Prohibition Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why was the 18 th amendment adopted?

Similar documents
Progressive Era. How does government change to adapt to the needs of society?

Social Security Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Which historical account of Social Security is more accurate?

Prohibition: Correction or Corruption of America 8 th to 11 th Grade Melissa Robertson Daniel Jenkins Middle Academy

Progressive Social Reformers SAC Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: What were the attitudes of Progressive social reformers towards immigrants?

Irish Immigration Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Were the Irish considered white in the 19 th century?

Reconstruction SAC Lesson Plan

1920s Document Based Question

Three Branches of Government. Lesson 2

Emancipation Proclamation Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Did Lincoln free the slaves or did the slaves free themselves?

Hamilton vs. Jefferson Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: What were the differences between Hamilton and Jefferson?

Constitutional Amendments 1-10 make up what is known as The Bill of Rights. Amendments are listed below.

Louisiana Purchase Lesson Plan

Japanese Segregation in San Francisco Lesson Plan

Radical Reconstruction Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why was the Radical Republican plan for Reconstruction considered radical?

4. There are three qualifications from becoming a member of the House of Representatives

November, Massachusetts. Michigan. New Hampshire. New York. New Mexico

Indian Removal Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why did people in the 1830s support Indian Removal?

Sedition in WWI Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Were critics of the First World War anti-american?

CONSTITUTIONFACTS.COM

Chapter 18. How well did Presidents Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson promote progressive goals in national policies? Essential Question 18.

Vocabulary Builder Activity. netw rks. A. Content Vocabulary. The Bill of Rights

Great Society Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Was the Great Society successful?

Declaration of Independence Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why did the Founders write the Declaration of Independence?

1. Title: The Organizational Structure and Powers of the Federal Government as Defined in Articles I, II, and III of the U.S. Constitution Grade 5

TEXAS SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY S STATEMENT ON DRUG FREE SCHOOLS AND CAMPUS STUDENT ANNUAL NOTIFICATION

DRINKING AND DRIVING OFFENCE

THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL

Title 28-A: LIQUORS. Chapter 100: MAINE LIQUOR LIABILITY ACT. Table of Contents Part 8. LIQUOR LIABILITY...

On April 15, 2002, Washington DC Mayor Anthony Williams spoke at an event led by

bosses political machines mugwumps Pendleton Civil Service Act

Immigration and Prohibition

SOCIAL STUDIES TEST for e-lessons day 2

Constitutions. It is a brief sketch of the structure of government. It limits government by setting boundaries.

DRUG PREVENTION PROGRAM

Administration and Management in Criminal Justice. Chapter 4: Environmental Influences

As Amended by Senate Committee SENATE BILL No. 408

Running head: TIME FOR A CHANGE 1. Time for a Change: Legalizing Marijuana in the State of Texas. Ronald Cummings.

Filing a Form I-751 Waiver of the Joint Filing Requirement of the Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence

Forming a More Perfect Union

Drinking and Driving

Chinese Immigration and Exclusion Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: What factors contributed to the Chinese Exclusion Act?

Garfield Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum Criminal Justice

Cuban Missile Crisis Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why did the Russians pull their missiles out of Cuba?

The Legislative Process


Walking Through a Trial

Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and of the Exploitation of the Prostitution of Others

Shays Rebellion. Central Historical Question: How did Americans react to Shays rebellion?

AOPA'S GUIDE TO CANDIDATE FORUMS. stand on issues important to General Aviation. A guide to help pilots discover where candidates

McKinney-Vento Act. National Coalition for the Homeless. NCH Fact Sheet #18 Published by the National Coalition for the Homeless, June 2006.

Three Branches of Government Webquest

Anne M. Noonan, Commissioner, Vermont Department of Labor WORKERS COMPENSATION FRAUD STUDY AND REPORT

Alcohol use or abuse. Lesson 2

Crete-Monee Middle School U.S. Constitution Test Study Guide Answers

Canterbury District Health Board s

Arizona Employment Law Letter For March 2006 Lewis and Roca Lawyers LLP 2006

Official Notice to Students Regarding Substance Abuse in University Campus Communities

Lesson 2 Alcohol: What s the Truth?

