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You think you know the story of Prohibition, but do you know the women behind it all? In "Firebrands", Gioia Diliberto uncovers the hidden history of four trailblazing women who fought for and against Prohibition. From the fierce ambition of Mabel Walker Willebrandt to the unlikely activism of society figure Pauline Sabin, these women wielded unprecedented power and influence. Discover how their intertwined lives and rivalries shaped an era and rewrote the rules for women in politics. Links: "Firebrands" Book: https://amzn.to/4ixbVSm Gioia Diliberto Website: https://gioiadiliberto.com/ Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/LadNPaLpkig _ Produced by Podcast Studio X. Find my book reviews on ViewsOnBooks.com.
In this episode, junior history education major Whitney Befort joins Hollie Marquess to discuss Pauline Sabin and her efforts to repeal the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Whitney covers her early life, her involvement in politics, and how she mobilized women all over the country to dismantle Prohibition in the U.S.
Hey BT Buddies! Today's episode is a Marcia Mini. Raise a glass and cheers to today's episode on Prohibition, but you MUST BE 21. Today's episode follows Pauline Sabin on her remarkable journey from Prohibition supporter to being a major force in the fight that repealed Prohibition. Hear snippets about American's life during the 1920s Prohibition era & how Pauline founded the Women's Organization for National Prohibition Reform, aka WONPR. womenendingprohibition.org - website mentioned in episode. Sound & Music from pixabay.com & storyblocks.com Three 6 Mafia, 2000. Sippin on Some Syrup. [Online] Loud. Alan Jackson & Jimmy Buffett, 2003. It's Five O'Clock Somewhere. [Online] Arista Nashville. Sources: Culture war. Wikipedia. Women in the United States Prohibition Movement. Wikipedia. Pauline Sabin. Wikipedia. Women's Organization for National Prohibition Reform. WONPR. Prohibition. PBS. Why did prohibition start?, IAC Publishing. Reference. Check out our Instagram @bloodtiedpodcast for photos mentioned in this episode. We appreciate all our listeners - don't forget to subscribe & rate us! We will be back on Thursday - July 7th with a brand new episode. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bloodtied/support
This 2018 episode covers a key figure in the battle over Prohibition, which was is often framed as a battle of the sexes, with women serving as the moral voice of sobriety. But Pauline Sabin is often credited as being one of the major activists behind Prohibition's repeal. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of A Tap on the Wrist, Laura & Vanessa discuss two woman who were impacted by alcohol and the change they made on the country. If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate, & review. Music credit: 'Booze and Blues' by Ma Rainey
Dans cet épisode, je discute avec Pauline Sabin.Comme beaucoup, dont je fais partie, Pauline s'est faite happer par la folie du gravel , après des années de triathlon Ironman, de VTT XC et Marathon, et également un titre de championne du monde de cyclo-cross master.Pauline raconte également comment s'organise la vie professionnelle et la vie de famille pour mener à bien sa règle du 30/30/30.Avant de vous laisser écouter Pauline et son délicieux accent de Rodez, je vais devoir réorganiser Spotzle en profondeur. Le site actuel Spotzle.com va rester ainsi pour des raisons indépendantes de ma volonté.En attendant de pouvoir proposer à nouveau des parcours et des récits d'aventures, je vais passer une newsletter hebdomadaire et la messagerie télégram. Abonnez-vous, c'est gratuit évidement.La newsletter hebdomadaire : https://spotzle.substack.comPrenez 5 min pour répondre à un questionnaire : https://forms.gle/EcJmhHfZCRkejMVg9Telegram : https://t.me/joinchat/AAAAAFaNm5uSfkz7WP4MQQSi vous souhaitez vraiment me soutenir, vous pouvez passer par Patreon : https://www.patreon.com/spotzle-------------------------------Pour suivre Pauline :Strava : https://www.strava.com/athletes/2412595?oq=paulineInstagram : https://www.instagram.com/paulinesabin/-------------------------------Facebook : www.facebook.com/spotzlecyclingGroupe Facebook : www.facebook.com/groups/492766087959899Instagram : www.instagram.com/spotzle/Strava : www.strava.com/clubs/spotzleRichard Sur Strava : www.strava.com/athletes/3633934Richard sur Instagram : www.instagram.com/richard_delaume/--------------------------------------Photo de couverture : Nicolas Wou-Ming U------------------------------- Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Welcome! You are listening to the Can't Make This Up History Podcast. I am your host Kevin, and today we raise a glass of cold water in honor of prohibition. In the 86 years since its repeal, we have romanticized the era of the speakeasy and the gangster in film and literature. But what gets lost in popular culture is the prohibition movement's origins in the women's rights movement, how tricky the whole ideal was to enforce, and how enforcing the dry law put it at odds with Americans' constitutional freedoms. I'm joined today by John Schuttler who co-wrote along with the late Hugh Ambrose, "Liberated Spirits: Two Women Who Battled Over Prohibition." John is a professional research historian who has made a 20-year career of digging through archives and librarians on behalf of authors, companies, and government bodies. In our discussion we cover two women with unique vantage points regarding prohibition. The first is Pauline Sabin, an influential East Coast socialite, who helped shape policy within the machinery of the Republican Party. The second is Mabel Walker-Willebrandt who served as Assistant Attorney General of the United States for most of the 1920s and was responsible for enforcing the 18th Amendment. Want to listen to new episodes a week earlier and get exclusive bonus content? Consider becoming a supporter of the podcast on Patreon! Like the podcast? Please subscribe and leave a review! Follow @CMTUHistory on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram & TikTok --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Cheers! It's an Unsung Sluts Podcast Temperance and Prohibition Episode. This is Part Two of this two-part episode. In this episode, Tabitha tells us about Pauline Sabin and her involvement in the Prohibition of the 1920's and 1930's. Pauline Sabin (1887 - 1955) http://www.pbs.org/kenburns/prohibition/media_detail/2082534271-sabin/ https://www.alcoholproblemsandsolutions.org/pauline-sabin-repeal-prohibition-leader/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pauline_Sabin http://www.forgottenfeminists.com/pauline-sabin/ Please send us an email about the Unsung Sluts (Amazing Women doing Amazing Things) in your lives at: Email - unsungslutspodcast@gmail.com Follow Unsung Sluts Podcast on: Instagram: @unsung_sluts_podcast Twitter: @unsungsluts Facebook - Unsung Sluts Podcast Website - www.unsungslutspodcast.com Please leave us a review on Apple Podcasts. It really helps us out. (Theme song "Liverpool Sluts by Sigmund Droid)
