A majority of Americans today agree that our country’s
thirteen-year “experiment” with Prohibition
was a catastrophic failure.
In truth, it failed like few human endeavors have ever
failed. Compared the Amendment 18, Dean Wormer outwitted
the Deltas, Charlie Brown kicked the football, and
the Yugo fucking styled. Put your finger on the biggest failure you can identify
then times it by about three gazillion and you’ll still equal less than
one raggedy butthair on the Volstead Act’s wide white useless ass.
Historians point to lots of reasons why Prohibition
went belly-up, but there’s
really only one reason. Prohibition flamed out because it was insanely fuckin’ stupid.
A tiny cabal of pathologically frightened jagoffs twisted congressional titties
until they got their way, and then jack-stomped on everyone else’s freedom
of choice.
The anti-liquor charge was lead, in the main, by the
Women’s Christian
Temperance Union (WCTU), and their snotty little brother, the Anti-Saloon League
(ASL). To describe the WCTU as a gaggle of ill-informed harpies is to do a disservice
to ill-informed harpies everywhere. They clucked, honked, bleated, squealed and
made pretty much every other barnyard noise they could come up with (and don’t
forget the titty twisters) and batter-rammed a law down America’s neck
that would’ve done Josef Stalin a solid. The whole deal was loony tunes—except
without wackiness, daffiness, or a stuttering pig.
The apex of the insanity took the form of a woman named
Carrie Nation. And what a form it was. Into every
movement, it might be said, a little Technicolor
craziness must fall, and Carrie Nation was a species
of multichannel, vibrating insanity without equal.
* * *
Carrie Nation was born Carrie Moore to the small revivalist
burg of Garrard, Kentucky in 1846. She started life
with two strikes against her. Her mother was certifiably
insane, a hot gnashing slurry of biochemical delusion,
who achieved a level of crackpottedness unheard of
this side of Dorian Gray’s last slumber
party. Mrs. Moore spent the last several decades of her life believing she was
Queen Victoria. She forced her apparently spineless husband to build her a gilded
carriage, which he did, and then instructed him to haul the thing back and forth
across their plantation grounds while Mammy Moore waved a white-gloved hand at
her unamused slaves. This was the gene kiln that cooked up Carrie Nation, early
leader, mouthpiece, and philosopher of the temperance movement.
Daddy Moore’s plantation eventually went the way of your Enron stocks and,
after a period of itinerancy, the Moore’s, with demented daughter Carrie
in tow, tumbled into the small town of Medicine Lodge, Kansas. It was here that
Carrie met a fellow called Charles Gloyd. Doctor Gloyd, actually, as he was the
town’s sawbones. Gloyd fell head over heels for—
Wait.
A brief description of Carrie is required at this point
in order that the rest of the Sawbones Gloyd story
ooze the weirdness it ought.
Carrie was a big girl. In
her youth she was large and bony, but widened with age.
She stood over 6’2” and eventually tipped the scales at over
250 pounds, towering over her family and neighbors. Her face, hard a-straddle
a pumpkin-like head, had a pushed-up look, as if she had received an uppercut
with a snow shovel. Even with a little age-weight she looked, not just obese,
but rather like a great flesh cube hovering free in space like a hellish parade
float. She wasn’t ugly, either, not in any reasonable sense of the word.
Instead, she radiated that sort of high-impact corpulence common to talk radio
hosts and Babar cartoons. Add to this her predilection for loud public conversations
with Jesus, whom she called “Big Brother,” and she is a picture perfect
example of the sort of repellently hostile and irrational being that has no other
option available in life but to engage in grassroots politics. Carrie was about
as lovable as a flak jacket filled with raw sausage.
So, then, back to Medicine Lodge, Dr. Charles Gloyd, and how he fell head over
heels for Carrie Moore.
Gloyd landed on the Moores and Carrie with the gusto
of a Yangtze River rat falling on the floating corpse
of a Shanghai opium dealer. It was a whirlwind courtship.
In only a few months, Gloyd wooed his female giant into a white dress and a
marriage bed. “Bed” and “Carrie Nation” aren’t words in
harmony, but those are the facts. Lots of words clang yet still get sentenced
together, so why quibble. It’s important to understand that the Gloyd/Moore
union was consummated, and after about a year of wedded bliss Carrie gave birth.
In addition to being the town doctor, Gloyd was also
the town sozzlehead; the Otis of Medicine Lodge.
Carrie later claimed to have been unaware of her
husband’s
reprehensible habits, which included not just rampant hooching, but also smoking
and membership in the Freemasons. Whatever the case, Carrie’s baby was
stillborn and riddled with deformities, for which she blamed Gloyd’s seed,
tainted, as it was, by “demon drink.”
The marriage slowly dissolved,
withering under Carrie’s rancid scorn. Only days after the divorce was
final, Charles Gloyd died, which he must’ve preferred to a continuance
of life with Carrie.
