Difference between revisions of "Category:Alcohol"

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1831: Little Rock Temperance Society is founded.
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'''Alcohol''' is an enduring issue in Arkansas. The [[Little Rock Temperance Society]] was founded in 1831. In 1853 the [[State Legislature]] banned the sale of alcohol to slaves without owner permission. During the [[Civil War]], the state banned the manufacture of whiskey to protect supplies of corn for military use. In 1876 the [[Women's Christian Temperance Union]] founds the the first Arkansas chapter of that organization. A local-option law is passed by the [[Arkansas General Assembly]] in 1879 requiring that communities vote on [[dry county]] measures at least every two years. The manufacture and sale of alcohol is prohibited by state law in 1915; the shipment of liquor into the state is prohibited two years later under the [["Bone Dry" Liquor Law of 1917]]. Arkansas becomes the twenty-seventh state to ratify the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution ([[Prohibition]]) in 1919. Prohibition is repealed under the Twenty-First Amendment in 1933. Two years later the General Assembly repeals the 1915 prohibition law and makes local-option elections more difficult. Liquor sales in hotels and restaurants is permitted under a General Assembly law passed in 1943. An act drafted by the [[Temperance League of Arkansas]] fails in election by an 167,578-122,252 margin in 1950. A mixed-drink bill framed by Governor [[Winthrop Rockefeller]] passes in 1969. Legislation championed by Senator [[Lu Hardin]] in 1993 made local-option votes on [[dry counties|wet/dry issues]] more difficult by raising the petition requirement to 38 percent of all registered voters.
  
1853: State Legislature bans alcohol sales to slaves without their owners' explicit permission.
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==References==
 
 
1862: Confederate state Legislature forbids the manufacture of corn whiskey.
 
 
 
1876: State's first Women's Christian Temperance Union chapter is founded.
 
 
 
1879: General Assembly passes local-option law that requires communities to vote every two years on whether to go dry.
 
 
 
1915: Law prohibits the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages statewide.
 
 
 
1917: "Bone-dry" law forbids even the shipment of liquor into the state.
 
 
 
1919: Arkansas is 27 th state to ratify the 18 th Amendment establishing national Prohibition.
 
 
 
1933: Referendum on repealing national Prohibition, authorized by General Assembly, favors repeal by 67,622 to 46,091.
 
 
 
1935: Legislature repeals 1915 state prohibition law, while making local-option elections difficult.
 
 
 
1942: Easing of local-option petition requirement ushers in wave of county and community votes to go dry.
 
  
1943: General Assembly makes it legal to sell beer to be drunk on the premises of hotel or restaurant.
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*Jack Schnedler, "Bottle Battles: The Never-Ending War Over Alcohol in Arkansas Plays Out in a Sprightly Exhibit and Book," ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette,'' May 8, 2005.
 
 
1950: Initiated Act to restore statewide prohibition, drafted by Temperance League of Arkansas, is defeated 167,578 to 122,252.
 
 
 
1965: Sale of wine with meals is approved by Legislature 1969: Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller's mixed-drinks bill passes General Assembly.
 
 
 
1993: Legislation makes local-option votes more difficult by raising petition requirement to 38 percent of registered voters.
 
 
 
2003: Criteria for private clubs eligible to be licensed by state Alcohol and Beverage Control board is expanded by law to include "community hospitality, professional association, entertainment."
 
 
 
2005: Pro-liquor group in Benton County begins petition effort for a November 2006 vote on changing the county from dry to wet.
 
 
 
==References==
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 
[[Category:Alcohol]]
 

Revision as of 13:15, 12 May 2011

Alcohol is an enduring issue in Arkansas. The Little Rock Temperance Society was founded in 1831. In 1853 the State Legislature banned the sale of alcohol to slaves without owner permission. During the Civil War, the state banned the manufacture of whiskey to protect supplies of corn for military use. In 1876 the Women's Christian Temperance Union founds the the first Arkansas chapter of that organization. A local-option law is passed by the Arkansas General Assembly in 1879 requiring that communities vote on dry county measures at least every two years. The manufacture and sale of alcohol is prohibited by state law in 1915; the shipment of liquor into the state is prohibited two years later under the "Bone Dry" Liquor Law of 1917. Arkansas becomes the twenty-seventh state to ratify the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (Prohibition) in 1919. Prohibition is repealed under the Twenty-First Amendment in 1933. Two years later the General Assembly repeals the 1915 prohibition law and makes local-option elections more difficult. Liquor sales in hotels and restaurants is permitted under a General Assembly law passed in 1943. An act drafted by the Temperance League of Arkansas fails in election by an 167,578-122,252 margin in 1950. A mixed-drink bill framed by Governor Winthrop Rockefeller passes in 1969. Legislation championed by Senator Lu Hardin in 1993 made local-option votes on wet/dry issues more difficult by raising the petition requirement to 38 percent of all registered voters.

References

  • Jack Schnedler, "Bottle Battles: The Never-Ending War Over Alcohol in Arkansas Plays Out in a Sprightly Exhibit and Book," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, May 8, 2005.

External links

Pages in category "Alcohol"

The following 69 pages are in this category, out of 69 total.