Wayne Wheeler

Wayne Wheeler
Born November 10, 1869
Brookfield Township, Ohio
Died September 5, 1927 (aged 57)
Little Point Sable, Michigan
Occupation Lobbyist
Known for Prohibition

Wayne Bidwell Wheeler (November 10, 1869 September 5, 1927) was an American attorney and prohibitionist. His most famous contribution to the prohibition movement was making the Anti-Saloon League the first organized political pressure group in the United States.[1]

Early life

Wheeler was born in Brookfield Township, Ohio, to Mary Ursula Hutchinson Wheeler and Joseph Wheeler.[2] His anti-alcohol standpoint started while working on his family's farm, when he came across a drunken hired hand who was so drunk that he was unaware of what he was doing with his hayfork until it had been accidentally lodged into the leg of a young Wayne Wheeler. Having experienced this trauma at such an early age, Wheeler was able to exploit the event and turn it into effective anecdotal evidence supporting the forthcoming Anti-Saloon League.[1]

Education

Upon graduation from high school, he taught at a school for two years before enrolling in classes at Oberlin College in 1890. Upon arriving at Oberlin College with very little money, Wheeler demonstrated his ability to work extremely hard. In order to help fund his education at Oberlin College and support himself financially, Wheeler worked as a waiter, a janitor for his dormitory, a teacher during summer vacation, and sometimes a salesman for various items.[3] In fact, it was in the janitorial closet at Oberlin College where Howard Russell Hyde first offered Wheeler a position in the Anti-Saloon League. Hyde offered Wheeler a job because he saw "a loving, spririted self-sacrificing soul who yearns to help the other fellow."[4] After graduating from Oberlin in 1894, Wheeler accepted Hyde's job offer as an organizer for the recently established Anti-Saloon League. He then went on and earned a law degree from Western Reserve University in 1898 while working full time.[5][6] During his years in college, Wheeler obtained the knowledge to become a skilled debater. This newly acquired skill and education would later help him in his career path as a temperance worker. While a student he engaged in temperance work, and after graduation joined the Anti-Saloon League as a field secretary.

Career

Early on in his career in the ASL, Wheeler developed a distinct sense of power that was known by many of his supporters and followers as Wheelerism, best described as pressure politics, a political action that relies heavily on the use of mass media and mass communications to persuade politicians that the public wants or demands a particular action. However, it commonly includes intimidation, threats, and other covert techniques as well.

These pressure politics in Wheeler's work soon began to engulf both his personal and working life. Before his marriage in 1901, Wayne Wheeler would often write heartfelt love letters to his fiancée, slipping in his strong beliefs on what was to be done with the prohibition movement. In 1902, he became superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League.

With his belief that prohibitionists should enforce laws in a strict and unsympathetic manner rather than through education of the subject, Wayne Wheeler and the ASL were able to defeat the anti-prohibitionist Ohio governor, Myron T. Herrick, when he ran for reelection in 1906. That was the first significant victory of the Anti-Saloon League in American politics. Wheeler became the attorney and general counsel for the National Anti-Saloon League, a member of the executive committee, and its head lobbyist. He became widely known as the "dry boss" because of his influence and power.[7]


Under Wheeler's leadership, the League focused entirely on the goal of achieving Prohibition. Unlike Francis Willards Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) which dealt with many humanitarian issues, Wayne Wheeler felt that the only way to successfully challenge the political influence of the brewers was to focus purely on achieving national prohibition by any means necessary.[8] Wheeler was able to elect politicians by encouraging the drys of both political parties to vote for a single candidate who supported the dry cause, regardless of the party the candidate was affiliated with. In essence, it supported or opposed candidates based entirely on their position regarding prohibition, completely disregarding political party affiliation or other issues. Unlike other temperance groups, the Anti-Saloon League worked with the two major parties rather than backing the smaller Prohibition Party. Wheeler developed what is now known as pressure politics, which is sometimes also called Wheelerism, according to Randolph W. Childs. By rallying dry voters of both parties to vote for the candidate who showed the greatest devotion to the dry cause, Wheeler was able to persuade many drys who were loyal to a certain party to vote for the opposite party's candidate if necessary. This strategy was extremely successful and put pressure on many candidates to support the ASL or face defeat come election time.

