Just What the Doctor Ordered
During Prohibition, an odd alliance of special interests argued beer was vital medicine
- By Beverly Gage
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2005, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
But rather than settling the debate, Palmer's opinion set off a new round of court challenges, squabbles and questions. "Will the druggists become bartenders and the drug store a saloon?" the New York Times asked that November. "Will the doctors become beer dictators and be overwhelmed by those who are thirsty because they are sick, or merely sick with thirst?"
Beer-makers, unsurprisingly, were sure that Palmer had hit upon a perfect fusion of virtue and science. "Brewers Jubilant over 'Medical' Beer," the New York Times reported on March 11. Doctors as a group were perhaps less so—"I don't think doctors are vitally interested one way or another in permission to prescribe medical beer," the counsel of the New York Medical Society explained—but as a group seemed to take satisfaction from Palmer's affirmation of their authority, seeing in it a victory of science over superstition.
Temperance reformers, by contrast, were furious at Palmer's betrayal—a first step, as they saw it, in undermining America's newfound self-control. "Many of the Anti-Saloon League sympathizers fear that the Palmer decision, if accepted, will lead to a loosening of the enforcement laws," read one news report. The Anti-Saloon League (ASL), one of the country's leading temperance groups, was particularly incensed at the suggestion that small children, seated cheerily at the neighborhood soda fountain, would be forced to witness beer's sale and consumption—a prospect which, according to ASL general counsel Wayne Wheeler, "makes clearer than ever the vice in this opinion." (He was joined in his lament by bootleggers, snake-oil salesmen and religious fakes who were loath to see pharmacists hone in on their trade.)
Had Palmer seen fit to restrict the consumption of medical beer in any way—by limiting the number of prescriptions, the amount that could be prescribed or the diseases for which it was sanctioned—organizations like the ASL might well have concluded that the handful of resulting prescriptions were not worth the fight. But the vision of giddy brewers reopening factories to produce millions of gallons of beer seemed too great an assault on their recent victory. "If beer is to be prescribed in any quantity for everybody who is ailing," predicted the New York Times, summarizing congressional opinion, "there will be no beer."
Within months of Palmer's decision, Congress had taken up the so-called beer emergency bill (officially, the Campbell-Willis bill), which limited wine and liquor prescriptions to not more than a half pint in ten days, and banned beer altogether. By the end of November 1921—much to the outrage of brewers and physicians who called the bill "a form of inhibition never before attempted in the history of legislative government elsewhere throughout the civilized world"—the bill had become law, putting an end to the strange brew known as medical beer.
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Comments (1)
I'm 83 yrs soon to be 84 and remember prohibition days. My parents made home brew because my father was a member of the german working class and did so love his beer. It was the custom to allow children to also partake and they always allowed me a "cheese glass" of beer. It was never enough to satisfy me. One day while my mother was on the back porch running her old Magtag washer I slipped into the bathroom where they stashed the brew and helped myself. I can still remember dipping into the crock with a small aluminum handled pan. Thinking how at last I'd have my fill. By the time my mother missed me I was so drunk it was necessary to break the window for I had bolted the door. I fell off the kitchen chair leaving my poor mother in hysterics. My father vetoed her plea to call the doctor and instead insisted they "put me to bed, and let me sleep it off. And that is how I survived prohibition and kept my taste for a glass of beer all these years.
Posted by charmaine gorrie on October 28,2011 | 07:58 PM