DRINK AND THE VICTORIANS
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH TEMPERANCE MOVEMENT
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BIBLIOGRAPHICAL
NOTE
This collection has been formed by the amalgamation of two smaller
but important collections. The larger part, probably about three-quarters
of the whole, was formed by William Hoyle of Claremont, Bury,
near Manchester. The other part was formerly in the Joseph Livesey
Library, Sheffield, and many of the pamphlets carry that library
stamp.
The catalogue has three
main elements: pamphlets and tracts; books, including a section
of contemporary biography; and newspapers, journals and conference
reports. There are around 1400 separately published pamphlets
and tracts but a series of tracts, or part of a series, has usually
been catalogued as one item. The Hoyle collection of pamphlets,
is bound in 24 volumes, mostly half black roan, many with his
ownership stamp. All the pieces from the Joseph Livesey Library
are disbound; so that any item described as "disbound"
may be assumed to be from the Livesey collection and all the others,
for which a volume and item number are given, from Hoyle's bound
collection.
[NOTE:
All pamphlets have been disbound, so the above bibliograhical
note is not completely accurate. July, 2007.]
INTRODUCTION
By Brian Harrison Fellow and Tutor in Modern History and Politics,
Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
Anyone keen to understand the Victorians can hardly do better
than devour Joseph Livesey's Staunch Teetotaler (458) or J.G.
Shaw's Life of William Gregson. Temperance Advocate (1072), for
temperance history offers the clue to a moralistic society that
did not yet separate religion from politics. Its key unlocks understanding
of an increasingly prosperous society groping towards the idea
that the poor need not always be with us. It gets us inside an
urban society pioneering its response to the social problems accompanying
growing affluence and increased leisure.
Nineteenth-century
Britain turned against cruelty and violence of all kinds, repudiating
ill-treatment of women, criminals, lunatics, animals, children
and slaves. Energy and hope were marshalled for the humanitarian
crusade in ways that now seem unfamiliar. If, for instance, master
ill-treated slave, abolition of slavery was the answer; if the
farmer neglected his cattle, then he must be educated or punished
into kindness; if woman turned to prostitution, she must be "reclaimed";
and if the drunkard beat his wife, drunkenness must be frontally
attacked. This highly moralistic diagnosis of social problems
gave far less attention to environmental pressures and structural
problems within the economy than would now be fashionable.
To many Victorians
drunkenness seemed at the root of many of the big city's evils:
crime, violence, family discord, social unrest, ignorance and
poverty. Temperance reformers from the late 1820s onwards attacked
the problem head on by trying to get drinkers to abstain. Each
individual faced an apparently simple choice: stay with the dissolute
on this side of the road, and squander resources in what one mid-Victorian
temperance cartoon saw as "the losings bank", that is,
the pub: or, accompany the prudent across the road into all the
affluence and respectability of "the winnings (that is, the
savings) bank".
But by the 1850s many
temperance reformers had become impatient with the teetotaler's
simple but slow-acting emphasis on moral choice, and in 1853 the
United Kingdom Alliance was formed to promote prohibition. The
Alliance soon devised what was called the "Permissive Bill",
which would ban the trade from an area when two thirds of its
ratepayers voted to implement it. To many reformers, including
J.S. Mill and (in his old age) the pioneer teetotaler Joseph Livesey,
this seemed a tyrannical interference with individual liberty,
and even a hindrance to the moral growth that every good Liberal
hoped for. In the resultant controversies (see 142, 370, 507,
925, 975 for examples), temperance reformers often gave as good
as they got, and were capable even of unhorsing John Stuart Mill
on some points - as in the writings of T.H. Barker (43-4) or Samuel
Fothergill (261).
In some ways the Victorian
temperance world now seems less alien than it appeared to me in
1961, when as a young graduate student I began studying the movement.
In the 1960s alcoholism and street violence seemed in full retreat
before expanded welfare and growing affluence, and environmental
diagnoses of poverty were well. entrenched; yet during the past
decade the drug problem has re-emerged with a vengeance. I remember
being surprised, in the early 1970s, to find that people were
interested in my Drink and the Victorians, a subject I had decided
to study from purely academic motives, for the light it could
shed on current social problems. Moralistic politics, too, have
reappeared; since 1979, British governments have been positively
Gladstonian in their zest for thrift and self-improvement, their
eagerness for a property-owning democracy, their emphasis on the
moral benefits of choice.
So this remarkable
collection will interest a wide range of scholars, and I wish
I'd known about it when writing my book. The major national libraries
- the British Library in London, for instance, and the Bodleian
Library in Oxford - are relatively weak in the temperance area.
In the 1960s the major temperance collections were held by the
United Kingdom Alliance, the British National Temperance League
(duplicates from whose collection in Sheffield are included here)
and the Goldsmith's Library; if I had known about it, I would
certainly have wanted to consult this collection as well.
No such hoard is ever
likely to appear on the market again. Much of it was accumulated
by William Hoyle (1831-86), a Lancashire cotton-spinner who became
the temperance movement's mid-Victorian expert on the statistical
aspect of the question, and brought intelligence, energy and resource
to the whole enterprise. His Our National Resources and how they
are Wasted (1871 - see 336-8, 951) was important. This collection
reflects the outlook of a man who was alert to everything important
that was going on between the 1860s and 1880s in the world of
prohibition and temperance; it also contains items from the related
movements against smoking (28, 86, 88-9,192, 284, 304, 388, 491,
597, 629, 649, 700-2) and meat-eating (517); everything likely
to promote a continuing campaign has been carefully husbanded.
Many of the books were presented to Hoyle, and some of their interesting
inscriptions illustrate the deep respect temperance reformers
felt for him.
The world of self-improvement
and respectability did not separate recreation from good works;
indeed, temperance readily became a hobby for its practitioners
- a private world, a hidden culture - and its publications were
hoarded for enjoyment as well as for usefulness. These include
temperance almanacks (100, 1148, 1202), readers (936), annuals
(1042), songbooks (231, 334, 947, 1111, 1131, 1164, 1197), reciters
(283, 817, 884, 1009, 1091), handbooks (917,968), primers (1018),
lesson-books (1011, 1054) and even temperance encyclopaedias (1047).
In the absence of other media, this was a period of essay-writing,
pamphleteering and periodical-launching, driven on by an almost
euphoric faith in the power of the printed word; these were the
great days of the Victorian provincial press.
Provincial mid-Victorian
Liberalism flourished on the continuous interaction between the
written and the spoken word. Temperance reformers, most of them
Liberals, published their sermons (e.g. 183, 277, 297), their
lectures (421, 444, 456, 993, 1019), their public debates (293,
365-6, 486, 645), and the proceedings of their public inquiries
(584, 658, 848, 1049, 1065, 1199), conventions and conferences
(270, 672, 805, 1035, 1040, 1085, 1087, 1136, 1182-4, 1209, 1224).
Frustrated ambition
and pent-up energies fuelled the many public temperance controversies
(not all of them friendly) - about the Gothenburg system for municipal
management, for example (289, 431) and about compensation for
confiscated licences (477). This literature was by no means always
written by the mindlessly sentimental: much of it is gritty, spiky,
angry material, hostile to a London-based and aristocratic Establishment,
passionately concerned about social problems that are seen as
both urgent and destructive of material and moral welfare.
The main strength of
the present collection lies in its wealth of mid-Victorian controversial
and ephemeral temperance material, though it also contains valuable
items from earlier decades (845, 891, for example), as well as
important later material., much of it retrospective, biographical
or autobiographical. The teetotaler, like Pilgrim, saw himself
as struggling through a life of snares and temptations, and the
analogy with Pilgrim's Progress moulded many a temperance memoir,
as the title of Thomas Whittaker's well-known Life's Battles in
Temperance Armour (1112) reveals. By 1860 it seemed worth publishing
the key (864) to a picture containing the portraits of 120 temperance
reformers, and a retrospective mood sets in during the 1880s and
1890s as the movement prepares itself for its long decline.
Temperance ephemera
were vulnerable. Victorians readily consigned annual reports,
leaflets, lectures, sermons and tracts to the wastepaper basket,
and little of what survived got past the salvage man during the
second world war. Temperance was, at least in its earliest decades,
too provincial and even vulgar in tone to interest the great copyright
libraries. The temperance movement's twentieth-century decline
made things worse. So items like 170, 650 or even 193 may well
be unique; yet obscure as they are, they reveal much of what temperance
meant in practical terms to ordinary people in their localities.
The collection contains
the well-known classics of temperance propaganda such as Burne's
Teetotalers Companion (853), Livesey's Malt Lecture (444, 991),
R.B. Grindrod's Bacchus (928) and Beecher's Six Sermons on Intemperance
(64). The major items of Victorian temperance historiography are
also there - notably Winskill (1123-5), the Webbs (1106) and Dawson
Burns (8602). These are complemented by the earlier, less grandiose
and now scarce histories of the movement: Morris (1010), Teare
(671), Walmsley (1101), Dearden (176, 891-2) and Stephenson (1084).
The movement's vigorous
torrents of propaganda branched out in several directions, each
with its own leading exponents, all well represented here: religious
(70, 75, 162, 168, 171, 240, 271, 385-6, 409-10, 496-9, 501-2,
579, 587, 594-8, 600, 602, 621-2, 696, 978, 980, 1035, 1059, 1061-2,
1085, 1119, 1173), criminological (187, 324, 344, 404-5, 454),
economic (262-4, 328-31, 336-41, 345-9, 351, 355-7, 360-2, 394-6,
1039, 1069) and medical (10-15, 20, 52, 71, 120-1, 150, 196, 216-7,
322, 332-3, 466, 473, 492-4, 512, 514-5, 674, 774, 792, 868-70,
960, 1014, 1016, 1018, 1108, 1116). The collection also provides
good coverage of the Sunday closing issues.
Particularly interesting
are the items relating to the important Ulster temperance reformer
John Edgar (199-212), the rich collection of William Hoyle's important
publications on the economic aspect of temperance (324-362, 951-43),
the scarce later writings of Joseph Livesey (443458, 992), the
valuable collection of the United Kingdom Alliance's informative
mid-Victorian (prohibitionist) annual reports (735-761) and publications
(558-64, 764-8), the rare items on the Sunday closing movement
(125-141, 871) and the volumes of temperance tracts (681,716,
1081, 1090-2) - evocative material that rarely becomes available
in this ...
