While Victorian public discourse, habits, and material culture often focused upon drinking alcohol, there was also a very visible alternative. The total abstinence movement, from its inception in the 1830s, had inspirational leaders such as Joseph Livesey who advocated “Eyegate” and “Eargate” as key ways to recruit members and spread interest in this form of temperance. Public displays during the period such as parades and processions, galas, bazaars, displays, and magic lantern shows, were supported by material culture – not merely badges, banners and posters, but the urban landscape of towns, cities and even villages. An alternative world existed in which the non-drinker could stay at a temperance hotel, drink at a temperance coffee or co...
This article examines Father Theobald Mathew’s temperance tour of Britain in 1843. Estimates vary, ...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, an anti-alcohol movement known as the Temperance movement...
From its foundation in 1847, the temperance organisation the Band of Hope addressed its young member...
The purpose of this article is to reveal the role of the perception of alcohol’s harm in the outcome...
The Victorians liked to drink and they lived in a society geared towards alcohol consumption. In the...
“Selling Sobriety” explores the uneasy symbiosis between the antebellum temperance movement and a di...
The Livesey Collection is the most complete assembly of temperance related materials in the world an...
Concluding that the history of temperance offers many options for the present, this report explores ...
As over-indulgence in strong drink was seen as a serious moral and social issue, some churches and t...
The UK Temperance movement attracted millions of members in the nineteenth and twentieth century, in...
The thesis seeks to steal only with a limited aspect of Engels' thesis on the relationship between d...
The temperance movement, advocating either moderate use of alcohol or complete abstinence, was one o...
This thesis sets out to record and explain the opposition to the use of alcohol in 19th century Sco...
This research work will present the contribution of the temperance movement in the struggle of the E...
In common with similar popular pressure groups, the temperance movement needed to inspire, to inform...
This article examines Father Theobald Mathew’s temperance tour of Britain in 1843. Estimates vary, ...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, an anti-alcohol movement known as the Temperance movement...
From its foundation in 1847, the temperance organisation the Band of Hope addressed its young member...
The purpose of this article is to reveal the role of the perception of alcohol’s harm in the outcome...
The Victorians liked to drink and they lived in a society geared towards alcohol consumption. In the...
“Selling Sobriety” explores the uneasy symbiosis between the antebellum temperance movement and a di...
The Livesey Collection is the most complete assembly of temperance related materials in the world an...
Concluding that the history of temperance offers many options for the present, this report explores ...
As over-indulgence in strong drink was seen as a serious moral and social issue, some churches and t...
The UK Temperance movement attracted millions of members in the nineteenth and twentieth century, in...
The thesis seeks to steal only with a limited aspect of Engels' thesis on the relationship between d...
The temperance movement, advocating either moderate use of alcohol or complete abstinence, was one o...
This thesis sets out to record and explain the opposition to the use of alcohol in 19th century Sco...
This research work will present the contribution of the temperance movement in the struggle of the E...
In common with similar popular pressure groups, the temperance movement needed to inspire, to inform...
This article examines Father Theobald Mathew’s temperance tour of Britain in 1843. Estimates vary, ...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, an anti-alcohol movement known as the Temperance movement...
From its foundation in 1847, the temperance organisation the Band of Hope addressed its young member...