- James Black (prohibitionist)
James Black (1823 – 1893) became a leader of the
temperance movement in the United States after having a bad experience with alcohol intoxication, if not alcohol poisoning.Black was born in
Union County, Pennsylvania to John Black and Jane Egbert Black. He married Eliza Murray in 1845.Black was actively involved in establishing the Good Templars, a temperance organization. In addition, he co-founded the
National Temperance Society and Publishing House withNeal S. Dow , another pioneering temperance leader. In its first 60 years, the publishing house printed over one billion pages. It published three monthly periodicals with a combined circulation of about 600,000. It also published over 2,000 books and pamphlets plus textbooks, flyers, broadsides and other temperance materials.In 1869, Black and some of his friends founded the
Prohibition Party . Three years later he was selected to run as the party’s presidential candidate. However, he won only 5,607 votes. Possibly one reason for the low vote he received was that the powerfulAnti-Saloon League , under the direction ofWayne Wheeler , would not support third party candidates. The same was true of the influentialWomen's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU).Black authored "Is There a Necessity for a Prohibition Party?". (NY: National Temperance Society and Publication House, 1876) and "Brief History of Prohibition and of the Prohibition Reform Party". (NY: National Committee of the Prohibition Reform Party, 1880).
Most sources list 1893 as the year of Black's death, but the
Library of Congress lists it as 1894.ource
* [http://www.ourcampaigns.com/CandidateDetail.html?CandidateID=20073 OurCampaigns biography]
References
*Tuttle, Elizabeth. Cheers! "Temperance society urges sobriety in bootleg era." Terre Haute, IN: Vigo County Historical Society, June 9, 1985.
*Wilson, James G., "et al." (eds.) "Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography". NY: Appleton & Co., 1887-1889, and 1999.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.