Perhaps most valuable
of all, because so central to the movement and so rarely available
in bound volumes, are the temperance periodicals. These range
from the ephemeral and therefore scarce venture that lasts for
but a few numbers - Nos. 884, 1154, 1163, 1225, for example -
to the major organs of a powerful movement that were published
by national organisations like the Band of Hope, the National
and British Temperance Leagues and the Church of England Temperance
Society (Nos. 1130, 11.38-9, 1142-3, 1149, 1165, 1167-8, 1174,
1178, 1177, 1.181., 1188, 11.92). Such items rarely come on the
market nowadays, yet they chronicle the movement's day-to-day
history; their vivid engravings, their fiercely sectarian correspondence-columns
and their earthy apologetics all combine to illuminate important
aspects of nineteenth-century popular culture and religion.
The discovery of this
collection gives students of the Victorian age a major opportunity.
Any library lucky enough to acquire it will greatly reinforce
its holdings on the history of nineteenth-century social reform,
nonconformity, provincial and popular culture - for we are nowadays
increasingly aware that to all of these, the Victorian temperance
movement was central.
BRIAN HARRISON
Brian Harrison, Fellow
and Tutor in Modern History and Politics, Corpus Christi College,
Oxford. Author of Drink and the Victorians. The Temperance Question
in England: 1815-1872 (Faber, 1971); Separate Spheres. The Opposition
to Women's Suffrage in Britain (Croom Helm, 1978); Peaceable Kingdom.
Stability and Change in Modern Britain (Clarendon Press, 1982);
and, with Colin Ford, A Hundred Years Ago. Britain in the 1880s
in Words and Photographs (Allen Lane/Penguin Books, 1.983).
PAMPHLETS
[call
number = 71-03051 + number from list below]
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1. A'BECKETT, Sir William.
Sir William A'Beckett on the Maine Law. A lecture which the late
chief justice of Victoria ... delivered on the 24th of August
last, at the School of Arts, Sydney, Australia, n.p., n.d. [Manchester:
United Kingdom Alliance.] 12pp. Disbound.
2. ABERDEEN INDUSTRIAL
SCHOOL ASSOCIATION. Ninth report of the committee of management
of the Aberdeen Industrial School Association. 1858-9. Aberdeen:
D. Chalmers, 1859. 12pp.
3. ACLAND, H.W. [president]
Report of medical conference on the suppression of intemperance
(revised) convened by the Church of England Temperance Society,
in the Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford. On October 30, 1876. Under
the presidency of Dr. H.W. Acland, F.R.S. President of the Medical
Council, and regius Professor of Medicine in the University of
Oxford. Second edition, Oxford: E. Pickard Hall [etc.] n.d. [c.
1876] 32pp.
4. ADAM, John. The
substance of a speech delivered at the annual meeting of the Glasgow
and West of Scotland temperance society. 20th December, 1830.
No. 16. Glasgow: University Press. 12pp. Disbound.
5. ADDRESS. Address
by the Committee of the Glasgow and West of Scotland Temperance
Society.MDCCCXXX. Glasgow: William Collins, n.d. [c. 1830] 24pp.
6. ADDRESS. Address
of the executive committee of the United Kingdom Alliance to the
electors and Non-Electors of Great Britain and Ireland. Manchester:
Beresford and Southern. n.d. 4pp.
7. ADDRESS. Address
to the electors and rate payers of Scotland. By the Scottish Permissive
Bill Association. Glasgow: Office of the ... Association. 16pp.
n.d.
8. ADDRESS. Address
to the ladies of Great Britain and Ireland, from the United Kingdom
Alliance, formed June 1st, 1863 to procure the total and immediate
legislative suppression of the traffic in all intoxicating liquors
as beverages. Manchester: Cave and Sever, n.d. [c.1863] 8pp.
9. AFFLECK, W.B. The
House that Jack Built: A lecture delivered ... in Trinity School
Room, Bradford. Bingley: Harrison and Sons, n.d. [c.1865] 23pp.
,'
10. ALCOHOL A POISON.
Alcohol a poison. n.p., n.d. [c. 1860] 30pp.
11. ALCOHOL. Alcohol
as a medicine. By a vice-president of the British Temperance Medical
Association. London: National Temperance League. n.d. 15pp. Disbound.
12. ALCOHOL. Alcohol
as a medicine. Manchester: At the Guardian Steam-Printing Offices.
n.d. [c.1867] 16pp. Issued by the United Kingdom Alliance.
13. ALCOHOL. Alcohol
as a medicine. Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. [c.1867]
16pp.
14. ALCOHOL. Is alcohol
an alimentary article? Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance n.d.
[c. 1870] 8pp.
15. ALCOHOL VERSUS
TEETOTALISM. Alcohol Versus Teetotalism. London: Longman, Green,
Longman, Roberts, and Green. 1863. [Bristol printed], orig. printed
wrappers, 86pp.
16. ALCOHOLIC CONTROVERSY.
The alcoholic controversy from Fraser's "Magazine, Sept.
1868. 24pp. ,
17. ALCOHOLIC CONTROVERSY.
The alcoholic controversy from Fraser's Magazine, Sept. 1868.
Reprinted by The United Kingdom Alliance. Manchester: United Kingdom
Alliance. 1868. 24pp.
18. ALSOP, Alfred.
In the slums of Deansgate. Manchester: John Heywood. n.d. (c.
1875) 16pp.
19. ANDREWS, C.C. Report
from Mr. Andrews, Minister resident of the United States at Stockholm,
on the Revenue from Spirits and on the Civil Service in Sweden.
London; John S. Levey, 1877. 24pp.
20. ANGELL, John. The
Alcohol Question. Being a series of Letters in Reply to Twelve
Essays on the Alcohol Question by Sir James Paget, Bart. M.D.,
and others, published in the Contemporary Review, Of November,
December and January, 1878-9. Reprinted from the Manchester City
News. Manchester: John Heywood, n.d. (c.1879) 24pp. John Angell,
F.C.S., F.I.C. Senior Science Master, Manchester Grammar School.
Formerly Chemical Assistant to the late Professor Graham, F.R.S.
of University College, London.
21. ARNOLD, Arthur.
English Drunkenness and Swedish Licensing. London: Cassell. Petter
and Galpin. 1877. 48pp. Arthur Arnold, Late Assistant-Commissioner,
public works Acts, 1863-64; Author of "The History of the
Cotton Famine," etc. etc.
22. ARNOT, Dr. Dr.
Arnot on Modern Narcotism. Manchester: Anti-Narcotic league. n.d.
(c. 1875) 4pp.
23. ARNOT, Rev. William.
A New-Year's Tract. Pictorial series. No. 4 Glasgow; Scottish
Temperance League. n.d. 4pp.
24. ARTHUR, T.S. Words
for the Wise. Glasgow: Oliphant and White. 1853 94pp.
25. ARTHUR, William.
"The People's day." An appeal to the Right llon. Lord
Stanley, M.P., against his advocacy of A French Sunday. Ninth
edition. London: Hamilton, Adams, and Co., 1855. 47pp.
26: ASHCROFT, T. Teetotalism
not a delusion; or, a vicar's charges refuted. A lecture delivered...
in reply to extraordinary charges made against teetotalism in
a sermon preached and published by the Rev. W. Sutcliffe, Vicar
of Musbury, Haslingden. Fifth thousand. London: William Tweedie,
n.d. (c.1870) Manchester Printed. 16pp.
27. ATKTN, F. The Westminster
Review on Good Templary. The Bible, and Strong Drink. A lecture.
Bolton: Office of the British Temperance League.1875. 28pp. Tnscribed
presentation copy from the author.
28. AXON, W.F.A. on
the Consumption of Tobacco, 1801-70. London: Harrison and Sons.
pp. 334-340. n.d.
29. B.,A. Churches
and modern unbelief. A communication dedicated to the Christian
evidence society. By one of its friends. London: Simkin, Marshall,
and Co., 1878.
30. B.,M. The Drunkard's
Frolic; and how it ended. A Fact. (in verse). London: William
Mackintosh. n.d. (c.1860). 12pp.
31. BABCOCK, Rev. D.C.
Temperance Lesson Leaves. Nos. 1-3, New York, J.N. Stearns. n.d.
Each 8pp.
32. BAKER, Rev. W.R.
Maternal Responsibility. In connexion with the cause of Temperance.
No. 42. New Series. London: Printed and Sold by J. Pasco. 4pp.
Disbound.
33. BALFOUR, Alexander.
Intemperance and the Licensing System London: Strahan and Co.
1879. 32pp. Disbound.
34. BALFOUR, Mrs. Clara
Lucas. Bands of Hope: Suggestions as to imparting systematic knowledge
of Temperance Principles at band of Hope Meetings. London: United
Kingdom Band of Hope Union. n.d. (c.1876) llpp.
35. BALFOUR, Clara
Lucas. The Claims of temperance on the young; or an affectionate
address to children and young people. London: Charles Gilpin.
n.d. 12pp. Disbound.
36. BANCROFT, George.
Anew dialogue entitled the essay and discussion class. Manchester:
George Bancroft, Printer, n.d. (c.1865) 8pp.
37. BAND OF HOPE. Grimshaw
Street, Band of Hope and Temperance Society. Flyer announcing
a meeting "To be held in the upper School-Room, on Tuesday
Evening, Mar. 12, 1878. Preston: C.W. Whitehead (1878) Single
sheet.
38. BAND OF HOPE MOVEMENT.
Essays on the Band of Hope Movement, being papers, read at the
Annual Conference of the United Kingdom Band of Hope Union, in
Exeter Hall, London, On Wednesday, May 17, 1865. London: Office
of the Union. n.d. (c. 1865) 52+8pp. advts.
39. BAND OF HOPE MOVEMENT.
The Band of Hope Movement. Seven papers read at the annual conference
of 'the United Kingdom Band of Hope Union, in Exeter Hall, London,
on Wednesday the 18th May 1864. London: Office of the Union. n.d.
(c.1864) 52+6pp advts.
40. BAND OF HOPE UNION.
First annual meeting of the Lancashire and Cheshire Band of Hope
Union, held in the Free Trade Hall, Manchester. Reprinted from
the Warrington Guardian, October, 8th, 1864. Warrington: At the
Guardian Steam Press Office. n.d. (c.1864) 8pp. The beginnings
of a strong Manchester-based organisation.
41. BARDSLEY, John
W. Is there not a cause? Speech... at the meeting of the Manchester
Dioscesan Church of England and Ireland Temperance Reformation
Society, held in the Town Hall Manchester, November 8th, 1866;
Thomas
Clegg, Esq., in the
chair. Manchester: Published by the Lancashire and Cheshire Band
of Hope Union. n.d. (c.1866) 8pp.
