James D. Ivy teaches history at San Antonio College and holds a Ph.D. in History of American Civilization from Harvard University.

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Acknowledgements Introduction: Southern Strategies 1. ""The Lone Star State Surrenders to a Lone Woman"": Frances Willard's 1882 Texas Tour 2. ""The Voice of the People in the Voice of God"": Local Option in McLennan County, 1885 3. ""The Steady Step and Majestic Swing of the Hosts of Reform"": The 1887 Campaign for Statewide Prohibition 4. ""The Blood of the Mighty Dead Has Stained Me!"": Eggs and Honor in the 1887 Campaign 5. ""Who Brought this New Idea into Texas, Anyhow?"": Texans Reject Prohibition Coda: From a Regional to a National Reform Notes Index
"An intriguing, original argument that Texas prohibition supporters adopted a Southern strategy of emphasizing evangelical religion, often using race, and trying to paint opponents of their movement as dishonorable." "No Saloon in the Valley" is a wise exploration of the prohibition movement at the grassroots. As a cultural and social historian, James Ivy is admirably sensitive to the tangled skein of religion, honor, race, gender, and regionalism that made up the Texas controversies over the liquor traffic. Finally we have a history in which Tejanos and African Americans are joined together with the 'short-haired women and long-haired men' of the prohibitionist crusade. --Jeffrey P. Moran, University of Kansas James D. Ivy's "No Saloon in the Valley" is more than simply a pathbreaking work on southern prohibition--and it is certainly that. Finely crafted, deeply researched, and engagingly written, this is the book to read on the ambivalent impulses behind the New South Reform. --Michael Vorenberg, Brown University
