THE W.C.T.U. REHOBOTH
AVENUE WATER FOUNTAIN
FACTS
“Everything inconsistent
with Christian Morality shall be excluded and prohibited”.
That was the 'words' of
the Rehoboth Camp Meeting Association in 1873 that the founders
envisioned a resort which
would adhere to church principals that included a ban on alcoholic
beverages.
The 1800's average
American took on seven gallons of liquor a year. This was
thought to be the cause of
poverty, violence and crime.
The Rehoboth ban on
alcoholic beverages last but a few years. Alcoholic beverages
became readily available.
Alcohol was well advertized and touted as a health stimulant.
Although Rehoboth gave in,
the WCTU did not. WCTU was formed a year after
Rehoboth was incorporated
and stood fast to its ban on drinking.
In 1997 Sussex county
outlawed intoxicating beverages but bootleg liquor found its
way in from stills hidden
in the Great Cypress Swamp and many other isolated corners of
Sussex. Then in 1919 came
the national prohibition liquor was not vanquished. The WCTU
continued the fight into
the 1920s'
All this while Rehoboth
was growing, there was an increase in visitors and vacationers,
visiting the resort, in
1929 the boardwalk was sent south and widened to 18 feet. At the
foot
of Rehoboth Avenue the
boardwalk was widened to 32 feet and that busy area provided the\
spot for the W.C.T.U. water
fountain. By the time the Rehoboth fountain was in place the
national prohibition fell
to public demand and in 1933 alcohol was legal, but, the Rehoboth
Avenue W. C. T. U. Water
Fountain is still here.
Abstract 06/30/18 by
Harrison H. of Micharl Morgan's Delaware diary, 22 October,
2014 Delaware Coast
Press. www.delmarhistory.blogspot.com.
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