42. BARKER. Is Barker
Right? A new and improved version of J.R.'s Poetry. n.p., n.d.
(c. 1850 )4pp.
43. BARKER, Joseph.
Temperance and Luxury. London, J. Pasco. 1842. 12pp. Disbound.
44. BARKER, Thomas
H. Civil Rights and Social Duties in relation to the Liquor Traffic.
A Paper read before the members of the Manchester Friends' Institute,
Friday March 24, 1871, as the concluding Lecture of the Session.
Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. (c.1871) 16pp. Thomas
H. Barker, Secretary, United Kingdom Alliance.
45. (BARKER, Thomas
H.) Mistakes and fallacies respecting, temperance legislation.
Friendly letters to Vernon Harcourt, Esq., of the Temple by the
Secretary of the United Kingdom Alliance; with an appendix: respectfully
dedicated to all candidates for Parliamentary honours. Manchester:
United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. (c. 1870).15pp.
46. BARKER, Thomas
H. Our Outlook and our electoral duty as temperance reformers.
With a plea for the Direct Popular Veto. Manchester: United Kingdom
Alliance. n.d. (c.1880). 15pp.
47. BARKER, Thomas
H. The Permissive bill, or prohibition made easy. With some important
testimonies. Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. (c. 1875)
12pp.
Thomas 31. Barker,
Secretary to the United Kingdom Alliance.
48. BARKER, Thomas
H. Points and facts for temperance advocates. Manchester: United
Kingdom Alliance. n.d. 12pp.
49. BARKER, Thomas
H, Points and facts for temperance advocates. Manchester United
Kingdom Alliance. n.d. (c.1870) 12pp.
50. BARKER, Thomas
H. The Rev. Dr. Garrett and the Sunday Closing Movement. Form
the "Alliance News" of January 18, 1868. Manchester:
The Central Association etc. n.d. (c.1868) 8pp. Small Quarto,
folded to fit volume.
51. BARKER, Thomas
H. Temperance advocacy. A paper read before the Temperance advocates'
Society on Manchester and Salford. Manchester: Beresford and Southern.
1859. 15pp. Disbound.
52. BARLOW, Sir Thomas.
A Medical view of the Temperance Question. An address delivered
at the Annual Meeting of the Women's Total Abstinence Union, May
3rd, 1916. London: Women's Total Abstinence Union. n.d. (c. 1916)
32pp. Orig. printed wrappers.
53. BARNES, Rev. Albert.
On the traffic in intoxicating liquors showing its immoral and
destructive tendency. With preface by the Rev. John Kirk. Twenty-third
thousand. Edinburgh: J. Dickson. 1847. 12pp. Dishound.
54. BARNES, Albert.
On'the Traffic on intoxicating liquors. Showing its immoral and
destructive tendency. With Preface by the Rev. John Kirk. Thirtieth
thousand. Glasgow: Office of the Scottish Temperance League. n.d.
(c. 1846) 12pp. Disbound.
55. BARNES, Albert.
The Throne of Iniquity; or, sustaining evil by law. A discourse
in behalf of a law prohibiting the traffic in intoxicating drinks.
New York: National Temperance Society and Publication louse. 24pp.
56. BARWICK, Thomas.
The legislative aspect of the temperance question: a paper ...
read at the Church of England Temperance Meeting, field at Christ
Church School Room, Gloucester. Gloucester: Her Majesty's Prison
Press. 1878. 9pp.
57. BATTY, Robert B.
A Guide to the Compensation Controversy. Manchester: United Kingdom
Alliance. n.d. 30pp. Printed wrappers.
58. BAYLY, Mrs. Who
should clear the way? London: Hodder and Stoughton. 1878. 32pp.
59. BEACON OF NORTH
STAFFORDSHIRE TEMPERANCE JOURNAL. The Beacon of North Staffordshire
Temperance Journal Conference Number. NO. V. July 1860. New Series.
London: Horsell and Cauldwell. n.d. (1860) 97pp.
60. BEARDSALL, Rev.
Francis. An appeal to the Manufacturers of intoxicating beverages
Shaw near Oldham T. Micklethwaite Printer. n.d. [c.1840]. 4pp.
61 BEARDSALL, Rev.
Francis. Lecture on intoxicating beverages. Reprinted from the
Preacher in Print. Shaw, Near Oldham, T. Micklethwaite, n.d. 12pp.
Disbound.
62. BEARDSALL, Rev.
Francis. Trial of John Barleycorn, alias Strong Drink. New York:
National Temperance Society and Publications House. 1879. 31pp.
63. BEECHER, Lyman.
Six sermons on the nature, occasion, signs, evils, and remedy
of intemperance. New edition, with an introductory essay, by John
Edgar, Professor of Divinity, Belfast College. Revised and enlarged
with numerous notes expressly for this edition. Bradford: Printed
for the Manchester Temperance Society, 1830. 66pp. The first-known
English edition of this famous temperance classic. Unknown to
the later temperance historians, but mentioned in 1831 by Joseph
Livesey, and in 1855 by Morris.
64. BEECHER, Lyman.
Six sermons on intemperance delineating its nature, occasions,
signs, evils, and remedy. Edinburgh: J. Dickson, 1846. 32pp.
65 BEECHER, Lyman.
Six sermons in intemperance ... With preface by the Rev. William
Reid. Forty-fifth thousand. Glasgow: Office of the Scottish Temperance
League. n.d. [c.1846] 32pp. Disbound.
66. BEESLY, Gerald.
The Drink Problem. Temperance Legislation League Pamphlet. B.
Series. No. 21. Published by the Temperance League. n.d. [c.1916]
8pp.
67. BEGGS, Thomas.
The exhibition and the people. The temperance cause in its relation
to the condition of the working classes. London: Charles Gilpin.
n.d. 16pp. Disbound. Thomas Beggs, author of "An Inquiry
into the Extent and Causes of Juvenile Depravity."
68. BEGGS, Thomas.
Juvenile delinquency and reformatory institutions. A lecture delivered
to the members of the Leeds Mechanic' institution ... London:
William and Frederick G. Cash. 1857. 35pp. Thomas Beggs, Fellow
of the Statistical Society.
69. BENNETT, Edward
T. Alcohol: Its use and misuse. London: W. Tweedie, 1868. 16pp.
Inscribed presentation copy from the author.
70. BTBLF TEMPERANCE
EDUCATOR. The Bible Temperance Educator; Vol VI - No. 3. lst July,
1886. Professors Delitzsch and Watts on Sacramental Wine. By the
editor, etc. p. 86-116.
71. BIRMINGHAM MAN.
Medical testimonies. Signed "A Birmingham Man." Birmingham:
Richard Davies, n.d. 4pp. Disbound.
72. BLACKIE John Stuart.
On democracy. A lecture delivered to the working men's institute
Edinburgh on the 3rd January 1867. Third edition. Edinburgh: Edmonston
and Douglas, 1867. 54pp.
73. BLEWS, William;
MARSDEN, William Henry and WHISTON, William Harvey. Royal Commission
on Liquor Licensing Laws. Minutes of Evidence taken before the
Royal Commission on Liquor Licensing Laws. London: Eyre and Spottiswoode.
1897. Folio. 28pp.
74. FLUE COAT HOSPITAL.
Some account of the Blue Coat Hospital, and public library in
the College, Manchester, founded by Humphrey Chetham, Esq. in
the year 1651. Manchester: James Leech. 1839. 20pp.
75. BOURNE, Hugh. Hugh
Bourne on Temperance. Single sheet. Birmingham: R. Davies n.d.
76. BOWDLER W.H. Letter
to the Home Secretary with reference to the late judicial decisions
as to Beer Licenses; and making some suggestions in the event
of any early legislation on the licensing question. Preston: The
Guardian Printing Works. 1883. 7pp. Disbound.
77. BOWLY Samuel. An
address ... to the Friends' Temperance Union. Fifth Month 31st,
1865. London: Richard Barrett, 1865. 24pp.
78. BOWLY, Samuel.
Total abstinence in its proper place. Addressed especially to
the religious portion of the Community. London: W. Tweedie. n.d.
15pp. Disbound.
79. BOWMAN, Fred. On
some of the objections which have been urged against the connection
of Bands of Hope with the Sunday School, Norwich Tracts. No. 192.
Norwich: Samuel Jarrold. n.d. 8pp. Disbound.
80. BOWMAN Fred H.
The Philosophy of the Band of Hope Movement. London: W. Tweedie.
1877. 15pp.
81. BOWLEY, H.T. This
Enigmatic Quadrangle can be read 484 different ways. Single sheet.
n.p., n.d. H.T. Bowley, I.O.G.T.
82 BOYD, Rev. H.J.
Christian heroism in the Temperance Cause. A Paper read at the
Annual Meeting of the Huddersfield Band of Hope Union... in the
Queen Street School, Huddersfield. James Hartley, 1874. 12pp.
Disbound.
83. BRIDGE, J. James.
The Band of Hope Catechism. n.p., n.d. 16pp.
84. BRIGHT, John. The
Right •Ion. John Bright, M.P. on Temperance. Norwich Tracts
No. 197. 4pp.
85. BRITAIN'S GREAT
WORK. Britain's great work, and the way to do it: or, A Maine
Law the demand of the times, in order to the deliverance of our
country from the manifold and appalling evils of intemperance.
With an appendix containing the Maine Law. Edinburgh: Ebenezer
Henderson, 1863. 36pp.
86. BRITISH ANTI-TOBACCO
SOCIETY. The Anti-Tobacco Journal. No. X. August, 1059. London:
Pitman [etc.] 1859. p. 110-120.
87. BRITISH TEMPERANCE
LEAGUE. British Temperance League's Monthly Pictorial Tract. No.
126. How Tom White was made an April Fool for the Last Time. By
the Rev. Frederick Wagstaff. Bolton: British Temperance League.
n.d. 4pp.
88. BROCKLEHURST, A.N.
The trial-at-Law of Tobacco Nicotino. Second edition. London:
William Tweedie, n.d. [c.1870]. Salford printed. 15pp.
89. BRODIE, Sir Benjamin.
Sir Benjamin Brodie, Bart., F.R.S., on Tobacco. (from the "Lancet.")
Manchester: Anti-Narcotic League. n.d. 4pp.
90 BROMBY Rev. Bishop.
Intemperance and its legislative remedies. By the Right Rev. Bishop
Bromby of Tasmania. A lecture delivered at Hobart's Town, Tasmania.
His Excellency the Governor of Tasmania in the chair. May 4th,
1871. Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. [c.1871] 12pp.
