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The Washingtonian Roots |
The following, rather long, extract describes the
Washingtonians and one of their star speakers as they were seen from the
perspective of the latter part of the 19th century--years after their decline to
little more than a fond memory in the minds of temperance advocates. The extract
is from The Temperance Reform and its Great Reformers by Rev. W. H. Daniels,
A.M., published 1878.
Thanks to Rick K who came across the book, converted this segment into digital
format, and made it available for reproduction here.
Excerpted from The Temperance Reform and its Great Reformers © by Rev. W. H. Daniels, A.M., published 1878.
Chapter VI -- The Washingtonians
The Washingtonian movement had its origin in a tippling
house, in the city of Baltimore, in the year 1840, with a company of half a
dozen hard drinkers who had formed themselves into a club, and who used to meet
for drinking bouts at Chase's tavern.
One night the Rev. Matthew Hale Smith, a noted lecturer on temperance, was
announced to speak in one of the churches, and they appointed two of their
number a committee to go and hear him. The committee brought back a favorable
report of the man and his doctrines, upon which a warm discussion arose. This
being overheard by the landlord, he at once broke into a tirade against all
temperance lecturers, and denounced them as hypocrites and fools.
To this storm of abuse one of the old topers replied, "Of course it is for your
interest to cry them down;" whereupon the discussion waxed hotter and hotter,
and resulted in the six men forming themselves into a temperance club which they
styled the "Washingtonian Total Abstinence Society," and adopted a pledge
requiring total abstinence from the use of all intoxicating liquors.
The names of those six individuals were William Mitchell, David Hoss, Charles
Anderson, George Steer, Bill M'Curdy, and Tom Campbell. John Hawkins early
became a member, but was not one of the original six.
They then voted to meet the next night in a carpenter shop, and each agreed to
bring a new member. These meetings were held almost nightly, at which each man
related his own experience at the court of death. As might be expected, the
meetings soon began to attract public attention.
These reformed men were soon invited to visit other cities and towns; and who of
our older citizens has not listened to the thrilling and simple experience of
John Hawkins as he portrayed the misery of the drunkard, and told the touching
story of his little daughter, Hannah, persuading him to reform? This new
movement spread from city to city, and from town to town, until there was
scarcely a place in the United States that did not have its Washingtonian Total
Abstinence Society. Men who had been drunkards for years burst the bonds that
had so long bound them, and became temperance reformers. The name being quite
long, it soon became shortened by daily use, and these organizations became
known throughout the country as "Washingtonians."
This was a rebellion of the subjects of King Alcohol against his tyranny, and as
such it immediately became famous. It was a reform, commencing with the people
who most needed reformation, and carried with it so much of sound sense, and so
little of mere rhetoric, that every-where the reformed men who went about
telling their own experience and salvation from the power of liquor found large
and attentive audiences, and the Washingtonian movement became the chief topic
both in religious and social circles.
It was quite a wonderful thing to hear a man in plain clothes, and without any
of the graces of speech, declare what had been done for him, and exhorting with
all simplicity and boldness that others should give up liquor as he had done.
The common people heard these men gladly, and drunkards by thousands and tens of
thousands signed the total abstinence pledge.
In this movement there was no exception made in favor of the man who could buy
fifteen gallons over the man who could buy a single glass.
Ale, wine, beer, cider, every thing else that had alcohol in it, was rejected,
and for motives of domestic peace and plenty, self-respect and personal honor,
men were persuaded to sign this pledge.
It was assumed that every man who wished to do so was able to break off his
habits of drink. The religious feature of the movement, which is its latest and
crowning glory, had not then appeared. Personal experiences, droll stories, and
sharp jokes at the expense of drunkards and drunkard makers; imitations of the
antics and fooleries of men under the influence of liquor; sharp thrusts at the
avariciousness and meanness of the liquor sellers, and at the tricks of liquor
makers, formed the staple of the lecturing under the Washingtonian movement.
When this movement began, Dr. Jewitt, who was himself one of the chief agents of
the reformation in Massachusetts, says, "Nineteen twentieths of the clergy were
total abstainers;" and what was true of Massachusetts was substantially true
throughout New England.
The progress of the temperance reform for the nine years from 1831 to 1840 may
be indicated by the following figures: In the first-mentioned year twelve
millions of people drank seventy millions of gallons of liquor -- an average of
six gallons a year to every man, woman, and child -- besides wine, beer and
cider. In 1840 seventeen millions of people drank forty-three millions of
gallons -- a reduction of more than one half per capita.
