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A Most Stirring and Significant Episode: Timeline

A Most Stirring and Significant Episode
Timeline
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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

Timeline

1808—First temperance society formed by Dr. Billy J. Clark and Rev. Lebbeus Armstrong in Moreau, NY

1814—The American Tract Society founded as the New England Tract Society

1816—African Methodist Episcopal Church’s first General Conference

1825—Reverend Lyman Beecher preaches Six Sermons on the Nature, Occasions, Signs, Evil, and Remedy of Intemperance

1826—American Temperance Society founded

1830–1831—Charles Finney’s Rochester, NY, revival

1832—American Baptist Home Mission Society founded

1836—American Temperance Union organized on the teetotal principle

1846—American Missionary Association founded

1851—Maine passes first statewide prohibition law

1865—National Temperance Society and Publication House founded

AME missionary William Gaines arrives in Atlanta and organizes Bethel AME

The first AMA missionary, Frederick Ayer, arrives in Atlanta

1866—Storrs School opened by the American Missionary Association

1867—Frederick Ayer organizes first temperance society in Black Atlanta in the Storrs School

1869—Atlanta University opened by the American Missionary AssociationNational Prohibition Party founded

1870—First Odd Fellows Lodge organized in Black Atlanta

1871—First Prince Hall Masonic Lodge organized in Black Atlanta

1873—First True Reformer Fountain organized in Black Atlanta

1874—Woman’s Christian Temperance Union founded

1875—First Good Samaritans lodge organized in Black Atlanta

1877—Clark University opened by the Methodist Freedmen’s Aid Society

1879—Atlanta Baptist Seminary opens

1880—The South’s first Colored WCTU chapter established in Atlanta

1881—Spelman Seminary opened by the Women’s American Baptist

Home Mission Society Missions organizations meet to plan a freedpeople-focused temperance campaign

Frances E. Willard’s Southern tour

Georgia Temperance Convention held in Atlanta

1885—Georgia Temperance Convention held in Atlanta

Passage of Georgia’s General Local Option Law

Morris Brown College opened by the AME Church

Fulton County’s first local option election, prohibition approved (November 25)

1887—Fulton County’s second local option election, prohibition overturned (November 26)

1888—Consultation Convention of Leading Colored Men of Georgia held in Macon, GA

1906—Atlanta Race Riot

1908—State prohibition begins in Georgia (January 1)

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