91. BROWN, Rev. A.
Morton. "All for Love;" or, Jacob Shaw and his wife
Rebecca. A New Year's Address to Parents. London: Sunday School
Union, 1867. 16pp.
92. BROWN, Hugh Stowell.
Comparisons are odious. Liverpool: J. Thomas. n.d.
93. BROWN, Hugh Stowell.
Lectures to the Men of Liverpool. The Street. Part II. Liverpool:
Gabriel Thomson. 1858. 16pp. Disbound.
94. BROWN, T.F. The
Magdalen, a poem. The profits arising from the sale of. the above
poem are to be appropriated to the funds of the Lincoln and Lincolnshire
penitent females' home. London: Simpkin, Marshall, and Co. 1852.
[Lincoln printed]. 25pp.
95. BROWNING, Rev.
Archibald. No. 17. The Baneful effects of intemperance on the
mind; and abstinence, as a cure for it in the present state of
society, superior to moderation. A sermon preached in Rev. Dr
Wardlaw's chapel, Glasgow, on the evening of Sabbath, the 29th
May, 1831. Glasgow: University Press. 12pp. Disbound.
96. BURNETT, John.
Bands of Hope in Town and Village; How to start and work them.
London: Elliot Stock. 1877. 70pp.
97. BURNS, Dawson.
The drinking system our national curse: an argument and an appeal,
to all good citizens. Maidstone: G.H. Graham. n.d. [c.1875]. 50pp.
98. BURNS, Dawson.
The drinking system our national curse: an argument and an appeal,
Price sixpence. Maidstone: G.H. Graham. etc. n.d. [c.1875]. 50pp.
A duplicate of the above.
99. BURNS, Rev. Dawson.
The Late Mrs Clara Lucas Balfour. Discourse by Rev. Dawson Burns.
n.p., n.d. [c.1875]. 24pp.
100. BURNS, Rev. Dawson.
The official edition. Graham's temperance guide, handbook and
almanack for 1867. Edited by Rev. Dawson Burns. Maidstone: Graham
Bros. [etc.l 152pp. Lists of temperance establishments; lists
of local societies with members' names.
101. BURNS, Rev. Dawson.
The other side: an examination of an article in the "National
Review," for January, 1860, entitled "Intemperance;
its causes and cures." Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance.
n.d. [c.1865]. 36pp.
102. BURNS, Rev. Dawson.
The other side: an examination of an article in the "National
Review," for January, 1860, entitled "Intemperance:
its causes and cures." Manchester: United Kinodom Alliance.
n.d. 36pp. A duplicate of the above.
103. BURNS, Rev. Dawson.
Statistics of the Liquor Traffic. An examination of Professor
Levi's letters to M.T. Bass, E sq., M.P., and of A paper read
by Professor Levi before the statistical society of London, January
16th, 1872; upon "The Capital Invested in the Liquor Trades,"
and statistics of Licences, Drunkenness, Crime, Consumption and
cost of intoxicating Liquors. Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance.
1872. [Pendleton printed] 32pp. Dawson's reply to Levi's article
listed below. Mr. Bass, the brewer and Liberal M.P. for Derby
"has again resorted to Prof. Levi for a supply of statistical
cartridges wherewith to fire upon his 'fanatical opponents."'
104. BURNS, Rev. Dawson.
What the Alliance is, and what it is not. Second edition. Manchester:
United Kingdom Alliance, n.d. [c.1870]. 8pp.
105. BURNS, Rev. Dawson.
United Kingdom Alliance. What the Alliance is, and what it is
not. Second edition. Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance, John
Dalton Street. n.d. [c.1865]. 8pp. A duplicate of the above.
106. BURNS, Jabez.
The abominations of our national intemperance, and the men who
sigh and cry over them. The thirty-second annual temperance sermon,
preached in Church Street Chapel., Edgware Rd, London. London:
Curtice [etc.]. 14pp. Jabez Burns (1805-1876) Burns had much influence
as a preacher and public speaker, especially on temperance. He
is said to have been the first clergyman of any denomination to
preach teetotalism from the pulpit.
107. BURNS, Jahez.
Drinking and Lawlessness: A Sermon preached at the inauguration
of the United Kingdom Alliance, Lever Street Chapel, Manchester.
Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance etc. n.d. [c.1863]. 16pp.
108. BURNS, Jabez.
Ipswich temperance tracts No. 212. Drinking and Lawlessness: A
sermon preached at the inauguration of the United Kingdom Alliance.
London: William Tweedie. n.d. [c.1855]. 16pp.
109. BURROUGHS. Dr
Joseph. A medical substitute for Alcohol in cases of emergency.
London: National Temperance League. n.d. 16pp. Disbound.
110. BUXTON, Charles,
E q., M.P. "How to stop Drunkenness." Single sheet,
n.p., n.d. Printed on one side only.
111. C.,D. Leading
articles on the Licensing question and the Sale of Liquors on
Sunday, contributed to the Licensed Victualler' Guardian. 1867-1868.
London: James Wyld n.d. [c. 1875] 76pp.
112. CADBURY, James.
A new history of Banbury, before and after a Maine Liquor Law.
London: W. Tweedie. 1855. 8pp. [Banbury printed].
113. CAINE, Rev. William.
Central association for stopping the sale of intoxicating liquors
on Sunday. Legislative enactments relative to the Sunday Liquor
Traffic. A Paper; read before the economy and trade department
of the National Association for the promotion of Social Science
in Bristol, October, 1869. Manchester: Jesse Broad. n.d. [c.1869].
16pp. Rev. William Caine, H.A., Chaplain of the County Gaol.
114. CAINE, Rev. William.
Drinking in Schools and Colleges. A Paper read before the prohibition
and temperance conventionin London. To which are added ?Motes
on the Responsbility of the Clergy and the wine of the Lord's
Supper. Manchester: M. Wynne. 1865. 16pp. Disbound.
115. CAINE, William.
The traffic in intoxicating drinks on the Lord's Day: A Paper
read before the punishment and reformation department of the National
Association for the promotion of Social Science, in Dublin, August
20, 1561. Manchester: Beresford and Southern. n.d. [c.1861] 8pp.
116. CAIRNS, John.
The Moral Greatness of the Temperance Enterprise. A sermon. Glasgow:
Scottish Temperance League. Glasgow: Punn and Wright, n.d. [c.1879]
16pp. Dishound.
117. CALLENDER, Romaine.
Jun., J.P. Speech ... on the permissive prohibitory liquor bill
of Sir Wiilfrid Lawson...Thomas Bazley...and M.R. Dalway-Pelivered
at a great public meeting, in the Free Trade Hall, Manchester,
27th April, 1869. Manchester: A. Ireland, n.d. [c.1869]. 4pp.
118. CANVASS. Canvass
of the householders of Liverpool on the propriety of closing public
houses and beershops on the Lord's Day. A full report of the meeting
of the inhabitants of Liverpool, held in St. George's Hall, Liverpool,
on Monday, 18th Nay, 1863. T.B. Horsfall, Esq., M.P. in the Chair.
Reprinted from the Liverpool Hercury. Liverpool: Egerton Smith
and Co., 1863. 36pp.
119. CARPENTER, William
B. The physiological errors of Moderation. Glasgow: Scottish Temperance
league. n.d. 31pp. Disbound.
120. CARPENTER, William
B. The physiology of Temperance and Total abstinence. Being an
examination of the effects of the excessive, moderate and occasional
use of Alcoholic liquors on the healthy human system. London:
Henry G. Bohn. 1858. 184pp.
121. CARPENTER, William
B. Temperance and Teetotalism: an inquiry into the effects of
Alcoholic Drinks on the Human System in Health and Disease. Thirtieth
thousand. Glasgow: Office of the Scottish Temperance League. 1850.
32pp. Disbound.
122. CARLISLE The Dean.
Legislation on the Liquor Traffic, suggested by a select committee
of the House of Commons in the year 1834. A paper for the International
Temperance and prohibition Convention. 1862. London: Hatchard
and Co. 1862. 16pp.
123. CARLISLE The Dean.
"Why I have taken the pledge;" or, an apology for total
abstinence and the permissive Maine Law. Third thousand. London:
Hatchard [etc.] 1860. [Carlisle printed] 32pp.
124. CAUSES. Causes
and Cure of Drunkenness. London: William Clows, n.d. 8pp.
125. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. An occasional
Paper being the report of the city meeting held in the Town Hall,
Manchester, 21st January, 1867: The Mayor of Manchester (Robert
Neill) in the Chair, With an abstract of the proceedings of the
Great Working Men's Meeting held in the Free Trade Hall on the
same evening. Manchester: A. Ireland, 1867. 31pp.
126. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. First
annual report read in the Free Trade Hall, Manchester, November
1st, 1867. David Crossley,Esq., in the Chair. Manchester: Printed
at the Guardian SteamPrinting Offices. n.d. [c.1867] 14+2pp.
127. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. Second
annual report read in the Free Trade Hall, Manchester, October
14th, 1868. Pavid Crossley, Esq., in the Chair. Manchester: Wm.
Lin Dillon. n.d. [c.18681. 24pp.
128. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. Third
annual report. Read in the Trevelvan Hotel Manchester, November
2nd, 1869. Peter Rylands,Esq., M.P. in the Chair. Manchester:
Bancroft and Fleming. 1869. 27pp.
129. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY Fourth
annual report read and adopted at a meeting of the general council
held in Manchester, November 1st, 1870. Peter Rylands, Esq., M.P.
in the Chair. Manchester: Jesse Broad and Co., 1870. 36pp.
130. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATTNG LIQUORS DURING THE WHOLE
OF THE TWENTY-FOUR HOURS OF SUNDAY. Annual meeting ... held at
the Free Trade Ilall, Manchester, on Friday, November 1st. 1867.
His worship the Mayor in the Chair, Manchester: Printed for the
association by Beardsall and Co. n.d. [1867] 12pp.
131. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS DURING SUNDAY. Report
of the proceedings at the annual public meeting of the Central
Association for stopping the sale of intoxicating liquors during
the whole of the twenty-four hours of Sunday; except to travellers.
Held in the Free Trade Hall, Manchester, on Tuesday, November
2nd, 1869. laugh Birley, Esq., N.P. in the Chair. Manchester:
Batton and Thomas. Printers. n.d. [c.l869] 32pp.
132. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. Deputation
to The Right Honourable H.A. Bruce, M.P., Secretary for the Home
Department, March 1st, 1870. By the friends of the Central Association
for Stopping the sale of intoxicating liquors on Sunday. President:
Sir Thomas Bazley; Treasurer: Richard Haworth; Hon Secs. Robert
Whitworth; Rev T.A. Stowell, Edward Whitwell. Manchester: Jesse
Broad and Co. n.d. [c.1870] 12pp.
133. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. Form
letter to Clergymen requesting them to preach a special sermon
in support of the objectives of the Association. Single sheet,
n.p., n.d. [Manchester: 1869].
134. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING DRINKS ON SUNDAY. Household
Canvass Schedule. With blank spaces for Name, residence, occupation
and opinion on the question.
135. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. Questionnaire
seeking information about the number of Beer-Houses, apprehensions
for drunkenness, etc. Form to be returned to Edwin Barton, Secretary.
136. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. Special
Sermons. Spaces left blank: for Name, etc. and the Title of Special
Sermon intended to be given in support of the objectives of the
Association.
137. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. A statement
of some of the evils arising from the sale of intoxicating liquors
on Sunday, with a brief account of some of the happy results of
the ForbesMackenzie Act in Scotland. Manchester: Bancroft and
Fleming. 1869. llpp.
138. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. Subscription
Ticket. Left blank with space for the Name and Address of the
Subscriber and for the amount subscribed.
139. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. Suggested
resolutions for public meetings. Single sheet. n.p., n.d. [Manchester?
1869?].
140. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. Sunday
School Collections received up to November 30th, 1868. Folding
Single Sheet. n.p., n.d. [Manchester: 1868]. On the reverse is
a letter signed by John Ashworth.
141. CENTRAL ASSOCIATION
FOR STOPPING THE SALE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS ON SUNDAY. Sunday
School Collection. Second sheet to January 30th, 1869. Folding
printed sheet with lists of the money received. n.p., n.d. [Manchester:
1869].
142. CEPHAS [pseud.]
Maine-Law and English liberty: or the Licensed victuallers' association
and the United Kingdom Alliance Contrasted. Manchester: Job Caudwell,
n.d. [c.1870] Southport printed. 16pp.
143. CHAMBERLAIN, Arthur.
Notes on the Government Licensing Bill of 1904. Birmingham: 1904.
32pp. Arthur Chamberlain, Justice of the Peace for the City and
County of Birmingham.
144. CHAMBERLAIN J.
Public House Reform. A Speech in reply to an nrticle in the "Fortnightly
Review," London: Hodder and Stoughton, n.d. [c.1877] 16pp.
Dishound.
145. CHAPTER IN TEMPERANCE
HISTORY. A chapter in temperance history; being an account of
the proceedings preliminary to the International. convention for
the promotion of Temperance and Prohibition, held in London in
September, 1862. London: Job. Caudwell, 1863 16pp.
146. CHAPTFR. A chapter
of temperance history; being an account of the proceedings preliminary
to the international convention for the promotion of Temperance
and prohibition, held in London in September, 1862. London: Job
Caudwell. 1863. 16pp.
147. CHRISTIAN. The
Christian. No. LX pp. 266-312; and, The Christian No. LXXVIII
October 1, 1847, London: J. Chapman. [18471. Leeds printed. Contains
an essay on Teetotalism.
148. CHURCH OF ENGLAND
TOTAL ABSTINENCE SOCIETY. First annual report of the Church of
England total abstinence society: with abstract of cash account,
and list of donors and subscribers. Also a diocesan list of the
abstaining clergy. London: ~-!'eeks and Co., n.d. [c.l8631 32pp.
149. CHURCH OF ENGLAND
TEMPERANCE MAGAZINE. Fetes and Holidays. Church of England Temperance
Magazine, Oct. 1, 1868. Vol V p.290-320.
150. CLARK, Sir Andrew.
The action of Alcohol upon Health. New Edition. London: Church
of England Temperance Society. n.d. 12pp. Disbound.
151. CLIFFORD, John
"Thou shalt not hide thyself." An argument and an appeal
for the cure of Britain's Intemperance. Being the annual sermon
on behalf of the National Temperance League, preached at the Metropolitan
Tabernacle, April 29, 1877. London: Id. Tweedie. 1877. 15pp.
152. CORBETT'S MONTHLY
SERMONS. The Sin of Drunkenness, in Kings, priests and people.
p.26-48 extracted from a larger work.
153. COBDEN-DELANE
CONTROVERSY Cobden-Delane Controversy. Opinions of the Liberal
press on the correspondence between Mr Cobden, M.P., and Mr. Delane,
the Editor of the "Times." Manchester: Alexander Ireland,
1864. 54pp.
154. COCKSHOTT J.J.
The C.E.T.S. and Temperance Legislation. Being a paper read at
the National Temperance Congress at Chester. London: Church of
England Temperance Society. n.d. [c.1895] 8pp.
155. COCKSHOTT J.J.
Further Steps in Licensing Reform. London: Church of England Temperance
Society. n.d. 8pp.
156. COCKSHOTT J.J.
The Licensing, Act, 1904, and what to do with it. London: Church
of Fngland Temperance Society. n.d. [c.19041 16pp. J.J. Cockshott,
J.P., Solicitor o£ the Supreme Court; Member of the Licensing
Committee for the Borough of Southport...
157. [COCKSHOTT J.J.]
The licensing clauses. Letter to the solicitor General (Sir Edward
Clarke, Q.C., M.P.) By a Conservative Worker. Southport: Robert
Johnson. n.d. [c.1888] 8pp.
158. COCKSHOTT J.J.
Licensing Legislation. Churchmen and the Coming Struggle; Being
a paper read at the Liverpool Diocesan Conference, 1903. London:
Church of England Temperance Society. n.d. [c.19031 14pp. Printed
wrappers.
159. COCKSHOTT J.J.
The local government bill. Mr. Cockshott on the compensation clauses.
Important speech. Southport: R. Johnson. n.d. [c.1888] 12pp.
160. COCKSHOTT J.J.
Reduction of Licenses and Compensation London: C.F.T.S. Publication
161. [COCKSHOTT J.J.]
Reduction of Licenses. Memorandum on Compensation. Southport:
Robert Johnson and Co. n.d. [c.1888] 4to. 19pp.
162. COLLINS, William.
The Harmony between the Gospel and Temperance Societies. Glasgow:
Office of the Scottish Temperance League. n.d. [c.1851] 32pp.
Disbound.
163. COLLINS, William.
Speech of Mr William Collins at the First Public Neeting of the
Bradford Temperance Society. Bradford: T. Inkersley and Co. n.d.
16pp. Disbound.
164. COMMON SENSE.
Common Sense; a word to those who do not think by proxy; or The
Temperance Movement - the public press - opium eating - The Bishop
of Norwich - Father Mathew - Ireland - and English Protestants.
By a Member of the University of Cambridge.Twentieth thousand
enlarged. London: Simpkin and Marshall. 1844. 24pp.
165. CONSERVATIVE.
Conservative and Temperance reform. By a Conservative. Manchester:
Darrah Brothers. n.d. 4pp.
166. COST AND CURE.
The cost and cure of Preston Drinking. Preston: Toulmin, Printer
by Steam Power. n.d. [c.1866) 4pp.
167. COSTER, George
Thomas. Shall our Scholars perish? An appeal to Sunday School
Teachers. Second edition. London: William Tweedie, n.d. 16pp.
Disbound.
168. COX, James. To
the Wesleyan Methodists. No. 43. New Series. London: J. Pascoe.
n.d. 4pp. Disbound. James Cox, Superintendant of the Wesleyan
Missions at Antigua.
169. CRAFTS, Rev. W.F.
The Alcohol fiend: a temperance dialogue, for lodges, Divisions,
Lyceums, or Sunday Schools. New York: National Temperance Society.
1877. 16pp.
170. CRAWSHAWBOOTH
TEMPERANCE SOCIETY. The third annual report of the Crawshawbooth
Temperance Society for the Year 1856-7 with a list of donations
and subscript- ions for the year 1857-8. Crawshawbooth: George
Stuart.' Price one Penny. n.d. [1857].
171. CRUIKSHANK, William.
God Glorified by Tee-Totalism: A sermon, delivered in Wellington
Road Chapel, Fifth thousand. Stockport: 11. Leigh. 18pp. Disbound.
172. CURIOUS NOTIONS.
Curious Notions. Jotted down in strange times. Pelfast: R.S. Allen
and Johnston. 1876. 26pp.
173. DARBY, W.H. Reasons
in favour of a Maine Law for Great Britain. Issued by the "Brymbo
and Broughton Maine Law League." Wrexham: R. Hughes, n.d.
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174. DARBY, W.H. Reasons
in favour of a Maine Law for Great Britain. Issued by the "Brymbo
and Broughton Maine Law League." Wrexham: R. Hughes, n.d.
16pp. A duplicate.
175. DAVIS, N.S. The
verdict of Science concerning the effects of alcohol on man. London:
William Tweedie. n.d. llpp. Disbound.
176. DEARDEN, Joseph.
A Brief History of the Commencement and Success of Tee-Totalism;
with a short account of Drunkenness, and the various means used
for its suppression. Preston: J. Livesey. n.d. [c.1840] 39pp.
Disbound.
177. DEBATE. The debate
and division on Sir Wilfrid Lawson's local option motion in the
House of. Commons, Friday, April 27th, 1883, Manchester: United
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178. DELAVAN, Edward
C. Temperance of wine countries. A letter. Manchester: United
Kingdom Alliance. 'Manchester: Taylor, Garnett, Evans and Co.,
n.d. [c.18701 16pp.
179. DELAVAN, Edward.
Temperance of wine countries. A letter. Manchester: United Kingdom
Alliance, John Dalton Street. n.d. [c.1860] 16pp. Edward Delavan
of Albany, New York.
180. DELAVAN, Edward
C. Temperance of wine countries. A letter. Manchester: United
Kingdom Alliance. n.d. [c.1860] 16pp. Duplicate.
181. DIXON, W. Hepworth.
A New Year's Tract. What Halifax would he without a liquor shop.
The Workman's Paradise. Halifax: T. and W. Birtwhistle n.d. [c.1874]
4pp. Disbound.
182. DOVER "DUKE
OF CAMBRIDGE" CASE. The Dover "Duke of Cambridge"
Case. Verbatim report of proceedings in the case of Boulter (appelant)
v. The Justices of Kent and other (respondents) in the House of
Lords, May 21st, 25th, and 28th, and July 26th, 1897. Nottingham:
The Licensing Laws Information Bureau. 1897. 143pp. Lacks wrappers.
183. DOWNING, Nicholas
B. Danger and Duty. A sermon. At the Town Fall., Birmingham, On
Sunday, 13th October, 1870, in connection with the services of
the Birmingham Temperance Mission Week. London: W. Tweedie and
Co. 1078. 12pp. Dishound. Title page cut down.