Still more manifest were the signs of progress after the Washingtonian movement
fairly got under way, and the reformed men had commenced their tour of the
principal cities, relating their experience to assembled multitudes, and
gathering in the people by thousands to the new society. It is estimated that
under the impetus of this movement one hundred and fifty thousand drunkards
signed the pledge, besides uncounted thousands of other classes of society.
Some of the leaders in this movement, so far from feeling the need of religion,
declared that religious exercises of every kind were out of place in temperance
meetings. They were not even opened with prayer.
It seemed to be a part of the policy to avoid every possible question that might
arise concerning religion, in order that men might be the more deeply impressed
with the duty of temperance. But this effort to divorce temperance from religion
was the chief weakness of the Washingtonian movement. Nevertheless, in spite of
this coldness toward Christ and his Church, the actual reform wrought by this
means was oftentimes the forerunner of revivals of religion in local churches,
and many a man was saved from his other sins through his effort to save himself
from drunkenness.
Few names were more familiar to the people of the United States during the early
years of the great Washingtonian movement than that of John Hawkins, of
Baltimore. He was not one of the original club by which the reform was
inaugurated, but joined them soon after, and presently developed such talent for
temperance oratory that his services were in demand from Maine to Louisiana.
During the eighteen years of his life after his reformation he spoke and
organized Washingtonian societies in all the principal cities and towns of New
England; and in New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Harrisburg, Cincinnati,
Louisville, Ky., Charleston, S.C., New Orleans, etc.
In his journal, which was published after his death, the record of the number of
signers of the total abstinence pledge at a large number of his meetings are
given, usually reaching into the hundreds, a considerable portion of them being
men whose bloated countenances and trembling nerves showed how much they were in
need of this salvation.
At Springfield, Mass., Newport, R.I., Saratoga, N.Y., and Portland, Maine, his
efforts were notably blessed; but perhaps his most remarkable triumph was in
Boston, then a city of a hundred thousand inhabitants, in which it was declared
at one of the Washingtonian Conventions that "four fifths of all the Boston
drunkards had signed the temperance pledge."
The enthusiasm of these Washingtonian meetings was something wonderful. The
experiences of men actually reformed from the lowest depths of drunkenness were
arguments that nothing could resist, and the presence of such a man before an
audience was as if one had risen from the dead. Poor wretches would rise to
their feet in the midst of great assemblies, and, with a look of desperation on
their bloated faces, would ask,
"Do you think I could reform? Do you think there is any hope for me?"
"Yes, brother. Sign the pledge, and it will make a sober man of you," would be
the reply.
Then, amid the sobs, and "God bless you's!" of his family and friends, the poor
drunkard would crowd up to the platform, take the pen in his trembling hand, and
sign, the vast congregation holding their breath as they watched him through
their tears. Then, with a heavy sigh, the man, with a new hope in him, would,
perhaps, try to speak a few words, confessing his own sins, and the sorrows he
had brought upon his wife and children -- always the same sad story, but always
new and touching -- and then the older Washingtonians would gather round him,
talk encouragingly to him, find out his most pressing necessities and relieve
them, and the poor, lost wretch would feel as if he had suddenly been lifted to
a mountain top where on the one hand he could look down into the abyss from
which he had just been taken, and on the other he could catch a glimpse of the
distant glories of the city of God, whose snowy, shining towers he dimly
remembered in childhood's visions, but which he had wholly lost sight of in his
long years of degradation, and which he had never again expected to see.
The following, from one of Mr. Hawkins's addresses at Faneuil Hall, Boston,
shows the tone and spirit of that brotherly work:
"When I compare the past with the present, my days of intemperance with my
present peace and sobriety, my past degradation with my present position in this
hall -- the Cradle of Liberty -- I am overwhelmed. It seems to me holy ground.
"I never expected to see this hall. I heard of it in my boyhood. 'Twas here that
Otis and the elder Adams argued the principles of independence, and we now meet
here to make a second declaration of independence, not quite so lengthy as the
old one, but it promises life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Our
forefathers pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor; we, too,
will pledge our honor and our lives, but our fortunes -- they have gone for rum!
"Drunkard! come up here, you can reform. I met a gentleman this morning who
reformed four weeks ago, rejoicing in his reformation; he brought a man with him
who took the pledge, and this man brought two others. This is the way we do the
business up in Baltimore; we reformed drunkards are a Committee of the Whole on
the State of the Union. We are all missionaries. We don't slight the drunkard;
we love him, we nurse him, as a mother does her infant learning to walk.
"I tell you, be kind to those men; they have peculiar feelings when the boys run
after them and hoot at them. Don't lay a stumbling-block in the way of such a
man; he has better feelings than many a moderate drinker. Go up to him, stretch
out your hand to him and say, `How do you do, sir?'