The people had spoken: They wanted beer, and they wanted it now, but not just for drinking. Protestors wanted the jobs that came with breweries, and the country was desperate from the money that could come from alcohol taxes. As quickly as temperance organizations sprang up in the decade before, anti-Prohibition organizations appeared in every city. But, a constitutional amendment had never been repealed before. The anti-Prohibition leagues realized they needed someone bigger than a governor or mayor to repeal this. They went after the Presidency.For a deeper understanding of the interplay between beer, taxation and the history of Repeal, Ambitious Brew: The Story of American Brew by Maureen Ogle is essential reading. Kenneth D. Rose’s American Women and the Repeal of Prohibition provided insight into Pauline Sabin’s work, as did David J. Hanson’s comprehensive resource, Alcohol Problems and Solutions.Those who want to do a deeper dive into the 1932 DNC and the mob’s involvement, you can read more in the article from Salon, Corruption for Decades. Lisa McGirr’s The War on Alcohol: Prohibition and the Rise of the American State also explores the relationship between the New Deal and Repeal. For more on Cox’s Army, check out The Bonus Army: An American Epic by Paul Dixon and Thomas B. Allen.Andrew Barr’s Drink: A Social History of America contains a great chapter about the failure of controls and the legacy of prohibition in state liquor laws and the relationship between California’s wine industry and repeal is well documented in When the Rivers Ran Red by Vivienne Sosnowski. To catch up with the bartenders who are bringing back pre-Prohibition cocktails, David Wondrich’s Imbibe is required reading.Support us by supporting our sponsors!
Closing Time by Daniel Francis provides a good account of the border wars and smuggling across the northern border. Robert Rockaway’s article “The Notorious Purple Gang” details the gang’s origin as well as the Cleaners and Dyers War.For information about the link between Prohibition and organized crime in Chicago, Gus Russo’s The Outfit and Get Capone by Johnathan Eig are invaluable sources. Al Capone’s Beer Wars by John J. Binder is a fantastic re-assessment of the period that sorts out some of the fact from fiction, in a highly mythologized period. For more on the Increased Penalties Act, Michael Lerner’s Dry Manhattan, is a good resource used for this podcast, as is Daniel Okrent’s Last Call. Robin Room’s The Movies and the Wettening of America is the source for the section on Hollywood’s move away from temperance.Kenneth D. Rose’s American Women and the Repeal of Prohibition provided insight into Pauline Sabin’s work, as did David J. Hanson’s comprehensive resource, Alcohol Problems and Solutions. The Washington Post’s recap of The Man in the Green Hat exposé is available here. Support this show by supporting our sponsors!
The battle over Prohibition is often framed as a battle of the sexes, with women serving as the “moral” voice of sobriety. But a woman named Pauline Sabin is often credited as being one of the major activists behind Prohibition’s repeal. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
On January 20th 1920, the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution - which banned the production, transport, and sale of alcohol - went into effect. Among the many Americans rejoicing at the passage of Prohibition that evening, was one Pauline Sabin. Sabin, a wealthy WASP socialite, who was New York’s first ever female member of the Republican National Committee, foresaw many positives to an alcohol-free society. Like many American women, Sabin viewed alcohol as a threat to the morality of her family, particularly her two young sons, and, in her own words, Sabin believed that “a world without liquor would be a beautiful world.” Quickly, however, Sabin and many others realised that such utopian hopes were misplaced. Prohibition, it seemed was creating more problems than it solved. Looking around at the increased crime and disrespect for law and order in the country, Sabin came to the conclusion that Prohibition was actually creating a worse world for her sons as opposed to the beautiful world she had once imagined. By 1929, convinced of Prohibition’s failure, Pauline Sabin formed and led the Women’s Organization for National Prohibition Reform (WONPR). An organisation that quickly accrued over 1.5 million members and led the charge to repeal Prohibition. Women had played a crucial role in Prohibition’s passage and much to everyone’s surprise they would play an equally important role in its eventual repeal in 1933. Prohibition would throw up many such surprises throughout the thirteen years it remained on the books and many of its failures still hold important lessons for our society today. As such, on this episode of American History Too, we aim to answer a simple question: Why did American Prohibition fail? Reading List David Kennedy, Freedom From Fear (1999) David E. Kyvig, “Women Against Prohibition,” American Quarterly, Vol. 28, No. 4 (Autumn, 1976), 465-482. Mary Murphy, “Bootlegging Mothers and Drinking Daughters: Gender and Prohibition in Butte, Montana,” American Quarterly, Vol.46, No.2 (Jun., 1994), 174-194. Michael Parrish, Anxious Decades (1992) Kenneth Rose, American women and the repeal of Prohibition (1996) Wendy Sarvasy, “Beyond the Difference versus Equality Policy Debate: Postsuffrage Feminism, Citizenship, and the Quest for a Feminist Welfare State,” Signs, 17:2 (Winter, 1992), 329-362 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Historian Dan Okrent discusses Pauline Sabin and her effort to repeal prohibition