184. DREW, William.
The Good Templar's Catechism: explanatory of the Rise, Progress,
and Principles of the Independent order of Good Templars. New
edition. Revised and Corrected. Birmingham: Published by the Grand
Lodge of England. 1872. 13pp. Disbound.
185. DRINK AND THE
BANKING SYSTEM Drink and the Banking System. Manchester: United
Kingdom Alliance, n.d. [c.1868]. 8pp
186. DRINK-CRAVE. The
Drink-Crave - How to cure. Vegetarian Society, Manchester, n.d.
4pp. Disbound.
187. DRINK AND CRIME
Drink and Crime: what the judges say. The testimonies of Right
Hon. Lord Russell of Killowen; The Late Right Hon. Farl Vairns;
The Late Right Hon. Lord Coleridge; The Hon Mr Justice Hawkins.
[etc.] Compiled by R.A. Jameson. Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance.
n.d. [c.1900] 32pp.
188. DRINK AND THE
DRINK TRAFFIC. Drink and the drink traffic. And what they do for
Preston. Preston: Toulmin, Printer. n.d. [c.1872] 4pp.
189. DRINK TRAFFIC.
The drink traffic and the Permissive Bill From Fraser's Magazine.
Feb. 1872. Reprinted by The United Kingdom Alliance. Manchester:
United Kingdom Alliance. 1872. 24pp.
190. DRUMMOND'S TRACT.
"Tumble-Down Dick." Illustrated Series. 'o. 55. Stirling:
Drummond's Tract Depot. n.d. 4pp. Disbound.
191. DRUNKEN THIEF.
A drunken thief. From the experiences of.an Edinburgh Detective.
London: W. Tweedie. n.d. 16pp. Dishound.
192. DRYSDALE, Charles
R. Tobacco and the diseases it produces. Being the substance of
an address delivered at Exeter Hall, London, ':ay 1873, at Manchester
Free Trade Hall, Mlarch 27, 1873 and at Guildford, on March 8,
1875. London: Balliere, Tindall, and Cox. n.d. [c.1875] l8pp.
193. DUBLIN AUXILIARY
TO THE UNITED KINGDOM ALLIANCE. Seventh Annual report of the Dublin
Auxiliary to the United Kingdom Alliance for the legislative suppression
of the traffic in all intoxicating liquors as beverages. Dublin:
Robert Chapman 1861 12pp.
194. DUBLIN AUXILIARY
TO TITF UNITED KINGDOM ALLIANCE. Eighth annual report of the Dublin
Auxiliary to the United Kingdom Alliance for the legislative suppression
of the Liquor Traffic. 1862. Dublin: Printed by Robert Chapman.
1862. 8pp with the original yellow wrappers bound in.
195. DUNKERLEY henry.
"Strikes," viewed in relation to the interests of Capital
and labour;. a few thoughts on the present industrial crisis.
Salford: George Wiley, 1853.
196. DYM, John. The
influence of Alcohol on the Human System simplified, in which
the process of digestion is described. Third thousand. London:
Houlston and Stoneman. n.d. [Northampton printed] 12pp. Disbound.
197. EARDLEY Rev. Stanton.
Your country's and your saviour's call. Second edition. London:
S.1:'. Partridge and Co. n.d. 24pp. Disbound.
198 EATON, Joseph.
A vindication of the Maine Law. The address of the Bristol Auxiliary
of the United Kingdom Alliance for the total legislative suppression
of the traffic on intoxicating liquors as beverages. London: W.
Tweedie, 1055. [Bristol printed] 16pp.
199. EDGAR John. Abolition
of the Ecclesiastical Courts. An appeal to the members of the
United Church of England and Ireland. Belfast: Printed at the
Banner of Ulster Office. 1859. 12pp. John Edgar (1798-1886) Irish
philanthropist. In 1829 he began to take an active interest in
the work of temperance, and for twelve years he was among the
most powerful. and conspicuous of the public advocatesof that
cause in Ireland. lie began the campaign by opening hi.s dining-room
window and pouring into the gutter the remains of a gallon of
whisky which he had got for the use of his family. In 1859 he
visited America to help with the relief of his countrymen during
the Irish famine. IIe was secretary of the Ulster Temperance Society.
200. EDGAR John. Christian
Temperance. [No. 1] Belfast: Printed at the Banner of Ulster Office.
n.d. [c.1859] 4pp.
201. EDGAR, John. Christian
Temperance. Tract No. IT. Why abstain from distilled spirit? Pelfast:
Printed at the Banner of Ulster Office. n.d. [c.1859] 4pp.
202. FDCAP, John. Chri.stian
Temperance. Tract No. III. Pledge of the Temperance Society. Relfast:
Printed at the Banner of Ulster Office. n.d. [c.1859] 4pp.
203. FDGAP, John. Christian
Temperance. Tract No. IV. Distilled spirit useless and noxious.
Belfast: Printed at the Panner of Ulster Office. n.d. [1859?]
3pp.
204. EDGAR, John. Christian
Temperance. Tract No. V. Belfast: Printed at the Banner of Ulster
Office. n.d. [c.1859] 4pp.
205. EDGAR, John. Digest
of Evidence before the Committee of Parliament on the Extent,
Causes, and consequences, of drunkenness. Belfast: Printed by
Thomas Mairs, Joy's Fntry, 1835. 132pp.
206. EDGAR, John. Iii
story and character of the Ecclesiastical Courts. Belfast: Printed
at the Banner of Ulster office. 1859. llpp.
207. FDGAP, Professor.
History of Seventeen houses composing one side of a street. Extracted
from a letter from the Rev. Professor Edgar of Belfast. British
and Foreign Temperance Society. No. 46. 4pp. Dishound.
208. EDGAR John. Oppression
of the ecclesiastical courts of the Established church. The Creyabbey
case. n.p., n.d. [c.1858] 4pp.
209. FDGAP, John. Oppression
of the established courts of the established church. The Greyabbey
Case, n.p., n.d. [1 58?] 4pp. A duplicate.
210. EDGAR John. Presbyterian
privilege and duty. Eleventh thousand. n.p., n.d. [Belfast: 1859?]
12pp.
211. [EDGAR John] Presentation
of a testimonial to The Rev. John Fdgar, D.D. of Belfast. 31st
December, 1849 Belfast: Printed at the Banner of Ulster Office.
n.d. [c.1849?] 17pp.
212. [EDGAR John?]
Peport of the Committee of the Ulster Temperance Society, for
1838. Pelfast: Wilson printer. n.d. [c.1838?] 12pp.
213. EDGAR John. The
Temperance of Christ. A Sermon. Belfast: Wilson, printer. n.d.
[c.12591 12pp.
214. FDGAP, John and
HINCKS Thos. The Drunkards refuge. Belfast: Printed at the Ulster
Tines Office, n.d. [c.1859] 2pp.
215. EDCAP, John and
HINCKS,'Thos. Three years' history of the publicans on a mile
of road, in a country district of Ulster. Belfast: Printed at
the Ulster Times, n.d. [c.1859] 4pp.
216. EDMUNDS, James.
Alcohol as a medicine. A Lecture ... Manchester: United Kingdom
Alliance, and the Manchester Diocesan Church of England Temperance
Society, n.d. 16pp. With original blue printed wrappers. James
Edmunds, M.D. Lecturer on Iledical. Science to the Female Medical
Society.
217 EDMUNDS James.
On alcoholic drinks as an article of diet for nursing mothers.
London: National Temperance League. n.d. 15pp.
218. FLLIS, Mrs. Voice
from the vintage, or the force of example. London: W. Tweedie.
n.d. [c.1870] 95pp.
219. ELLISON Rev. H.J.
The people and the licensing laws. Letters from Town Clergymen,
which appeared in the "Times," Sept.20 and Sept. 25,
1871. London: W. Tweedie. 1271. 14+2pp. H.J. Ellison Vicar of
Windsor and chairman of the committee.
220. ENGLAND'S BANE
England's Bane and the citizen's duty in relation thereto. Manchester:
The Executive of the United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. [c.1875] 4pp.
221. "EPIDEMIC
"WHIMS" "Epidemic whims" A reply to Isaac
Taylor's misrepresentations of Teetotalism and Prohibition. n.p.,
n.d. [c.1870] 20pp.
222. EVANS, T.H. All
a pack of Nonsense; or, Finny, Twitter, and Jenny. A Temperance
Tale for Children. London: ?J. Tweedie and Co. 1879. llpp.
223. EVANS T.N. Harriet
Harland's Husband; or, a man without a fault. A Temperance dialogue
London: W. Tweedie n.d. 16pp.
224. EVANS T.H. How
to cure and prevent the desire for drink. London: National Temperance
League. 1880 7pp Disbound.
225 EVANS. T.H. "Just
a Lark." A tale for working men. London: National Temperance
Publication Depot. 1880. 10pp. Disbound.
226. EVANS T.H. A man
who could do impossihilities. A tale of a Coffee Tavern. London:
National Temperance Publication Depot. 1830.
227. EVANS, T.H. A
man without a fault. A domestic story. London: National Temperance
Publication Depot. 1S80. 14pp. Disbound.
228. EVANS T.H. A man
without a fault. A temperance dialogue. London: W. Twee lie. n.d.
[c.1375] 11pp.
229. EVANS, T.II. ,'-Iilly
Morton's 'listake. A temperance dialogue. London: Tweedie. n.d.
[c.1875] 14pp.
230. EVANS, T.H Selina
Selby's Statagem. London W. Tweedie. n.d. [c.1875] 24pp.
231. EVANS' TEMPERANCE
ANNUAL. Evans' Temperance Annual. An original collection of Instructive
and amusing pieces for singing, reading, and reciting. London:
Abel Heywood n.d. [c.1877] 53+1Opp advts. with Evans' Temperance
Annual, second season. 1878. 3rd Season, 1879; 4th Season 18°0;
5th Season, 1881. i.e. Five annual numbers.
232. FACTS. The facts
of the case, being the well-authenticated results of the Maine
Law. Condensed and arranged from the appeal of the American Temperance
Union. Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. [c.1870] 16pp.
233. FATTHFUL. Paul
[pseud.] Plain Letters from Paul Faithful. No. 1 To Brewers, Distillers,
and all vendors of intoxicating drinks. Norwich: Samuel Jarrold.
n.d. 4pp. Disbound.
234. FARQUHARSON Robert.
The, case for Moderate Drinking. William Blackwood: 1892. 16pp.
235. FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William. Abstinence from evil. A sermon preached in St. Columbia
Church Glasgow, February 19, 1378. 15pp. Disbound.
236. FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William An address to Teachers on Total Abstinence. London: 'r!.
Tweedie. n.d. 4pp. Disbound. Printed on blue paper.
237. FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William Between the living and the dead. Preached in Westminster
Abbey, London: William Tweedie. 1878. 15pp. Disbound.
238. FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William Canon Farrar's speech on the Temperance Movement, in the
Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford Third edition. Manchester: United Kingdom
Alliance. n.d. [c.1879] 16pp. Disbound.
239 FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William. The Claims of Total Abstinence on the educated classes.
An address ... Delivered in the Hall, of King's College, Cambridge.
London: W. Tweedie, n.d. 15pp.
240. FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William. The duty of the church in the present crisis. A speech
delivered in the Free Trade !!all, Manchester. Church of England
Temperance Society: n.d. 15pp. Disbound.
241. FARRAR, Rev. Frederick:
William England's national sin. Preston: Greenall, printer. 4pp.
242. FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William Ven Archdeacon Farrar, D.D. on the Maine Liquor Laws:
being an address delivered at the Prince's Hall, Picadilly, London,
On 12th January, 1886. United Kingdom Alliance. Manchester: United
Kingdom Alliance. n.d. [c.1806] 16pp.
243. FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William The Vow of the Nazarite. London: W. Tweedie. 1877. 15pp.
244 FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William. The vow of the Nazarite. London: W. Tweedie. 1877. Thirtieth
thousand. 15pp.
245. FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William. The vow of the Nazarite. London: W. Tweedie, 1878. 15pp.
Disbound.
246 FARRAR, Rev Frederick;
William. The vow of the Rechabites. Preached in Westminster Abbey.
London: W. Tweedie, 1877. 14pp. Disbound.
247. FARRAR, Rev. Frederick
William. Pleas for Total Abstinence. London: National Temperance
League. n.d.
248. FEATHERSTONE,
Thomas. The juvenile frolic; or, The Teetotal chairman in a fix.
Leeds: John Kershaw, n.d. [c.1865] 16pp.
249. FERGUSON, Charlotte.
Jim Wilson's resolve, and what came of it. A Lancashire temperance
tale. Manchester: John Heywood, n.d. [c.1870] 32pp.
250. FINCH, John. John
Finch's Temperance tracts, No. 4. Teetotalism: containing a portraiture
and the ancient and modern History of Teetotalism; together with
some account of the Botheration moderation Temperance societies,
and a letter to the Liverpool Anti-Temperance Society. From the
Liverpool Albion of July and August, 1836. Liverpool: Albion Newspaper
office. n.d. [c.1036] Opp. Disbound.
251. FINTONA [pseud.]
The Publicans' Banquet. A burlesque report of the Annual Dinner
of the Licensed Victuallers' Association. London: Abel Heywood
1379. [Leicester printed] 12pp.
252. FISH Henry C.
Drinking for Health. A sermon. New York: National Temperance Society
and Publication House. 1872. 36pp.
253. FTSIT, Rev. Wilbur.
F:ctracts from speeches. London: Richard Davies Single sheet,
printed on both sides. n.d.
254. FTTZGIBBON, Gerald
[Letter to Rev. Dr Garrett.] n.p., n.d. [Manchester: 1867) 2pp.
255. FLOWER, W.B. Rev.
Teetotalism not anti-Scriptural, a Sermon Preached to Members
of the Knutsford Total Abstinence Society and the Independent
order of Rechabites. On Whit-Tuesday May 27th, 1844. London: Brittain.
n.d. [c.1844], [Knutsford printed] 15pp. Disbound.
256. FORBES, John.
Temperance and Teetotalism. An enquiry into the effects of Alcoholic
drinks on the human system in health and disease. London: John
Churchill. 1847 36pp.
257. FORD, William.
Inconsistency of Strong Drink with Christianity. Stroud: J. Elliott.
1°74. 19pp.
258. FORD, William.
The struggle against intemperance; a subject for Christians of
all denominations. Stroud: J. Elliott. 1876. 2Opp. Dishound.
259. FORPYCF, Rev.
J. We are verily guilty! The relation of the Church to temperance.
Grimsby: Grimsby Newspaper, Printing and Publishing Company. 1876.
l7pp.
260. FORSTER, Pev.Pilliam.
Christian Obligation: a discourse preached in Wardour Chapel Soho;
at the request of the Committee of the Fitzroy Teetotal association
on the 19th of October 1851. London: Committee of the Fitzroy
Teetotal Association. n.d. 16pp. Disbound.
261. FOTHERGILL, Samuel.
Liberty, Licence, and prohibition, An examination of the arguments
of John Stuart Mill, in his work on Liberty in relation to the
Liquor traffic, Manchester: Tubbs and Brook, n.d. 26pp. HARRISON
no. 568. "The Alliance to its dismay found itself attacked
in J.S. Mill's Liberty extracts from which were placarded by the
publicans. It was therefore forced into formally defending state
regulation of morality... Alliance supporters attacked Mill on
several occasions, and not without effect..." Brian Harrison,
p.224.
262. FOTHFPGTLL, Samuel.
The principles of political economy applied to the wages question:
being a reply to articles by Mr. George Potter in the "Contemporary
Review," on Strikes and Lock-Outs;" and an exposure
of the popular fallacies in relation to the distribution of wealth,
of the mischievous action of the present policy of the trades'
unions on themselves... In two parts. Manchester: John Heywood,
n.d. (c.1871) 44pp.
263. FOTHERGILL, Samuel.
The threatening element in England's prosperity; or, poor-laws,
licence, education, and prohibition. A reply to an article by
Professor Fawcett, in the Fortnightly Review of January 1st, 1871.
Manchester: Tubbs and Brook. n.d. (c.1871) 22pp.
264. FOTHERGILL Samuel.
The threatening element in England's prosperity; or poor-laws,
licence, education, and prohibition. A reply to an article by
Professor Fawcett in the fortnightly review 1st, 1871. Manchester:
Tubbs and Brook, n.d. (c. 1.871) 22pp.
265. FOWLER L.N. How
to Live; or, Temperance in a nutshell. A lecture. n.p., n.d. (c.
1870) 23pp.
266. FOWLER, L.^`.
How to live; or Temperance in a nutshell, No. II., Being A Lecture.
Dundee: Courier office. 1870. 30pp.
267. FOX, Rev. G.T.
and APNOT, Pev. William. Christian legislation the duty of a christian
state; By the Rev. G.T. Fox... What to do for drunkards, and how
to do it. By the Rev. William Arnot... Being the inaugural sermons
preached before the ministerial conference, on the suppression
of the liquor traffic, Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance. n.d.
(c. 1857) 32pp.
268. FOXWELL, P.P.
Arguments for the suppression of the Liquor Traffic together with
the opinion of the late Right Rev. Pr. Doyle, Bishop of Kildare
and Leighlin, on the importance of temperance organization. Cork:
Purcell and Company. 1869. 12pp.
269. FRENCH, P. Valpy.
Personal advantages of abstinence. London: W. Tweedie, 1878. 15pp.
Disbound.
270. FULL REPORT. A
full report of the proceedings of the ministerial conference &0/
on the suppression of the Liquor Traffic, held at Manchester,
in the town hall, on June 9th, 10th, and 11th. 1857. London: W.
Smith and Son. 18.57. 112pp. This report includes the speeches
of lion. Neal Dow, Samuel Pope and Pr. F.R. Lees.
271. GALE, Henry. Apostolic
temperance; a reply to the Pev. John Cumming, D.D., in confutation
of his arguments for the moderate drinking; of intoxicating, liquors,
as set forth in "Sabbath Morning Readings," and "Forshadows
and of the contemplated". "Prohibition of the liquor
traffic". London: William Horsell. n.d. (c. 1855) 147pp.
272. GALE, HENRY. "The
Good Samaritan". A sermon preparatory to the international
temperance and prohibition convention... preached... on Sunday
evening, August 31, 1862. London: Job Caudwell. (1862 Manchester
Printed) 16pp.
273. GALE, Henry. flow
the church alone can save the nation from the curse and consequences
of the Drinking System. London: 1877. 32pp.
274. GALE, Henry. The
Sons of Light. A Paper prepared for reading at the visitation
of the Lord Bishop of Bath and t%'ells at Dunster, the 25th of
April, 1.861, on "Teetotalism" and the "Liquor
Traffic,"... Taunton: Somerset County Gazette and General
Steam Printing Works. n.d. (c.1861) 30pp.
275. GARPETT, Rev.
Charles. Our national drink bill for 1884, and what we have for
it. A lecture. Leeds: McCorquodale. n.d. (c.1884) 12pp.
276. GARRFTT, Rev.
Charles. Prepare ye the way of the Lord. A sermon preached...
at the Metropolitan Tabernacle on behalf of the National Temperance
league. On Sunday, April 9th, 1871. Manchester: Tubbs and Brook.
n.d. (c.1871.) 16pp.
277. GARRETT, Rev.
Charles. Save the children: A temperance sermon, preached in the
Wesleyan Chapel, Great Queen Street, London. London: F.F. Longley,
n.d. 15pp.
278. GARRFTT, Rev.
Charles. Save the children: The annual temperance sermon, preached
in the Wesleyan Chapel Great Queen Street, London. London: F.E.
Longley. n.d. (c. 1870) 15pp.
279. GARRFTT, Rev.
Charles. British Temperance League. Stop the Gap! A plea for hands
of Hope, being the substance of a speech delivered at the annual
meeting of the hand of hope Union, in Exeter Hall, London, on
r'!onday evening, the 11th, of May, 1863. To which is added directions
for the management of bands of hope. Preston: T.S. Houghton. n.d.
(c.1863) 13pp.
280. GARPETT, Rev.
Charles. Stop the Gap; Fourteenth Thousand. A plea for the Bands
of Hope, being the substance of a speech delivered at the Annual.
Meeting of the Band of Hope Union, in Exeter Hall, London, on
Monday Evening, the 11th of May, 1863. Preston: P. Lambert. 1863.
15pp.
281. GARPETT, Rev.
Charles. The Sunday Drink Traffic in its hearing on Sunday Schools.
London: Elliot Stock, 1871. 16pp.
282. GARRETT, Rev.
Charles. Where are the Nine? A Speech delivered at Exeter Hall,
on Monday Evening, 'lay 18th. 1863... at the annual meeting of
the United Kingdom Band of Hope Union. London: Bale, Machine Printer.
n.d. 4 pp.
