Wayne B. Wheeler: The Man Who Turned Off the Taps
Prohibition couldn't have happened without Wheeler, who foisted temperance on a thirsty nation 90 years ago
- By Daniel Okrent
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
Wheeler and the ASL sponsored more than 300 anti-Herrick rallies throughout the state and mobilized their supporters in the churches by suggesting that the governor—“the champion of the murder mills”—was a pawn of the liquor interests. When the Brewers’ Association sent out a confidential letter urging its members to lend quiet but material support to Herrick (his Democratic opponent was a vocal temperance advocate), Wheeler said he “got [a copy of the letter] on Thursday before election, photographed it and sent out thousands of them to churches on Sunday.” In a race that drew what was at the time the largest turnout for an Ohio gubernatorial election, every other Republican on the statewide ticket was elected, but Myron Herrick’s political career was over.
“Never again,” Wheeler boasted, “will any political party ignore the protests of the church and the moral forces of the state.” Nor, in a word, would they ignore Wayne B. Wheeler.
The ASL’s state-by-state campaign was reasonably effective, particularly in the South. But in 1913, two events led the organization to adopt a new strategy. First, Congress overrode President William Howard Taft’s veto of something called the Webb-Kenyon Act, which outlawed the importation of alcoholic beverages into a dry state. The stunning 246 to 95 override vote in the House of Representatives showed not just the power of the anti-liquor forces but also how broadly representative they had become.
The override was followed by enactment of a national income tax authorized by the recently ratified 16th Amendment. Until 1913, the federal government had depended on liquor taxes for as much as 40 percent of its annual revenue. “The chief cry against national Prohibition,” the ASL’s executive committee said in a policy statement that April, “has been that the government must have the revenue.” But with an income tax replacing the levy on liquor, that argument evaporated, and the ASL could move beyond its piecemeal approach and declare its new goal: “National Prohibition, [to] be secured through the adoption of a Constitutional Amendment.”
The ASL statement called this new policy “The Next and Final Step.” But the league could not take that step without extracting Wheeler from Ohio and sending him to Washington. Although that didn’t happen officially until 1916, Wheeler’s domination of the highest councils of the ASL began with the 1913 decision to push for a Prohibition amendment. Shuttling between Columbus and the ASL’s Washington office, he displayed the strategic savvy and the unstoppable drive that would eventually lead the editors of the New York Evening World to proclaim him “the legislative bully before whom the Senate of the United States sits up and begs.”
By the time Wheeler stepped onto the national stage, he had long since mastered his legislative parlor tricks. When Lincoln Steffens had visited Columbus several years earlier, Wheeler explained his tactics to the great muckraker. “I do it the way the bosses do it, with minorities,” Wheeler said. By delivering his voters to one candidate or another in a close race, he could control an election: “We’ll vote against all the men in office who won’t support our bills. We’ll vote for candidates who will promise to.” Wheeler, who had greeted Steffens amiably—“as a fellow reformer,” Steffens recalled— now “hissed his shrewd, mad answer” to those politicians who would betray ASL voters: “We are teaching these crooks that breaking their promises to us is surer of punishment than going back on their bosses, and some day they will learn that all over the United States—and we’ll have national Prohibition.”
A constitutional amendment mandating such a thing required a two-thirds majority in each house of Congress as well as legislative majorities in 36 states. Wheeler’s skill at achieving majorities by manipulating minorities freed the ASL from the more cumbersome referendum and initiative movement. When voters were offered a simple yes-or-no, dry-or-wet choice on a ballot measure, a minority was only a minority. But when two candidates in an election could be differentiated by isolating one issue among many, Wheeler’s minority could carry the day. A candidate with, say, the support of 45 percent of the electorate could win with the added votes of the ASL bloc. In other words, in legislative elections, the power of Wheeler’s minority could be measured in multiples.
A resolution calling for a Prohibition amendment had been introduced in nearly every Congress since 1876, but none had ever emerged from committee. And no version of a female suffrage amendment had gotten as far as floor debate in two decades. But in the congressional session of 1914, both were reported out of committee on the same day.
