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Weve spent the last two days talking about events
connected to alcohol in North Dakotas past. Today we bring you the
story of Elizabeth Preston Anderson, who was at the other end of the spectrum.
She was born on this date in 1861 to Elam Stanton Preston, a Methodist
pastor in Decatur, IN. His ancestors were Friend Quakers who
came over from England sometime before 1750.
Elizabeth said her first memory was at the age of two, when she was awakened
to say goodbye to her mother as she lay dying. Elizabeths next memory
was of getting a new mother, then of the celebration when the North won
the Civil War. Then, she wrote, followed days of unutterable
sadness and despair, which I could feel but could not understand...beloved
Lincoln had been assassinated.
When she was 18, the Prestons moved to Dakota Territory and homesteaded
near what is now Tower City. In the midst of a raging prairie fire that
fall, Elizabeth made a vow to have an object in life; to work for
that object by making the most of every power; every advantage or opportunity
God should give me.
Soon after, she became ill and had to take a year off from teaching in
Sanborn. The doctor prescribed alcoholic stimulants, and after a number
of months she became aware of a growing appetite for it, an impatience
for the hour to strike when the next dose should be given. After
some serious reflection, she told the doctor she would take no more
of it.
While teaching in Page, Prestons hotel room overlooked the back
door of a saloon. One morning she spotted a man passed out on the ground.
The sun was shining in the young face, over which the flies were
crawling, she wrote, the mouth was open. That picture of some
mothers boy could not be erased from my mind. As I looked over my
school room, I studied my fine, bright, promising boys, wondering which
of them would take this young mans place.
Preston had found her object. She organized a local Womans Christian
Temperance Union, began making prohibition speeches and managed to get
the bar in Page shut down. By 1891, she was on a roll but feared shed
have to give up her prohibition work and go back to teaching. At the first
worlds convention of the WCTU in Boston, she summoned the courage
to ask for an introduction to Frances Willard, the groups head.
Preston later wrote, When she turned her blue eyes upon me and spoke
a few words, I knew that she not only saw me but that she saw my background
the wind swept, sun-drenched prairies of North Dakota, and understood
our problems. That year, Preston says, I began my legislative
work at Bismarck, which continued for more than thirty-five years... They
knew that a great company the WCTU the cream of North Dakota
women was back of me.
Elizabeth Preston worked tirelessly on behalf of children and womens
right for women to vote. She was served 40 years as president of the state
Womens Christian Temperance Union.
Historian Clement Lounsberry later wrote, (She) always attended
the legislative sessions, where she worked without cessation, night and
day, to prevent the repeal of the (prohibition) law... The friends of
temperance owe a debt of gratitude to this fragile little woman who successfully
combated every movement of the liquor forces.
Source: Elizabeth Preston Anderson, Sketch of my Life (written by request
of Minnie J. Nielson), 1939
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