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Newspaper South Carolina Temperance Advocate (Charleston, S.C.) 1852-1854

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About South Carolina Temperance Advocate (Charleston, S.C.) 1852-1854

Historians have long interpreted the culture and economy of the antebellum-era South—its reliance on enslaved laborers and tolerance of heavy drinking—as incompatible with the temperance cause championed by evangelical reformers in the Northeast. Yet the cause found its share of southern supporters. They may have been uncomfortable with the national movement’s ties to abolitionism, but they were no less passionately roused by the issue itself. Rather than challenging social structures, southern temperance advocates tended to frame temperance as a matter of personal self-discipline.

The first temperance organization in South Carolina, the Temperance Society of Columbia, was established in 1829; the statewide body, the State Temperance Society of South Carolina, was established in 1832. On January 30, 1839, the Cheraw Gazette and Pee Dee Farmer ran a proposal for a temperance newspaper, declaring, “The increasing prevalence and ruinous effects of the use of intoxicating liquors, call loudly for some decisive measures to rouse public attention to this direful evil….”

The first issue of the weekly Columbia South-Carolina Temperance Advocate, edited by the Reverend Julius J. DuBose, appeared in July 1839. Its contents included general news summaries and price reports in addition to pro-abstinence pieces. Judge John Belton O’Neall contributed a weekly column titled “The Drunkard’s Looking Glass”; O’Neall later served as president of the Sons of Temperance of North America. The Temperance Advocate received accolades but struggled to attract subscribers. On August 1, 1840, the editors of the Camden Journal asked, “Shall the Temperance Advocate go down?”

Beginning July 15, 1841, publisher Isaac C. Morgan relaunched the paper as the Columbia South Carolina Temperance Advocate and Register of Agriculture and General Literature. Its articles appeared in publications as far flung as the Boston New-England Farmer and Petersburg Farmers’ Register, but its viability remained tenuous.

In 1852, Edwin Heriot assumed dual responsibilities for editing and publishing the Temperance Advocate. Heriot brought serious credentials to the task, having previously worked with the literary journals the Charleston Floral Wreath, and Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Magazine and Charleston Southern Literary Gazette. He changed the title back to the South Carolina Temperance Advocate and moved its operations from Columbia to Charleston. Even his talents, however, were insufficient to reverse the Temperance Advocate’s fortunes. Thomas J. Warren, publisher of the Camden Journal, took over the paper later that year. The last issue appeared on May 11, 1854. A generation later, a new crop of newspapers—the Columbia Temperance Advocate, Lexington South Carolina Temperance Standard, and Williamston Temperance Standard—rose up to carry the banner for the temperance cause in South Carolina.

Provided By: University of South Carolina; Columbia, SC

About this Newspaper

Title

  • South Carolina Temperance Advocate (Charleston, S.C.) 1852-1854

Names

  • Heriot, E. (Edwin), editor
  • State Temperance Society of South Carolina

Dates of Publication

  • 1852-1854

Created / Published

  • Charleston, S.C. : Edwin Heriot

Headings

  • -  Temperance--South Carolina--Newspapers
  • -  Charleston (S.C.)--Newspapers
  • -  Charleston County (S.C.)--Newspapers
  • -  Camden (S.C.)--Newspapers
  • -  Kershaw County (S.C.)--Newspapers
  • -  Temperance
  • -  South Carolina
  • -  South Carolina--Camden
  • -  South Carolina--Charleston
  • -  South Carolina--Charleston County
  • -  South Carolina--Kershaw County
  • -  United States--South Carolina--Charleston
  • -  United States--South Carolina--Kershaw--Camden

Genre

  • Temperance periodicals
  • Newspapers

Notes

  • -  Weekly
  • -  Began in 1852? Ceased with May 11, 1854.
  • -  "Devoted to temperance, agriculture, home education, moral reform, the seaman's cause & general intelligence."
  • -  Published in Camden, S.C., <1853>-1854.
  • -  Not recorded in ULS; not recorded in Amer. newspapers, 1821-1936.
  • -  "Organ of the State Temperance Society and the Order of the Sons of Temperance and Rechabites."
  • -  Description based on: Vol. 14, no. 2 (July 8, 1852); title from masthead.
  • -  Latest issue consulted: Vol. 15, no. 41 (May 11, 1854).

Medium

  • volumes ; 61 cm

Library of Congress Control Number

  • 2013228785

OCLC Number

  • 741340302

Preceding Titles

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Cite This Item

Citations are generated automatically from bibliographic data as a convenience, and may not be complete or accurate.

Chicago citation style:

South Carolina Temperance Advocate Charleston, S.C. 1852 to 1854. (Charleston, SC), Jan. 1 1852. https://aj.sunback.homes/item/2013228785/.

APA citation style:

(1852, January 1) South Carolina Temperance Advocate Charleston, S.C. 1852 to 1854. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://aj.sunback.homes/item/2013228785/.

MLA citation style:

South Carolina Temperance Advocate Charleston, S.C. 1852 to 1854. (Charleston, SC) 1 Jan. 1852. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, aj.sunback.homes/item/2013228785/.