This was no coincidence. The suffrage movement had long shared a constituency with the anti-liquor movement. Frances Willard and the WCTU campaigned actively for both causes. Susan B. Anthony had first become involved in securing the vote for women when she was denied the right to speak at a temperance convention in 1852 in Albany, New York. By 1899, after half a century of suffrage agitation, Anthony attempted to weld her movement to the Prohibition drive. “The only hope of the Anti-Saloon League’s success,” she told an ASL official, “lies in putting the ballot into the hands of women.” In 1911, Howard Russell’s successor as the league’s nominal leader, Purley A. Baker, agreed. Women’s suffrage, he declared, was “the antidote” to the efforts of the beer and liquor interests.
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Comments (22)
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Very useful article and I did some research with it
Posted by hi on January 11,2013 | 09:47 AM
Sorry guys. It seemed like the thing to do at the time.
Posted by Wayne Wheeler on May 28,2012 | 04:25 AM
Dammerung,
You are dead wrong. Libs want to ban words they don't like? I am assuming you are talking about "religious" words on such things as money..which is against the Constitution, yet I still see it on my money. As far as banning any "legal" words..only the Cons are doing that and also banning books in the South as well. Also banning "dangerous" substances like salt? I think you need your head examined. salt will never be banned, it is "education" to use salt in moderation due to health issues. Educate yourself before inserting foot. Libs are the "freedom fighters" Cons are the "only Christian run the world" fighters.
Posted by Animation3dfx on November 3,2011 | 04:33 PM
The Wheeler game plan is alive and well today! The "special interests thrive" We have the greatest congress money can buy and yet we seem to just stand by and watch history repeat itself. Only the names have changed. Liquor interests of then are the progressives of today. Our protective agencies of today are about as effective as the prohibition police of the bootleg era. I am appalled at what we have done to the America we are leaving to our grandchildren. By the way, did you know that the alcoholic beverage industry is the only industry in the US that exists by virtue of the voters approving a constitutional amendment? Must be what the voters wanted, not the demagogs.
Posted by Tom Montali on June 30,2011 | 08:10 PM
During the Anti-German Hysteria period of WW1, we tried to wipe out all things German from our American culture, Sauerkraut became Liberty Cabbage, German Toast becomes French Toast, Frankfurter becomes Hot Dog, Hamburger becomes Salisbury Steak. Thousands of Town and Street names are changed over night. For example, Hamburg Street becomes London Street. The list goes on and on. I'm sure that Prohibition was in part an attempt to finish the job by ridding America of it's beloved German Beer. Oh yes, I must also remind us that Bier becomes Beer.
Posted by Richard Thomas on November 6,2010 | 05:29 AM
The interesting part of this article which many seem to be missing (based on the small sample size I've read) is the impact Wheeler had upon the modern political tactics and methods employed by all sorts of "groups" today. I do not believe the point of the article was to highlight the "war on drugs", alternative fuel, etc. The lesson is in the changes to the political methods used to this day to influence almost every piece of legislation passing threw our governments at all levels. Nice perspective Smithsonian!
Posted by Matt Ciessau on September 8,2010 | 01:42 PM
As I sat on my back porch and enjoyed a cigar I read the article about prohibition and could not help but substitute “alcohol” for “tobacco” throughout the whole six pages. Some of the words needed no substitution of words “How did a freedom-loving people decide to give up a private right that had been freely exercised by millions since the first European colonist arrived in the New World”. The tax issue was an eye opener for me and really made me question what tax would replace tobacco taxes like the income tax replaced the alcohol tax. Whatever the politicians use to replace the tax revenue now provided by tobacco will, like the income tax, be an additional burden on “the poor and uneducated” as Morris Sheppard feared in the Prohibition debate. As organized crime became a curse that flourished because of the prohibition of alcohol the change of prohibited “legal” substances is causing the same kind of shift. The tax rate is increasing by local, state and federal government and citizens are now going in increasing numbers to sources that provide no tax revenue. The hypocrisy in most of the anti-tobacco laws, not surprisingly, does not include state run casinos or private clubs. Just like the Volstead Act had its loopholes so do most tobacco prohibition laws. Our elected leaders just don’t seem to get it, prohibition of things people want be it alcohol, tobacco, sex, or drugs only lead to more criminal activity because the desire does not go away the product only gets harder to find and more expensive without any tax revenue to offset any harm caused by the product.