The circumstances of her child’s death, followed by the divorce and Gloyd’s
passing, fertilized Carrie’s insanity, and she stepped up her attacks on
the world’s evils: smoking, drinking, Freemasonry and sex. So great was
her hatred of sex that Carrie began stalking young couples out on strolls or
buggy rides, lurking behind bushes and leaping out at her unfortunate victims
armed with an umbrella and ear-splitting religious rancor. During this time she
was still a revered member of the WCTU and spent time with other members of the
group picketing and singing hymns outside saloons. Far from being regarded as
the town kook, Carrie’s neighbors looked on her as someone you shouldn’t
mess with.
A few years after Gloyd’s death, Carrie met the man whom she felt God had “destined” her
to marry. His name was David Nation.
A perennial loser, Nation must’ve looked at Carrie’s romantic attentions
as something he’d better go with lest he fail every aspect of his life.
Over the years, before and after meeting Carrie, David Nation tried his hand
at cotton farming, running a hotel, haberdashery and preaching. He was ordained,
but conducted boring sermons in a small, quaking, voice that entirely lacked
the hellfire of the times. Carrie would often sit in the front pew and holler
prompts at the man, and when he floundered too much would end the service herself
with a “that’s enough for today, David.”
David Nation doted on his new wife, and, more importantly,
was sober, sharing Carrie’s vehement dislike of quickening liquids. But to Carrie, the best
part of her new relationship was her new name. With it, said “Big Brother” Jesus,
she would now have the power to “Carrie a Nation” forward into godly
abstinence (she would at one point change her name from Carrie to Carry so her
motto would make more sense.)
* * *
Kansas had been legally dry since 1860, first among
the gaggle of annoying mid-western states who prefigured
Prohibition. Most people, however, considered the
dry laws a joke, and all but a handful of citizens
looked the other way regarding alcohol. Not even
the cops bothered much, as most of them understood
that they were being forced to act in accordance
with a law they thought was totally dopey.
Medicine Lodge, Kansas, small as it was, contained
seven saloons for the comfort of local drinkers,
as well as a drugstore than purveyed illegal spirits
as patent medicines. The WCTU occasionally protested
these establishments, parking their carcasses outside
to sing hymns, chant temperance poetry, and inform
customers as to the peril of their eternal souls.
Carrie Nation participated in all WCTU actions, but
seemed to find their tactics lacking a certain something.
During one of her delusional chats with “Big Brother” Jesus, He compared
Carrie to Joan of Arc and suggested that she undertake more extreme measures.
Now fueled with the rapturous fire of the Lord, Carrie wasted little time in…uh…carrying
out His wishes.
One sunny morning in 1899, Carrie Nation and one lone
WCTU sycophant, attacked the Medicine Lodge drugstore.
She burst through the doors in a spitting fury. Armed
with a sledge hammer, she shrieked a black cloud
of hell-n-brimstone at the shocked, goggling owner
and his handful of customers. She called a religious
fury into the hammer, raised the weapon in her two ham-sized fists and reduced
a cask of whiskey to moistened splinters. Onlookers could only gape at the
flailing, keening behemoth and no one did anything
to stop her.
For the 53-year-old Carrie Nation, this was an epiphany. “Big Brother” Jesus
had stayed the hands of the evil doers, allowing Carrie to carry out His work
unmolested. From now on no one would stand between her bellowing rage and “demon
drink.”
As she put it herself: “Smash! Smash! For Jesus’ sake, smash!”
* * *
The horse was, as they say, out of the chute. Emboldened
by her success at the drugstore, Carrie loaded a
wagon with throwin’ rocks, WCTU cronies and
the sledge hammer, then set out for the nearby town of Kiowa, Kansas. Kiowa
was the home of three saloons, including the somewhat legendary Dobson’s,
a place known for its sophisticated appointments. Dobson’s was Carrie’s
ultimate destination, as she was galled by the fanciness of this satanic den,
but she elected to sack the others first as a kind of warm-up.
She ravaged the two smaller saloons, blowing through them like God’s
own special tornado. Using the sledge, she demolished everything in both joints
that might hold hooch, from casks and kegs, to steins and cups. Bevies of drunkards
burst from the bars, scattering into the streets like so many fluttering quail.
Word reached Dobson’s of the Biblical shit storm heading their way and
the owner and patrons tried to prepare but Carrie had saved plenty of energy
for Act Three of her Demolition Tragedy, and no one offered even token resistance.
Carrie killed all the liquor in the place, then all the receptacles, and then
set about killing the place itself. She hurled rocks through windows and billiard
balls through expensive imported mirrors. She sledged the furniture to death.
All of it. Every table, chair, stool, gewgaw, and gimcrack fell beneath her wrath.
She ripped the swinging doors from their hinges as a parting shot, a visual reminder
to the entire town that they shouldn’t get in Carrie Nation’s way.
Strangely, no one did. Not one person lifted one finger
to try and stop the destruction. Whether Mr. Dobson
and his customers were too astonished to interfere
with the crazed banshee, or too frightened, is unknown, but their inaction
turned the scene of Dobson’s Saloon Massacre, and Carrie Nation, into overnight media
sensations.
