Carrie Nation's Hatchet and the Day of the Tiles
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On 7 June 1899, Carrie Nation walked into a saloon in Kiowa, Kansas, carrying rocks, and smashed the bottles. She was not making a point. She was enforcing the law. Kansas was a dry state, but the saloons were open, and local officials were looking elsewhere. Nation, a committed temperance campaigner whose first husband had been an alcoholic, decided that if the system would not fix the problem, she would. Her direct action, which later became synonymous with her trademark hatchet, made her one of the most recognisable women in turn-of-the-century America. She was arrested repeatedly, welcomed the platform, and argued that if laws existed and were not enforced, citizens had a right to enforce them. Also on this date: Graceland opened to the public in 1982, turning Elvis Presley’s private Memphis home into one of America’s most visited sites. In 1971, the US Supreme Court ruled in Cohen v. California that offensive speech is constitutionally protected. And in 1788, during the Day of the Tiles in Grenoble, French citizens threw roof tiles at royal troops, marking an early spark of the French Revolution. Each story shares a common thread: people who stopped waiting politely for change.
Chapters- Hatchet Job Carrie Nation’s direct action in Kiowa, Kansas on 7 June 1899, when she walked into saloons with rocks and smashed bottles to enforce state prohibition law. Her campaign evolved into a national movement, her arrests became platforms, and her hatchet became a symbol. Also covered: Graceland’s 1982 opening, the 1971 Cohen v. California free speech ruling, and the 1788 Day of the Tiles in Grenoble.
- https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/18th-amendment
- https://www.elvis.com/graceland/
- https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/403/15/
- https://www.britannica.com/biography/Carrie-Nation
- https://www.history.com/topics/france/french-revolution