better than the long term effect of people drinking that alcohol. Hope that helps!(3 votes)
- As employees were losing fingers and perhaps incurring other types of injuries while at the workplace, is there evidence that employers were attempting to make their factories safer for their employees?(1 vote)
- Many employers were more concerned about making money than they were about keeping their workers safe, especially at this time, when workers could be easily replaced by the immigrants pouring into America and desperate for work.(2 votes)
- is there any specific lesson for the industrial revolution if so where can i find it. Thanks(1 vote)
- You might look in the World History course. There's likely to be one over there.(2 votes)
- Were people drinking in works before the Industrial Revolution? Who pushed this movement?(1 vote)
- At, Becca said something about drinking alcohol, does that mean there was a drunk test in the early 1800's? 0:20(1 vote)
- No, there was not. But the whole video is kind of about alcohol.(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] Hi, this is
Becca from Khan Academy, and today I'm going to be
talking about temperance. So, what was the temperance movement? In this video, I'll talk a little bit about what temperance
was, what its causes were, and how it started to
develop in the early-1800s. Temperance was the idea
that Americans drank way too much alcohol and needed
to temper their consumption. It started as kind of this idea that people should just
drink a little bit less, they should drink less whiskey,
less rum, less hard alcohol. And then, slowly, it started to take on this kind of prohibitory character. So, again, it was the
idea that we just needed to temper our alcohol consumption. And so, how did the
temperance movement take root? The temperance movement
kinda has three main causes that I like to think about. So, the three main causes were
the Second Great Awakening, the Industrial Revolution, and growing nativism and, frankly, racism that
started as new immigrants were coming to America in the early-1800s. So, this was all kinda
happening right around here, and so I'll talk a little bit more about each of these causes
for the temperance movement and how it began. So, I'll start by talking about
the Second Great Awakening. So, the Second Great
Awakening was this time period in the early-1800s that
focused a lot of social reforms around capturing moral
good or Christian ideals so Christian ideals,
here's the little cross, within our social institutions. So, this happened in
education, in prisons, in the first women's rights movement. And so, this was all going on in the 1800s and it was about this idea that we needed to be
good and moral people, and we needed our social
institutions to reflect that. So, temperance can be seen as a part of the Second Great Awakening. And so, down here, you can kind of see the Second Great Awakening image here. This is the idea that the family was also intimately affected
by people being too drunk. Here's the father and he's really drunk and things are kind of going to mayhem. People were just too drunk, and this was tearing apart
lots of different institutions, including the family, including education, including the workplace. And so, that's a good transition to talking about the
Industrial Revolution. So, the Industrial
Revolution was also going on at this time period and people could no longer
be drunk on the job, right? So, people used to be artisans. They used to just kind
of sit in their home, make their shoes or sew something by hand, and they could be drunk while doing that. But now, if you're kind
of in a factory setting, people were getting their fingers cut off by these new machines that were promoted in the Industrial Revolution
because they were drunk while trying to operate the machinery. So, with this new industry, workers could no longer
be drunk on the job. And so, the final cause is this nativism that people were seeing with
new Catholic immigrants. So, there were Catholic immigrants
coming into the country. And lots of Protestants
were very anti-Catholic and anti-immigration. They decided that the
Catholics were drunks. They did drink a lot, but it was definitely this
kind of racist sentiment that was percolating within
the Protestant community, and this kind of aligned
itself with the Whig Party. So, the Whigs became more Protestant; they were really big temperance people. And the Catholics more aligned themselves with the Democrats. The sentiment towards
these immigrant populations had this kind of political effect. So, at this time, temperance
was starting to become more of a political movement and different social groups
were taking this more seriously. There were some state-level organizations. It was just becoming more
of a social phenomenon. In 1825, right over here,
this really famous preacher, Lyman Beecher, did his six
sermons on the sins of alcohol. And so, these sermons in 1825 solidified this idea in the American mind that it was anti-Christian
to be a huge drinker, and this idea really took root. This is becoming kind of
this larger social phenomenon and there start to be
not just more state-level or community-level
societies against drinking, you see the first ever
national organization. So, the first national
temperance society was in 1826, down here, with the American
Temperance Society, so the ATS. And I'll talk more about the ATS and the kind of nationalization of the temperance movement
in the next video.