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Eliza Thompson

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Known for
  
Temperance movement

Name
  
Eliza Thompson


Role
  
Allen Trimble's daughter

Parents
  
Allen Trimble

Eliza Thompson httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Full Name
  
Eliza Jane Trimble

Born
  
August 24, 1816 (
1816-08-24
)
Hillsboro, Ohio

Died
  
November 3, 1905, Hillsboro, Ohio, United States

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Eliza Jane Trimble Thompson (1816-1905), was a temperance advocate. The daughter of Governor Allen Trimble, Thompson was inspired by a December 23, 1873 lecture by Diocletian Lewis to begin leading groups of women into saloons where they sang hymns and prayed for the closure of the establishments. These direct, non-violent “Visitation Bands” were successful and quickly spread first across the state of Ohio and then to a total of 22 other states from New York to California. Dr. Lewis, a minister who had a drunken father which contributed to his desire for temperance and abstinence, believed that women needed to be educated on the social evils of alcohol.

Contents

"Mother Thompson" and others claimed often dramatic conversions by saloon keepers. In other cases, the retailers simply gave up after being picked on for weeks by the Visitation Bands.

Within several years the movement subsided. However, it was successful in stimulating the temperance movement, which had declined with the outbreak of the Civil War (1861-1865). The Woman’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) traces its origins to the Women’s Crusade against alcohol.

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References

Eliza Thompson Wikipedia