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        The standard work on the history of the Prohibition Party is Roger Storms' "Partisan Prophets," published in 1972.   Storms died in 1980 of complications from injuries sustained in a traffic accident.  No one has collected Party records since 1972, although much information has been preserved in the Monthly issues of the Prohibition Party newsletter, "The National Statesman".  "Partisan Prophets" is currently out of print, but can still be found in a few libraries.

       Prohibition Party presidential candidates polled over 100,000 votes at each election from 1884 to 1920.  It elected Sidney Catts governor of Florida in 1916. It elected Kittel Halvorsen of Minnesota to Congress in 1890, and it elected Charles Randall of California to congress for three terms (1914 - 1916 - 1918).  In 1904, it elected 204 local officials in just one county, Venango County, in Pennsylvania.

       The Prohibition Party candidate who received the highest vote total in a single election was Rev. Robert P. Shuler in a 1932 California race for the US Senate. He garnered 560,088 votes (25.8%) and actually carried Los Angeles County. Rev. Shuler was a Methodist minister who pastored Trinity Methodist Church in Los Angeles for many years. He had previously played a key role in exposing corruption in other states. He was one of those involved in the investigation which led to the ouster of Gov. Ferguson in Texas.

       The last Prohibitionists to win election to office were three local officials in the town of Lee, ME in 1978. Fred Dingley won re-election as town moderator, for a total of 30 years of service in that office. Roger Storms was re-elected to the District 30 School Board, and his wife Margaret was re-elected as town clerk.  Its presidential candidate through the 1980's and 1990's, Earl F. Dodge, has received 1000 to 1200 votes at each election.

  

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(click on picture to view larger image)

John Russell

First Chairman of the Prohibition National Committee

John Russell of Michigan (1867- 1872)

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Legend: Condo unit at left is the "Russell Building," 128 West 11th Ave, Denver, Colorado

The National Headquarters of the Prohibition Party since 1977.

photo by Earl Higgerson, 1997

Our National Committee Chairman, Earl F. Dodge, is the living person most knowledgeable about Prohibition Party History.  He can be reached by mail at:

PO Box 2635

Denver, Colorado 80201

Phone:  (303) 572-0646

Email: [log in to unmask]

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The Storms Collection

The Prohibition Party maintains a collection of lapel buttons and other campaign artifacts at its national headquarters in Denver. This "Roger Storms Historical Collection" is open to the public by appointment (contact Earl F. Dodge at the address above). The Storms Collection was begun in 1968, on the initiative of Earl Dodge, and was dedicated to Storms in October, 1981, after Storms' untimely death.

Bullmoose Chapter of APIC

The Third Party Chapter of the American Political Items Collectors (APIC) specializes in the history of third-party movements in America through the dissemination of knowledge about these parties, their positions on political issues, their history, their leadership, and their political items. The Chapter illuminates the place of third parties on the American political landscape. It publishes a newsletter 4 times each year to keep its members abreast of developments in third parties in America. The newsletter also includes articles on the histories of these parties, many of which are written by college and university faculty members whose areas of specialization are in this part of American History.

Prohibition Party on TV

The first, and to date only, Prohibition Party candidate to use paid television advertising in his campaign was David Livingston. Livingston ran for several Colorado offices in the1980's, ending with a try for Governor in 1990. He had these two 30-second spots tapedby his local television station to use during his campaign for Governor. The spots cost $260 dollars to produce and about $800 dollars to broadcast several times during the early morning hours. They ran on four stations.

Below are links to each of the two 30-second clips in real video format. At this time, we do not have the audio for them. You need to download the Real Video Player free to view the videos.

video one         video two            



smallerjim.gif (1423 bytes) The Partisan Prohibition Historical Society

The Partisan Prohibition Historical Society Awards Listing

Prohibition Party presidential/vice-presidential candidates  1872 - present

The Prohibition Party Archive at Michigan

The Prohibition Party Archive at Columbus, Ohio

The third major Prohibition Party collection is held by the WCTU Library at Evanston, Illinois.
We have invited them to send us a listing, but we have not yet received a response.

"There is one unmistakeble lesson in American History: a community that allows a large number of young men to grow up in broken families, dominated by women, never aquiring any stable relationship to male authority, never acquiring any set of rational expectations about the future - that community asks for and gets chaos, crime, violence, unrest, disorder - most particularly the furious, unrestrained lashing out at the whole social structure - that is not only to be expected; it is very near to inevitable."

Patrick Moynihan, US senator

 

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