Celebrity came a-courtin’, and Carrie Nation was delighted to hold hands
a go for a stroll.
* * *
After Kiowa, Carrie’s raids were covered by a collection of national press
reporters assigned to travel with the Fury From Kansas. With her flock of goslings
lined up behind, Carrie stormed the…uh…nation from coast to coast,
smashing, singing and preaching. The only change to her modus operandi came when
she traded her sledge hammer in for a big ol’ hatchet, thereby introducing
the charming word “hatchetization” into our national vernacular.
Roughly, “hatchetization” defines the actions forced upon righteous
temperates in order to stave the onslaught of “demon drink” against
the country’s unfortunates.
The hatchet became Carrie’s symbol, as well as a fine money-raising tool
for her and the WCTU. She started a mail-order concern that distributed, in addition
to autographed postcards of Carrie, and copies of her newsletter, The
Smasher’s
Mail, miniature copies of her famous hatchet. The postcards featured Carrie propped
over a bible looking blockish and pious, and the newsletter gave voice to Carrie’s
wide-ranging hatreds and petty intolerances. Her writing rambled so, and her
logic was so twisted and perverse, that the Mail was, at times, unreadable. But
no matter the quality of her offerings, Carrie’s knick-knack business earned
her solid coin with which to finance her raids, and fanned her celebrity to full
fire.
Fans composed songs and verse about their Jesus-beblubbered
heroine, which can only have made Carrie’s already dizzyingly insane little brain glow like
a self-righteous furnace. Her every waddling move was covered by the press and
lauded by teetotalers across the land. For a long time, she was left to her own
devices, raiding and smashing where ever she went with little concern that the
authorities might get involved.
But then, right at the height of the “Carrie” Nation, the legal community’s
testicles dropped and people began prosecuting Carrie for property damage and
for being a deranged pain in the ass.
Maybe they shouldn’t have, because
every trip Carrie made to a jail cell seemed to shine an ever more positive light
on her and her cause. Her traveling retinue of reporters dutifully reported each
arrest, but always accompanied the news with a photo of Carrie. In these photographs,
Carrie was usually shown in her cell with her back to the bars hovering over
a Bible like Augustus Gloop over Willie Wonka’s chocolate river. Her fans
ate that shit right up. Seeing, then, how much good it did to arrest their nemesis,
tavern keepers kind of gave up, choosing instead to lock their establishments
until they were sure Carrie had left town.
A sorry state of affairs if ever there was one. A whole
generation of peaceful drunkards held by the short
hairs by a person who, in all fairness, should have
been in a padded room muttering to “Big Brother” Jesus from the depths
of a morphine haze.
* * *
In the end, though, it was the very fact of Carrie
Nation’s celebrity that
did her in and saved drinkers from any more of her particular brand of belligerent
predation. She received so much coverage, got so much attention, that eventually
the whole scene seemed to reach a sort of crest. On one side of the peak Carrie
Nation was a heroine, while on the other her actions and demeanor quickly became
the subject of ridicule and joke-making. In other words, people began to wise
up and see Carrie’s rage-filled dementia for what it was.
Not to be daunted, though, Carrie hired herself an
agent (who drank, by the by) and launched herself
on the lecture circuit. In theaters across America
and in Europe she reenacted her famous raids, “hatchetizing” empty casks
to bits and warbling hymns in her toneless singing voice, while audiences hooted.
In New York and Chicago she was something of a tolerable side-show attraction,
but in London she was rightly seen as a dodgy menace. The first and only pub
raid she staged in Britain earned her immediate arrest, a steep fine and a polite
invitation to take her show back across the water. The Brits weren’t having
any of this Yankee whack-job and her antics with Amerind cutlery.
Things went downhill for Carrie after this. Her supporters
slowly deserted her, the WCTU denied all knowledge
of her, and the press lost interest. In short order,
Carrie Nation went from megastar, to laughing stock, to non-entity. After suffering
one final, massive, mental breakdown that left her a jabbering loon, Carrie
Nation died in 1911, locked in a cell in a mental
asylum.
Eight years later America went dry.
* * *
Was Carrie Nation a true member of the American temperance
movement that lead to the disaster of Prohibition,
or merely part of its lunatic fringe? The WCTU would
have you believe the latter, but the simple fact
of her meteoric fame indicates the former. If she
was Prohibition’s lunatic fringe it’s only because
the whole program was lunacy. Carrie Nation is certainly an emblem of the dark
desires that underlie any prohibitionist thought. That’s as true today
as it was in hers.
Drunks got the last word on Mrs. Nation, however. In
the mid-1920s, bootleggers set up an illegal still
on a patch of unused land in central Kansas, land
that happened to be what was left of the Moore family farm.
Drunkards will always win.
—Richard English
(Note: the Author is indebted to the works of Stuart Walton, Mark Edward Lender,
James Kirby Martin, and Edward Behr.)