Ric N. Caric, Morehead State University, wrote the paper on the
Washingtonians in Philadelphia.  Sorry for my carelessness in omitting
his name.  Jared Lobdell also asked about email addresses.  I suspect
that Scott Haine <[log in to unmask]> has them.


On Oct 30, 2004, at 9:39 AM, David Fahey wrote:

> The ADHS has two sessions (listed under the old ATHG name) at the
> American Historical Association conference in Seattle in January 2005.
>
> Friday, January 7, 9:30
>
> New Perspectives on the Politics of Alcohol Regulation: from
> Prohibition to Consumption Restrictions to Marketing Limitations
>
> chair and comment: William J. Rorabaugh, University of Washington
>
> Writing Prohibition in the Soil: Harriman, Tennessee, and the
> Prohibition Party's New Approaches to Political Organization,
> 1890-1905, by Lisa Andersen, University of Chicago
>
> A Saloon by Any Other Name: Ethnic Clubs and Liquor Control in Ontario,
> 1927-44, by Dan Malleck, Brock Univeristy
>
> The New Temperance: the 1970s and 1980s Campaigns to Restrict Alcohol
> Marketing, by Pam Pennock, University of Michigan at Dearborn
>
> Friday, January 7, 2:30
>
> A Complex Dialectic: Degradation and Agency in Alcohol Treatments
>
> chair: Bud Burkhard, University of Maryland University College
>
> Displays of Degradation and Figures of Womanhood: The Washingtonians in
> Philadelphia, 1841-45
>
> Theories of Agency in the Treatment of Inebriates: Moral Suasion versus
> Moral Therapy in the Market Society of Gilded Age America, by Katherine
> A. Chavigny, Sweet Briar College
>
> "He is an Excellent Doctor if Called When Sober": American Physicians
> Embrace Temperance, 1800-60, by Scott Martin, Bowling Green State
> University
>
> comment: W. Scott Haine, University of Maryland University College
>