Are You MADD? Chandreyee Johnson BSHS/355. February 2, Aaron Short

Choosing Health. A booklet about plans for improving people s health. Easy read summary

The President s Job Description

Immigration. The United States of America has long been the world s chief receiving

OFFICIAL NOTICE TO FACULTY AND STAFF REGARDING SUBSTANCE ABUSE IN UNIVERSITY CAMPUS COMMUNITIES AND WORKSITES

EXAMPLE CIS CITIZENSHIP INTERVIEW/TEST

The Preamble to The Bill of Rights. Bill of Rights

Art-list License Agreement

Lesson 3. Branches of Government. Student Materials OBJECTIVE FOUNDATIONS UNIT

Child Abuse, Child Neglect. What Parents Should Know If They Are Investigated

2015 STATE OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT SURVEY A Project Sponsored by the Newseum Institute

Grades Middle & high school

Academic Standards for Civics and Government

KEROSKY PURVES & BOGUE ATTORNEYS AT LAW

APPENDIX A - CHARTER ORDINANCES

President Theodore Roosevelt

Technical Writing. Preparation. Objectives. Standards. Materials. Grade Level: 9-12 Group Size: Time: Minutes Presenters: 1

One Person, One Vote

Vermont Legislative Council

Depression and Disability

Substance Abuse: A Public Health Problem Requiring Appropriate Intervention

Chapter 21. What Are HIV and AIDS?

Manifest Destiny Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: How did Americans justify Westward Expansion?

Georgia Performance Standards. Health Education

Writing Prompts for High School

HSC: All My Own Work. Copyright. Introduction. Module Outline

Electronic Signature of Retirement Plan Documents

Making the Case for Progressive Constitutional Changes in Connecticut

5th social studies core skills (5thsocstud_coreskills)

Classroom Lesson :City on the Rise

ITT Technical Institute, Orlando, Florida Safety and Security Policies with Crime Statistics Report CRIME STATISTICS

DRUG, ALCOHOL, TOBACCO AND OTHER CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES POLICY

Transcription:

Lesson Plan Central Historical Question: Why was the 18 th amendment adopted? Materials: United Streaming Video Segment: American Dries Up (from Just the Facts: The Emergence of Modern America: The Roaring Twenties) http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidassetid=532c6de7- E714-403B-BD6C-AF31FB1EFD2F&blnFromSearch=1&productcode=US 18 th Amendment Document and Guiding Questions Documents A-D Guiding Questions Plan of Instruction: 1. Hand out 18 th Amendment sheet and have students answer questions. Ask some students to share their responses. 2. Play United Streaming Video Segment: American Dries Up (from Just the Facts: The Emergence of Modern America: The Roaring Twenties) http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidassetid=532c6de7- E714-403B-BD6C-AF31FB1EFD2F&blnFromSearch=1&productcode=US When movie finishes, ask students why some Americans supported temperance (according to the movie)? 3. Hand out Documents A-D and Guiding Questions. Have students complete in small groups. 4. Discussion: What problems did people see in society at the turn of the century? Why did they think would solve these problems? What strategies/evidence did temperance advocates use to convince people to support? Do you find their arguments convincing? Do you think people at the time found their arguments convincing? Why or why not? Why does the author of Document B single out immigrants? Historians disagree about the motivation behind : o Some say was an attempt on the part of middle-class Protestants to control immigrants and the urban poor.

o Some say was an attempt to help children and families. o What do you think? Citations: Eighth Annual Meeting of the National Temperance Council, Washington D.C., September 20, 1920. http://dl.lib.brown.edu/repository2/repoman.php?verb=render&id=1119376466906250&vi ew=pageturner Hooch Murder Bill Drafted by Anderson, The New York Times, November 14, 1922. http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archivefree/pdf?_r=1&res=9e07efd61f39ef3abc4c52dfb7678389639ede Alcoholism and Degeneracy, Boston, MA and Westerville, Ohio: Scientific Temperance and American Issue Publishing Company, 1913. http://dl.lib.brown.edu/repository2/repoman.php Children in Misery, Boston, MA and Westerville, Ohio: Scientific Temperance and American Issue Publishing Company, 1913. http://dl.lib.brown.edu/repository2/repoman.php Copyright 2009, Avishag Reisman and Bradley Fogo.

