"Vote Dry" "Vote Dry" was a popular
campaign slogan heard throughout Carroll during several early twentieth century elections. Prohibition had been a hotly contested
political issue and Carroll County voted to go dry in 1914.
Although Carroll was now dry, the subject was a bitterly contested issue in
the November 1915 state election. Local
voters were urged to elect a slate of non-partisan "dry" candidates by T. M.
Hare, superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League of Maryland: |
SITUATION
EXCEEDINGLY GRAVE THE TICKET
JOHN B. BAKER, Democrat
G. FIELDER GILBERT, Democrat
HERBERT R. WOODEN, Republican
FRANK ELY, Republican
BE NOT
DECEIVED If Dorsey and Frederick are elected Carroll County
will have to immediately face another fight on the liquor question. The liquor organization proposes to change the
Carroll County Local Option law so that the district will be made the unit. It believes that at least two districts of Carroll
county will give wet majorities and from these districts systematic debauchery of the
county can be easily carried out. EVERY
PATRIOT ON GUARD Every temperance voter of Carroll county should put
this cause above partisanship and should go to the ballot box on November 2nd determined
to swing into line with the dry army which won such a splendid victory last November and
vote for men who will not only maintain the county as the unit for a local option vote,
but will vote for legislation needed to perfect the present County Local Option Law and to
submit state-wide prohibition to a vote of the people. |
Carroll's voters
rejected "wet" candiates Frederick and Dorsey and elected Ely and Wooden. The Prohibition question would not be settled,
however, until January 1919 with the ratification of the 18th Amendment which made the
sale of alcoholic beverages illegal. Although
the temperance forces had won a great
political victory, they also ushered in the era of bootlegging and related crimes. |
| Photo caption: | This
VOTE "DRY" FOR "MY SAKE" campaign button was worn by a
supporter of prohibition in the early twentieth century.
Historical Society of Carroll County collection. |