Wheeler and the ASL gained a lot of support by creating loose alliances with groups who shared a common anti-alcohol sentiment if often times nothing else. This idea of supporting and/or avoiding conflict with groups that generally consisted of drys came to be known as the "Ohio Idea".[9] Wheeler considered racists, nativists, progressives, suffragists and populists to be a part of this Ohio Idea. Wheeler especially supported suffragists. He and the ASL knew that most women in the early twentieth century supported the idea of prohibition. If given the right to vote he saw them as being the key to enacting Prohibition and increasing the political influence of the ASL. Wheeler's Ohio Idea, much like the use of pressure politics, was a key component to the success of the ASL and the Prohibition movement as a whole.

Wheeler was the de facto leader of the Anti-Saloon League and wielded considerable political power, according to Justin Steuart, his former Publicity Secretary:

"Wayne B. Wheeler controlled six congresses, dictated to two presidents of the United States, directed legislation in most of the States of the Union, picked the candidates for the more important elective state and federal offices, held the balance of power in both Republican and Democratic parties, distributed more patronage than any dozen other men, supervised a federal bureau from outside without official authority, and was recognized by friend and foe alike as the most masterful and powerful single individual in the United States."[10]

Steuart claimed that Wheeler often bragged about the many deceptions used in promoting Prohibition. Wheeler is considered to have performed temperance work in a mild manner compared to other organizations. For example, the Prohibition Bureau went to the extremes of adding poison to alcoholic beverages in order to get people to stop drinking.

By 1926, Wheeler was being criticized by members of Congress who were questioning the League's spending in some congressional races. At one point the Anti-Saloon League decided that the only way for people to stop drinking any alcohol drinks was to add poison to as much drinkable alcohol. Wheeler was even quoted saying "The person who drinks this industrial alcohol ...is a deliberate suicide". These sorts of views on and the severity of his opinion began to change the way the public viewed the Anti-Saloon League.[11]

Death

Wheeler retired shortly afterwards but continued to fight for prohibition. He fought tirelessly but to little success. On August 14, shortly after removing himself from the busy life he lead with the ASL, Wheeler's wife was tragically burned to death in a cooking accident at his house in Little Point Sable, and her father suffered a fatal heart attack upon viewing the incident. Just two weeks after losing his wife and father in law, Wayne Wheeler himself died at the age of 57.[12]

Legacy

Wayne Wheeler is not widely heard of today, however, many who are very familiar with Prohibition regard him as playing one of the most important roles in the creation of the 18th Amendment. His use of pressure politics, his expertise in rallying the dry base, and the sheer amount of time and effort he contributed to the ASL were the key staples in the success of the ASL, and the Prohibition movement as a whole. "Without Wayne B. Wheeler's generalship it is more than likely we should never have had the Eighteenth Amendment."[13]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Wayne Wheeler". American National Biography.
  2. "Ancestry of Wayne Bidwell Wheeler". wargs.com. Retrieved 14 October 2014.
  3. Okrent, Daniel. Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition. (New York, NY: Simon and Schuster, Inc., 2010), 38
  4. Okrent, Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition. 38-39
  5. Hanson David. "Wheeler, Wayne Bidwell" American National Biography Online, Feb. 2000.
  6. https://www.anb.org/login.html?url=%2Farticles%2Fhome.html&ip=74.73.71.215&nocookie=0
  7. Wheeler, Wayne Bidwell; Shaw, Elton Raymond (1924). Prohibition: Going Or Coming?: The Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act; Facts Versus Fallacies and Suggestions for the Future. Shaw Publishing Company.
  8. Okrent, Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, 36
  9. Okrent, Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, 42
  10. Okrent, Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, 41
  11. Hanson David. "Wheeler, Wayne Bidwell" American National Biography Online, Feb. 2000.
  12. Okrent, Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, 294
  13. Okrent, Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, 36

References

Further reading

External links

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