283. (GASKELL, William)
Temperance Rhymes. London: Simpkin, Marshall. 1839. (Manchester
printed) 79pp. William Gaskell (1805-1884) husband of Mrs. Gaskell,
the novelist. Gaskell, exercised great influence in Manchester
especially in the promotion of education and learning,.
284. GIBBONS, Henry.
Tobacco: An essay. London: S.W. Partridge. n.d. (c.1875). 24pp.
Henry Gibbons, M.D., Professor of Materia Medica in Toland Medical
College.
285. GILBERT, W., SHEDDEN,
A. and WHITTELL, H.T. Dudley Maine-Law Discussion, 1857, Between
Messrs. W. Gilbert Jun., and A. Shedden, of the "Dudley Literary
Club," and H.T. Whittell, Esq., F.R.C.S. of the Birmingham
branch of the "United Kingdom Alliance." Dudley: John
Lukis. 1857. 42pp. Dishound.
286. GILL, John. Habits
and health. Third edition. London: W. Tweedie and Co. 1876. 15pp.
Dishound. John Gill, M.D. Member of the Pathological Society.
287. GLAZEBROOK, Harriet
A. "The Lips that touch liquor shall never touch mine!"
Twenty-eigth thousand. No. l. Kempster's Temperance Readings,
London. 4pp. In verse.
288. GODLING, William
E. Intemperance; and our relation to it as Wesleyan Methodists.
Tenth thousand. London: Sold at the Wesleyan Conference Office.
1879. 20pp. Disbound.
289. GOTHENBURG SYSTEM.
The Gothenburg System. Reprinted from the "Liverpool Mercury."
Edinburgh: William Oliphant and Co. n.d. (c.1879: Liverpool Printed)
36+4pp. Pisbound.
290. (GOUGH, John B.)
A flight for freedom. Manchester: Anti-Narcotic League. n.d. (c.1875)
Single sheet.
291. GOUGH, John B.
Our Standpoint. John B. Gough's orations specially revised by
himself. London: Morgan and Scott. n.d. 14+2pp Disbound.
292. GOUGH, John B.
Gough's visit to England: or, Reports of his Orations. Habit:
Before the Young Men's Christian Association, in Exeter Hall.
No. 3. n.p.,n.d. (c. 1854) 16pp. Dishound.
293. GOUGH VERSUS LEES.
Extracts from the recent correspondence between Dr. F.R. Lees
and Mr. W. Wilson and others with a report of the trial of the
action of Gough versus Lees, in the Court of Fxchequer of Pleas
before Mr. Baron Martin, on the 21st Day of June, 1858. London:
James Cornish, 1858. 60pp. Original printed wrappers, nice copy.
294. GOVERNMENT INTOXICATING
LIQUORS BILL. The Government "Intoxicating Liquors Bill."
From the Alliance News, May 9th, 1874. Manchester; United Kingdom
Alliance. 4to. 8pp. Disbound.
295. GPFAVES, George.
Manchester Statistical Society. Homes for the Working Classes.
Read April 8th, 1861. n.p., n.d. (c.1861) 11pp.
296. GRIER, Rev. Prebendary,
Local Option, what, and what not? (and) Drs. Clarke and Duckworth
on Alcoholics. Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. 4pp.
Disbound.
297. GRIER, Rev. R.M.
Temperance. A sermon preached (in substance) in the Church of
St. Augustine, Rugeley, on the evening of Sunday, May 4, 1873,
and elsewhere: Rugeley: Printed by T. James. 12pp.
298. GRIER, R.M. Total
Abstinence. Approved by God and expedient for Man. The recent
strictures on Teetotalism, by the Rev. Charles Guest, The Vicar
of Christ Church, Burton-on-Trent, considered. Rugeley: Thomas
James, Printer, 1883. Lapp. Dishound.
299. GRINDROD, R.B.
Clerical failures in total abstinence. n.p., n.d. 8pp. Disbound.
300. GROCER'S LICENCE.
The Grocer's Licence. London: Church of England Temperance Society.
n.d. 16pp. Disbound.
301. GROVES, W.H. Christian
obligations in regard to drunkenness. A sermon. Fifth thousand.
London: Simpkin, Marshall and Co. 1877. (Grimsby printed) 20pp.
302. GULL, Sir William.
The evidence of Sir William Gull. Leeds: J.W. Petty and Sons.
1878. 16pp. Pink printed wrappers. Sir William Gull, Physician
to Queen Victoria.
303. GUTHRIE, Thomas.
A Plea on Behalf of Drunkards and against Drunkenness. Edinburgh:
Johnstone and Hunter. 1851. 30+2pp. Disbound.
304. IT., F.S. Tee-Totallers.
Is the use of Tobacco an Evil? Newcastle: J. Rew-castle. n.d.
2pp. Disbound.
305. H., H.S. The 'Temperance
Movement' and the 'Salvation Army.' A Discourse. Printed for private
circulation only. London: Printed by Stangeways. n.d. (c. 1882)
20pp.
306. HALL, Mrs. Samuel
Carter. The Drunkard's Bible. n.p., n.d. 16pp.
307. HALL, Mrs. Samuel
Carter. The Worn Thimble; a story of'Woman's Duty and Woman's
Influence. Part 1. London: Richard Barrett. n.d. 16pp.
308. HAMILTON, William.
An address to the public, in behalf of Temperance societies. No.
15. Glasgow: Hutchison and Brookman. n.d. 12pp. Disbound.
309. HANNAY, Rev. Alexander.
stow is England to be saved? An appeal to young men. Second edition.
London: W. Tweedie. 1877. 12pp. Disbound.
310. HANSON, Rev. J.
Illustrated Maine Law Tracts. No. I. London: Richard Parrett.
n.d. 32pp. The tract consists of a memorial sketch of Mon. Neal
Dow.
311. HART, Mrs. Ernest.
Alcohol; Food or Physic? A Lecture to working people. London:
Church of England Temperance Publication Depot. n.d. 16pp.
312. HARVEY, James.
How can paper money increase the wealth of a nation. Fifth thousand.
(revised). London: W. Skeffington. 1867. (Retford printed) l3pp.
313. HASTINGS, G.W.
The licensing authority. With facts in regard to Canadian Licensing
Legislation. London: Simpkin, Marshall and Co. 1882. 18pp.
314. HAUGHTON, James.
Harmony of the temperance reformation with the objects of the
social science association. Read before the Statistical and Social
Inquiry Society of Ireland, August, 1861. n.p. n.d. (c. 1861)
7pp.
315. HELM, Elijah.
Manchester Statistical society. A Review of the Cotton Trade of
the United Kingdom, during the Seven Years, 1862-1868. Read April
14th, 1869. pp68-94.
316. HIGGINBOTTOM,
John. Alcohol, medical men, publicans, and their victims. Nottingham:
M. Pickard. n.d. (c.1870) 12pp.
317. HIGGINBOTTOM John.
Nothers, Doctors, and Nurses, Nottingham T. Kirk. 1843.
318. HILL Matthew Davenport.
A Paper on the treatment of Criminals in certain states of Germany...
read in his absence by Lord Brougham at the second meeting? of
the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science,
Held at Liverpool in October, 1858; together with his Lordship's
interlocutory address. Printed for private distribution. Bristol:
Arrowsmith, Printer. n.d. (c.1858) 17pp.
319. HILTON, John.
A defence of Legislation on the lines of local option. A lecture...
Delivered before the Nembers and Friends of the Balloon Society
of Great Britain, in the Poyal Aquarium, ?Westminster. February
20th, 1885, Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. (c.1885)
27pp. Orig. blue printed wrapper.
320. HINDS, George.
The wise precept of a Holy Mother. A Temperance Sermon preached...
in Upper Portland-Street Congregational Church, Southport, June
14th, 1874. By request of the British Temperance League. London:
W. Tweedie n.d. (c.1874: Hull Printed) 15pp.
321. HODGSON, Pev.
Evelyn G. and BURNS, Rev. Dawson. Scripture v. Total Abstinence.
A. public discussion... held in the Palatine Hall, Lancaster,
on the 16th July, 1869. Lancaster: E. and J. Milner n.d. (c. 1869)
26pp.
322. HOSPITAL NURSING.
Hospital Nursing without alcoholic drinks. By Two Lady Nurses.
London: National Temperance Publication Depot. n.d. 15pp. Dishound.
323. HOWIE, James Muir.
Stimulants and Narcotics. London: W. Tweedie, n.d. (c. 1878) 19pp.
Dr. James Muir Howie Presdient of the Poyal Medical Society, Edinburgh.
324. HOYLE, William.
Crime and Pauperism: a letter to the Right Honourable William
Ewart Gladstone M.P. Manchester: A. Ireland. 16 pp. William Hoyle
(1831-1886) Temperance reformer, fourth child of poor parents,
was born in Rossendale, Lancashire. Tie began as a cotton-spinner
and ended up owner of a large mill. In 1869 he published a pamphlet
by "A Cotton Manufacturer," entitles! "An enquiry
into the long-continued depression in the Cotton Trade,"
which, revises? and enlarged into a hook, was published in 1871
as "Our National Resources, and how they are wasted."
This volume made lloyle at once a recognised authority on the
statistics of the drink question. In 1876 appeared "Crime
in England and Wales in the nineteenth Century." Hoyle was
an ardent supporter of the policy and proceedings of the United
Kingdom Alliance which for many years was based in Manchester.
325. (HOYLE, William)
Drink and the drink traffic, and what they do for Bury and its
neighbourhood. Bury: J. Heap, Steam printer. n.d. (c. 1880) 4pp.
326. HOYLE, William.
The drinking system and its evils, viewed from a christian standpoint.
Paper read at the Wesleyan Temperance Convention. Birmingham,
August 2nd, 1870. Manchester United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. (c.
1879) l4pp.
327. HOYLE, William.
The drink Traffic and its evils: an urgent plea for legislative
action. Manchester: John Heywood. 1852. 12pp.
328. HOYLE, William.
The economic basis of commercial prosperity, viewed in its application
to the present stagnation in trade. A Paper read at the Social
Science Congress in Aberdeen, September 24th, 1877. Manchester,
John Heywood. n.d. (c.1877) 16pp.
329. HOYLE, William.
The Economic influence of the drinking; customs of society upon
the nation's well-being. Read in the Economic Section of the British
Association for the Advancement of Science, at York; Sept. 3rd,
1.881. Manchester: United Kingdom Alliance. n.d. (c.1881) 12pp.
330. (HOYLE, William)
England's Bane and the Citizen's duty in relation thereto. Manchester:
Darrah Bros. n.d. (c. 1875) 7pp.