Baltimore Sun

Washington Temperance Society began here

- By Christina Tkacik THEN & NOW

Baltimore is often remembered for its resistance to Prohibitio­n. Ironically, the city also was home to one of the 19th century’s most popular temperance societies, which began nearly 100 years before the founding of Alcoholics Anonymous.

On April 5, 1840, six friends met at Alexander Chase’s Tavern on Liberty Street and vowed never again to drink any “spirituous or malt liquors, wine or cider.” They held weekly meetings to share their experience as ex-drinkers.

A few key elements distinguis­hed the group that would go on to call themselves the Washington Temperance Society. Unlike other temperance societies of the day, they avowed only personal abstinence from alcohol, and refused to endorse legislatio­n to make drinking illegal for all. They even allowed distillers and barkeeps to join their ranks, so long as they promised not to drink themselves. And, while other temperance societies denounced alcoholics for their wickedness, the Washington Temperance Society preached the possibilit­y of reform, speaking to each other as ex-problem drinkers.

“A reformed man has the best access to a drunkard’s mind and heart, because he best knows, and can enter into all a drunkard’s feelings,” reads a passage in the 1842 book, “The Washington Temperance Society,” available at the Maryland Historical Society.

Membership quickly numbered into the thousands, and chapters developed in New York City and elsewhere. Initiation fees were 25 cents; dues were 12.5 cents per month. But within a few years, the society had foundered.

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