The 18 th Amendment (Modified) Source: United States Constitution Context: The US Senate passed the 18 th Amendment on December 18, 1917. It was ratified on January 16, 1919, after 36 states approved it. The 18 th Amendment, and the enforcement laws accompanying it, established of alcohol in the United States. Several states already had laws before this amendment. It was eventually repealed by the 21 st Amendment on December 5, 1933. It is the only amendment that has ever been completely repealed. Section 1. After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, transportation, importation or exportation of intoxicating liquors in the United States and all its territory is hereby prohibited. Section 2. The Congress and the States shall both have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. Section 3. This article shall have no power unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by the legislatures of the States, as provided in the Constitution, within seven years from the date of the submission to the States by the Congress. Vocabulary To ratify to confirm or pass something, such as an amendment Intoxicating liquors alcohol Article a section or item in a written document. Until enough states ratified this amendment, it was known as an article. Guiding Questions: 1. What is your first reaction to the 18 th amendment? 2. Do you think this amendment could be passed today? Why or why not? 3. Why do you think some Americans in 1918 might have wanted this amendment?

Document A: and Health (Modified) Alcohol poisons and kills; Abstinence and save lives and safeguard health. Dr. S.S. Goldwater, formerly Health Commissioner of New York City, stated the decision of science, the final opinion of our nation after a hundred years of education upon the subject of alcohol. It is believed that less consumption of alcohol by the community would mean less tuberculosis, less poverty, less dependency, less pressure on our hospitals, asylums and jails. Alcohol hurts the tone of the muscles and lessens the product of laborers; it worsens the skill and endurance of artists; it hurts memory, increases industrial accidents, causes diseases of the heart, liver, stomach and kidney, increases the death rate from pneumonia and lessens the body s natural immunity to disease. Justice Harlan speaking for the United States Supreme Court, said: We cannot shut out of view the fact that public health and public safety may be harmed by the general use of alcohol. Vocabulary Abstinence: Stopping yourself from doing something (e.g., drinking) Consumption: eating or drinking Source: Statement read at the Eighth Annual Meeting of the National Temperance Council, Washington D.C., September 20, 1920. The National Temperance Council was created in 1913 to work for.

Document B: Hooch Murder Bill (Modified) Hooch Murder Bill Drafted by Anderson Anti-Saloon Head Aims to Reach Those Whose Drinks Cause Death. William H. Anderson, State Superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League, announced in a statement yesterday that the organization would sponsor a measure at the upcoming State Legislature. The measure would be known as the Hooch Murder bill. It says a person can be tried for murder, and punished accordingly, if they are suspected of selling alcohol that resulted in the death of the person drinking it. Commenting on the measure, Mr. Anderson said: This bill is intended for whoever it may hit, but it is especially directed at the immoral foreigner, usually an alien, who had largely stopped killing with a knife from hate or with a gun for hire, and has gone into the preparation and thoughtless selling of poison for profit. Vocabulary Hooch: slang term for alcohol, commonly used in the 1920s to refer to illegal whiskey Alien: a foreigner who is not a citizen Source: Hooch Murder Bill Drafted by Anderson, The New York Times, November 14, 1922.

Document C: Alcoholism and Degeneracy Vocabulary Temperate: refraining from drinking alcohol Intemperate: drinking alcohol Degeneracy: being in decline; having qualities that are not normal or desirable Source: Boston, MA and Westerville, Ohio: Scientific Temperance and American Issue Publishing Company, 1913.

Document D: Children in Misery Source: Boston, MA and Westerville, Ohio: Scientific Temperance Federation and American Issue Publishing Company, 1913.

Guiding Questions Name Document A 1. (Sourcing) When was this document written? Was this before or after the passage of the 18 th Amendment? Why might the National Temperance Council have met in 1920 (after the passage of the 18 th Amendment)? What do you predict they will say? 2. (Close reading) What does the National Temperance Council claim is caused by alcohol? 3. (Context) Do you find these claims convincing? Do you think people at the time found these claims convincing? Explain. Document B 1. (Sourcing) When was this document written? Was this before or after the passage of the 18 th Amendment? 2. (Close reading) What is the Hooch Murder Bill? 3. (Context) Based on this document, who is the Anti-Saloon League blaming for the sale of alcohol during? Why do you think they singled this group?

Document C and D 1. (Sourcing) When were these posters made? Was that before or after the passage of the 18 th Amendment? Who published these posters? What was their perspective? 2. (Close reading) According to these posters, what are two reasons why is a good idea? 3. (Close words) Look at the words used in Document C. These were considered scientific categories. What does that tell you about science at this time? 4. (Context) Using these posters, explain some of the beliefs about children that were common in the early 20 th century. Do you think these beliefs are silly or reasonable? Explain. People who supported thought it would solve a lot of society s problems. Use the documents to explain what problems they saw in society and why they thought would solve these problems.