- Eliza Daniel Stewart
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Eliza Daniel Stewart, (1816 - 1908), was an early temperance movement leader. In 1872, she urged wives of "drunkards" to sue alcohol dealers and may have been the first proponent of what are now known as server liability laws. The next year she organized the first Women's Temperance League. In 1874 she played a prominent role in establishing the Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). She visited the United Kingdom, where she helped organize the British Women's Temperance Association and the Scottish Christian Union. In 1895, Ms. Stewart was the keynote speaker at the World WCTU convention in London, England.
Source
Further reading
- "Woman's Crusade of 1873-74". Temperance & Prohibition. Department of History, College of Humanities, The Ohio State University. http://prohibition.osu.edu/content/crusade.cfm. Retrieved 2007-09-08.
- "Eliza Daniel Stewart". Ohio History Central. Ohio Historical Society. http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=358. Retrieved 2007-09-08.
Categories:- 1816 births
- American temperance activists
- 1908 deaths
- American people of Scottish descent
- Activist stubs
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