"Just let me tell you about one of our reformed men. We all of us changed a
great deal in our appearance; some grew thin, some grew pale, but a certain
dark-complexioned man grew yellow; and the old grog-seller noticing the change
in the others and seeing this old customer not becoming "white", declared he did
not believe but what he was a hypocrite, still drinking behind the door. One day
the two men met, and the Tavernier said to the teetotaler,
"'It appears to me you don't alter quite so much as the rest'
"'Don't I? Well, why don't I?'
"'Why you don't grow pale, you only grow yaller.'
"'Yes,' said the reformed drunkard, putting his hand in his pocket and pulling
out a handful of gold pieces, `these look "yaller", too, but you don't get any
more of 'em from me!'
"Go to Baltimore now and see our happy wives and children. Just think of our
procession on the 5th of April, when we celebrated our anniversary. Six thousand
men, nearly half of them reformed within a year, followed by two thousand boys
of all ages, to give assurance to the world that the next generation shall be
sober.
"But where were our wives on that occasion? At home, shut up with hungry
children in rags, the way they were a year ago? No, no; but in carriages, riding
round the streets to see and rejoice over their sober husbands!"
Mr. Hawkins, like the other temperance orators of those days, relied chiefly on
the force and value of his own experience before the great crowds that flocked
to hear him; but all the time he had new miracles of deliverances to relate, new
stories of reformation to tell out of the rich successes that crowned his
temperance ministry.
The following, gathered mostly from his published memoirs, is the story of
[Hawkins'] life:
"I was born in Baltimore, on the 28th of September, 1797. After some years at
the school of the Rev. Mr. Coxe, at the age of fourteen I was apprenticed for
eight years to learn the trade of a hatter with a master whose place of business
was a regular den of drunkenness. A few days ago I found the old books of my
master; there were the names of sixty men upon them, and we could not recollect
but one who did not go to a drunkard's grave."
When the British made a landing at Baltimore during the war of 1812, young
Hawkins borrowed a musket and joined the ranks of the volunteers, exposing
himself with all the rashness and abandon of southern youth in the very front of
the battle, from which, however, he escaped unhurt. In 1815 he was brought under
the influence of divine grace in a revival of religion, united on probation with
the Methodist Episcopal Church, and for some years was a zealous and useful
Sunday-school teacher and Christian worker. But hard times came, employment
failed, and in 1818 he went to seek his fortune at the West.
Of these days he says:
"As soon as I was away from paternal care I fell away. All went by the board,
and my sufferings commenced. For six months I had no shoes, and only one shirt
and one pair of pantaloons. Then I was a vagabond indeed. But I returned, ragged
and bloated, to my mother's home. It was customary in those days to let the
young people drink with their parents, but neither they nor I thought of my
becoming a miserable drunkard.
"When I got to the edge of my native town I was so ashamed that I waited till
the dusk of the evening, and then I crept along to the house of my mother. She
dressed me up decently, did not upbraid me, but only said, `John, I am afraid
you are bloated!'"
Mr. Hawkins having temporarily reformed, was married on Christmas day, 1822, to
Miss Rachel Thompson, of Baltimore, of which marriage two children were born,
Elizabeth and Hannah. The latter name will recall to many of the readers of this
history a little temperance book of Washingtonian days entitled "Hannah Hawkins;
or, the Reformed Drunkard's Daughter," a book over which many tears have been
shed and many good resolutions made.
"For fifteen years," continues Mr. H., "I rose and fell, was up and down. I
would earn fifteen dollars a week and be well and happy, and with my money in
hand would start for home, but in some unaccountable way would fall into a
tavern, thinking one glass would do me good. But a single glass would conquer
all my resolutions. I appeal to all my fellow-drunkards if it is not exactly so.
"During the first two weeks of June (1840) I drank dreadfully, bought liquor by
the gallon and drank and drank. I cannot tell how I suffered; in body every
thing, but in mind more!
"By the fourteenth of the month -- drunk all the time -- I was a wonder to
myself, astonished that I had any mind left; and yet it seemed, in the goodness
of God, uncommonly clear. My conscience drove me to madness. I hated the
darkness of the night, and when morning came I hated the light, I hated myself,
hated existence; was about taking my own life. I asked myself, `Can I restrain?
Is it possible?' But there was no one to take me by the hand and say `You can.'
I had a pint of whisky in my room, where I lay in bed, and thought I would drink
it, but this seemed to be a turning point with me. I knew it was life or death
as I decided to drink it or not.