I thoroughly enjoyed the article and my cigar, which came off the internet without taxes. I may read this again tomorrow with another cigar, this one from Mexico.
Posted by Rick Beus on May 23,2010 | 10:58 AM
Great article. I had always thought Prohibition was a bad idea that the ASL and its allies "sneaked in" under cover of WWI -- but now I see there were decades of (sometimes rough-elbowed) political spadework, by a very determined man, preceding it. Seems the policy couldn't escape the short-sightedness of its base of support in the churches, however -- did the Drys never imagine that once the great thing was achieved, "sinners" (including the Congress)would immed. begin finding creative ways to undermine it? Naive is not the word; when we look at Volstead, we are looking the Law of Unintended Consequences square in the eye. This movement has since rightly given all such attempts at sweeping social reform from above a bad name.
Posted by Robert H. on May 13,2010 | 03:04 PM
One sad relic of prohibition is ethanol as automotive fuel. Before Prohibition, farmers were beginning to make ethanol to run their tractors and other machines. Prohibition stopped that, throwing the baby out with the bathwater. When Prohibition was repealed, farm use of ethanol fuel was forgotten. Now we have politically correct gasohol, which has less energy content per gallon. Ethanol fuel for automobiles is not practical, because pure ethanol presents storage and transport problems (it absorbs water which takes energy to remove). I'd like to see on-site distilled ethanol used on farms instead of gasoline or diesel fuel.
Posted by Tom O'Brien on May 12,2010 | 03:35 PM
When I was a young sportswriter at The Port Arthur News in l950, a former editor had posted a number of classic "leads" inside the door of a cabinet where supplies were stored. Obviously he was attempting to stimulate the creative juices of his reporters. I'll never forget one yellowed old clipping that captured the end of Prohibition:
"A great amber wave washed out of the past today and broke in silvery foam on the dining tables of a nation.
Posted by John DeVillier on May 10,2010 | 04:37 PM
As a boy growing up in Deroir during Prohibiton I recall this. Men would tell of taking a 5 cent streetcar ride on E. Jeffersin Ave. to Joseph Campau St. Getting off and walking down to the Detroit River.There they would pay another 5 cents to leave the dry USA, board the ferryboat, and cross the river to wet Walkerville, ONT, Canada. Walkeerville was the home of a Hiram Walker distillary. Then they would walk back to the ferry, and return to the USA. When the story was told, there would be a lot of winking, nodding, laughter, and tinkling of glasses.
Posted by Jzmrs W. Faulkner on May 6,2010 | 11:36 AM
I think this was a great story. Please have more like it. I learned something today, made my day.
Posted by Danny Denecamp Sr on May 3,2010 | 07:32 PM
There must have been many politicians who voted both for Prohibition and its repeal. Has anyone ever done a study of them?
Posted by Bob Weber on May 3,2010 | 07:13 PM
Or the war on tobacco, or the war on autonomous health decisions?
Or the war on "trans fats"?
Or the war on salt?
Or the war on "fast food"?
Or the war on firearms?
Or the "war on terrorism"?
Where does the idea come from that the majority of grown adults "need" another person or group of persons to decide for them what they may and may not do with their own persons and property?
What is the justification for turning "the general welfare" clauses in the Constitution into governmental welfare policy?
Who decides who gets to dictate to me, while I do not get a voice in that decision?
Whatever happened to the clear statement in the Constitution that government is ONLY authorized to prevent and/or punish fraud, theft, and injury, that humanity has innate rights that are only limited when they infringe on someone else's rights to life, liberty, and property ("the pursuit of happiness")?
Far from teaching the futility of the control of the masses by a self-appointed elite few, Prohibition taught that with the right tactics and connections with money, and the (illegal) force of government, the dictatorially-bent Machiavellian few could achieve absolute rule over the masses, using the excuse of caring for their safety and "well being."
H.L. Mencken once observed: "The urge to save humanity is always a false front for the urge to rule it."
And Sen. Daniel Webster wrote: "Good intentions will always be pleaded for every assumption of authority. It is hardly too strong to say that the Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions. There are men in all ages who mean to govern well, but they mean to govern. They promise to be good masters, but they mean to be masters."
When will we ever learn?
Posted by GrayCat on May 3,2010 | 05:01 PM
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