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A Most Stirring and Significant Episode: Notes to Appendix II

A Most Stirring and Significant Episode
Notes to Appendix II
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Copyright
  3. Dedication
  4. Contents
  5. Acknowledgments
  6. Timeline
  7. Abbreviations
  8. Introduction
  9. Part I— Messengers from the North
  10. chapter 1 — “Our Enterprise Flows from the Gospel of Christ"
  11. Chapter 2 — The Message Trickles South
  12. Chapter 3 — The Trickle Becomes a Flood
  13. Part II — Reformers in the South
  14. Chapter 4 — Taking Ownership
  15. Chapter 5 — “The Most Enthusiastic Election Ever Held in This Country”
  16. Chapter 6 — The “Dry” Years, 1885–1887
  17. Chapter 7 — Prohibition Revisited
  18. Afterword
  19. Appendix I — Biographical Sketches of Key Personalities
  20. Appendix II — Regulating Atlanta’s Liquor Industry, 1865–1907
  21. Notes to Introduction
  22. Notes to Chapter 1 — “Our Enterprise Flows from the Gospel of Christ"
  23. Notes to Chapter 2 — The Message Trickles South
  24. Notes to Chapter 3 — The Trickle Becomes a Flood
  25. Notes to Chapter 4 — Taking Ownership
  26. Notes to Chapter 5 — “The Most Enthusiastic Election Ever Held in This Country”
  27. Notes to Chapter 6 — The “Dry” Years, 1885–1887
  28. Notes to Chapter 7 — Prohibition Revisited
  29. Notes to Afterwords
  30. Notes to Appendix II
  31. Works Cited
  32. Index

Notes to Appendix II

1. Atlanta History Bulletin 6 (January–April 1941): 17, 101–3; “The Liquor Trade of Atlanta,” Daily New Era, September 6, 1871; “Drinks for 1885,” Atlanta Constitution, January 3, 1885.

2. “Saloon Statistics,” Quarterly Journal of Inebriety 16 (1894): 272.

3. My license data are compiled from the annual tax ordinances of Atlanta that are recorded in the Minutes of the Atlanta City Council (MACC), held by the Atlanta History Center (AHC).

4. For a sample of this literature see D. B. Lady, “The Drinking Habit and Prohibition,” The Reformed Quarterly Review (1896): 468–80; “The Moral Side of the Question,” Atlanta Independent, January 12, 1907; George Kibbe Turner, “Beer and the City Liquor Problem,” McClure’s 33 (1909): 528–43; John Koren, “Some Aspects of the Liquor Problem,” National Municipal Review 3 (1914): 505–16.

5. In 1881 Nebraska’s state legislature required all towns with more than 10,000 people to charge $1,000 for a retail liquor license. Aside from Lincoln and Omaha, the only two other major cities with a $1,000 license were in Minnesota, Minneapolis and St. Paul. Within Georgia, Savannah charged $200, and Columbus charged $500. Beginning in 1885, Fulton County outside of Atlanta charged $2,500 for a retail liquor license, as an indirect way to close all saloons. Many Georgia counties had been using this approach for years.

6. “The City Council,” Atlanta Constitution, May 9, 1879, and June 8, 1882; MACC 5:1, 8:219, 10:582, 12:38, 14:613, 633, 18:312, 330, 663, AHC; “Council Minutes,” Daily New Era, June 14, 1868, “Liquor Licenses,” Atlanta Journal, June 17, 1891.

7. MACC 9:664, 15:670, 17:689, AHC; “Sam Jones on Saloons,” Oversized Bound Volume, Sam P. Jones Papers, Special Collections, Robert W. Woodruff Library, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.

8. Scomp, 642–60. For a listing of the various state laws in effect as of 1889 see The Cyclopaedia of Temperance and Prohibition (NY: Funk & Wagnalls, 1891), s.v. “Legislation—Georgia.”

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