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"Dixie Editors Fear Dry Force Bill Will Lead to
Negro Control in South"
"The question is not one of liquor at all.
It is simply a question of State's rights—or whether
local self-government should be abolished in this nation
or not." This broadside railing against the
Anti-Saloon League and the national prohibition movement
was printed around 1918 (GLC 09079). By this time,
several Southern states had already passed their own
state prohibition laws, so why were these same states
opposed to a nationwide law? The answer lies with
the issue of states' rights, the idea that the states
possess certain rights and powers defined by the Constitution
and Bill of Rights. These "Dixie Editors"
opposed the Eighteenth Amendment because they felt it
was a violation of the bounds of federal authority.
But underlying the South's opposition to the prohibition
amendment based on states' rights was the ongoing issue
of race. Many in the South felt forced into the
passage of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments,
giving African Americans citizenship and the right to
vote. As a result, these rights were not always upheld
and racism was a persistent problem. In the "Negro
Question" article printed in this broadside, an
editor writes, "...That [Fifteenth] amendment gives
to Congress the power to force upon the South a vote
for the negro—and a revival of the dangerous color
question... it would give South Carolina a NEGRO government
from top to bottom." There was a fear of
allowing African Americans to gain any sort of political
power. These Southern newspapers believed that
by allowing the prohibition amendment to pass, they
would be opening the door to further interference from
the Federal Government.
The Eighteenth Amendment outlawing the manufacture,
transportation, and sale of alcohol went into effect
on January 16, 1920. Largely considered a failure,
it was overturned by the Twenty-first Amendment in December
1933.
Marisa Morigi, Deputy Curator
Gilder Lehrman Collection

GLC 09079. "Dixie
Editors Fear Dry Force Bill Will Lead to Negro Controls
in South; Destroys State Rights", Broadside.
c. 1918.
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For more information or to obtain copies, contact Ana Ramirez-Luhrs at reference@gilderlehrman.com
or call (212) 787-6616 ext. 209.
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Szymanski, Anne-Marie E., Pathways to Prohibition:
Radicals, Moderates, and Social Movement Outcomes.
Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2003.
Behr, Edward, Prohibition: Thirteen Years That Changed
America. New York: Arcade Pub.; Distributed by
Little, Brown and Co., c1996.
Blakey, Leonard, The sale of Liquor in the South;
The History of the Development of a Normal Social Restraint
in Southern Commonwealths. New York: AMS Press,
1969.
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