American Decades
Prohibition
Prohibition and the Churches.
Even as the Depression that followed the stock-market crash of 1929 deepened to unprecedented lows, Americans were preoccupied with the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which prohibited the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages. That amendment, which had been ratified in 1919, was the result of long, dedicated effort by reformers, many of them active in Protestant evangelical groups. The Women's Christian Temperance Union reflected the links between the effort to dry up America and the Protestant churches. The Anti-Saloon League, with strong ties to the Methodist Church, called itself the Protestant church in action.
ON AN AMENDMENT TO REPEAL PROHIBITION
In a 1933 article called "This Is Armageddon," the liberal Christian Century spoke out against the widespread call to repeal Prohibition. "It...
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1930's Religion
- Overview
- Topics in the News
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Headline Makers
- Buchman, Frank N. D. 1878-1961
- Cannon, Bishop James, Jr. 1864-1944
- Coughun, Father Charles E. 1891-1979
- Day, Dorothy 1897-1980
- Devine, Father 18777-1965
- Fosdick, Harry Emerson 1878-1969
- Holmes, John Haynes 1879-1964
- Ryan, Father John A. 1869-1945
- Smith, Gerald L. K. 1889-1976
- Ward, Harry F. 1873-1966
- Wise, Stephen Samuel 1874-1949
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Religion, 1930–1939