"My wife came up knowing how I was suffering, and asked me to come down to
breakfast. I said I would some presently. Then my daughter, Hannah, came up --
my only friend, I always loved her the most -- and she said, 'Father, don't send
me after whisky to-day!'
"I was tormented before; this was agony. I could not stand it, so I told her to
leave, and she went down stairs crying, and saying, `Father is angry with me.'
My wife came up again and asked me to take some coffee. I told her I did not
want any thing of her and covered myself up in the bed. Pretty soon I heard some
one in the room, and, peeping out, I saw it was my daughter.
"`Hannah,' said I, `I am not angry with you -- and -- I SHALL NOT DRINK ANY
MORE.' Then we wept together.
"I got up, went to the cupboard, and looked on my enemy, the whisky bottle, and
thought, `Is it possible I can be restored?' Several times while dressing I
looked at the bottle, but I thought, `I shall be lost if I yield.'
"Poor drunkard! There is hope for you. You cannot be worse off than I was, not
more degraded or more of a slave to appetite. You can return if you will. Try
it! TRY IT!
"Well, I went to the society of reformed drunkards, where I found all my old
bottle companions. I did not tell any one, not even my wife, that I was going. I
had got out of difficulty, but did not know how long I could keep out.
"The six founders of [The Washingtonians] were there. We had worked together,
got drunk together, we stuck together like brothers; and so we do now that we
are sober.
"One of them said, `Here's Hawkins, the regulator, the old bruiser,' and they
clapped and laughed. But there was no laugh in me, I was too solemn and sober
for that. Then they read the pledge:
"`We, whose names are annexed, desirous of forming a society for our mutual
benefit and to guard against a pernicious practice which is injurious to our
health, standing, and families, do pledge ourselves, as gentlemen, that we will
not drink any spirituous or malt liquors, wine or cider.'
"They all looked over my shoulder to see me write my name. It was a great
battle. I never had such feelings before.
"At eleven o'clock I went home. Before when I stayed out late I always went home
drunk. My yard is covered with brick, and my wife could easily tell as I walked
over it whether I were drunk or sober. She could even tell whether the gate
opened drunk or sober.
"Well, this time it opened sober, and when I entered she was astonished. I
smiled, and she smiled; and then I told her quick -- I could not keep it back;
--`I have put my name to the temperance pledge, never to drink as long as I
live.'
"It was a happy time. I cried and she cried -- we couldn't help it; the crying
woke up my daughter, and she cried too for joy. I slept none that night; my
thoughts were better than sleep. Next morning I went to see my mother. She had
been praying twenty years for her drunken son. When she heard the good news she
said, `It is enough. Now I am ready to die.'
"Now what was I to do? My mind was blunted, my character gone; I was bloated,
and getting old; but men who had slighted me came to my help again, took me by
the hand, encouraged me, held me up, and comforted me.
"I'll never slight a drunkard as long as I live; he needs sympathy and is worthy
of it. Poor and miserable as he is, he did not design to become a drunkard, and
people have too long told him he cannot reform. But now we assure him he can
reform, and we show ourselves, the Baltimore Washingtonians, two hundred in one
year, as evidence of that fact.
"Drunkard, come up here! You can reform. Take the pledge and be forever free!"
The Washingtonian meetings might have been called temperance class-meetings,
with a missionary outlook. One of the first records of the work is a letter to
the original Baltimore Washingtonians, asking them to send a delegation of
reformed men to New York, "to tell their experience." Five men were sent, men
wholly without oratorical powers, but who had been slaves to drink, and had felt
how good it was to be free; and the testimony of these five men was all that was
required to kindle the enthusiasm in that great city.
A number of new temperance newspapers sprang into existence. Nineteen such
publications are named in Mr. Hawkins' memoirs, while the regular newspaper
press was largely occupied with the strange work of reform among the drunkards
and the individual histories that the meetings developed. Some of the ablest
speakers and writers of the day, in prose and poetry, devoted their genius to
this great moral reform; among them Rev. Mr. Pierpont, of Boston, Wm. B. Tappen,
Rev. Edward N. Kirk, D.D., and a large number of other leading clergymen. Dr.
Lyman Beecher, in his mature age, saw and rejoiced over this temperance tidal
wave, which was a fulfillment of his own prophecy, and a result for which he had
well prepared the way.
Mr. Hawkins, toward the close of his brilliant career as a temperance worker,
was licensed as a preacher of the Gospel by the Methodist Protestant Church,
though he seems to have made little use of his commission.
His death occurred suddenly at Piqua, Pa., August 26, 1858, in the sixty-first
year of his age, in the full possession of his mental power, and in the glorious
hope of everlasting life
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