The Dauntless Temperance Campaigner: Difference between revisions
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[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperance_movement_in_the_United_Kingdom The temperance movement in the United Kingdom] emerged in the early 19th century as a response to widespread alcohol consumption and its associated social problems, including poverty, domestic violence, and public disorder. Initially, the movement promoted moderation, but over time, many advocates pushed for total abstinence ("teetotalism"). Organizations such as the National Temperance League, established in 1856, played a pivotal role in promoting these ideals. While the temperance movement did not result in widespread legal success in the United Kingdom, its [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperance_movement global prominence] in the early 20th century led to longer-term prohibition and restrictions of alcohol sales in Canada, the United States, Norway, Finland, and some provinces of India. | [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperance_movement_in_the_United_Kingdom The temperance movement in the United Kingdom] emerged in the early 19th century as a response to widespread alcohol consumption and its associated social problems, including poverty, domestic violence, and public disorder. Initially, the movement promoted moderation, but over time, many advocates pushed for total abstinence ("teetotalism"). Organizations such as the National Temperance League, established in 1856, played a pivotal role in promoting these ideals. While the temperance movement did not result in widespread legal success in the United Kingdom, its [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperance_movement global prominence] in the early 20th century led to longer-term prohibition and restrictions of alcohol sales in Canada, the United States, Norway, Finland, and some provinces of India. | ||
Women were instrumental in the temperance movement, often linking the fight against alcohol to broader social reforms. Figures like [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_Henry_Somerset Lady Henry Somerset] championed both temperance and women's rights. | Women were instrumental in the temperance movement, often linking the fight against alcohol to broader social reforms. Figures like [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_Henry_Somerset Lady Henry Somerset] championed both temperance and women's rights. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Cassell John Cassell], the most likely identity of the Dauntless Temperance Campaigner's late friend, was a prominent temperance advocate and publisher who used his platform to promote temperance and educate the working class. Additionally, like the Campaigner, some temperance activists (e.g. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Bywater_Smithies Thomas Bywater Smithies]) also campaigned for animal welfare. | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 20:15, 14 February 2025
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"She has an agenda for London, and all the lands around London, for that matter: clean living, virtue, and tea."[2]
The Dauntless Temperance Campaigner is a high-profile activist in London.
For the Good of London
"She champions a great many causes, large and small, for nothing is beneath her notice and she will let no vice go unchecked. Yet, she cares for animals, the poor, the reformed criminals and honey addicts with as much fervour as she crusades against wicked landlords and spirifers, liquor merchants and honey peddlers."[3]
The Campaigner advocates for temperance (the restriction or prohibition of alcohol), human and animal welfare, and the moral betterment of all Londoners. She is known to visit the sick throughout the city, offering them hearty potato soup for their convalescence.[4] As a pet owner[5] who harbors a particular (and mutually shared) fondness for cats,[6] she dislikes seeing animals in captivity and has been known to purchase caged animals simply to free them.[7] Although she is a strong proponent of criminal rehabilitation, the Campaigner cannot always apply this when personal conflict is involved, for instance when a person's disreputable past affected someone in her family.[8]
The Campaigner uses her respectable public image to promote products from reputable sources that align with her moral standards,[9] and she stages protests outside establishments (like pubs) that she believes are harmful to the moral health of London.[10] On occasion, she attends poetry readings in Veilgarden, where she is a particularly vocal critic[11] of poetry that includes pagan elements, excessive alcohol references, or poor rhyming.[12]
While not a member of the profession, the Campaigner is a member of Sophia's club of Monster-Hunters. She is certainly no slouch herself,[13] but primarily attends for the tea and conversation[14] and leads the club's relief efforts.[15] The Campaigner was also close friends with John (likely John Cassell), the previous March of the Calendar Council; after the Council ordered his assassination, she was the one who found his body.[16]
Mayoral Campaign
"A fixture among London's social reformers, she has a plethora of worthy causes, all of which she is passionately devoted to. Her slogan is 'Teatime for London.'"[17]
In 1895, the Campaigner announced her candidacy for Mayor of London, running under the slogan "Teatime for London." Her platform included improved conditions and greater rights for London’s workers, debtors, and tenants; establishment of "houses of respite and healing" to aid addicts and the impoverished; advocacy for the city's assorted animals; crackdowns on spirifage and prisoner's honey;[18] and of course, the promotion of tea.[19] Her campaign was primarily supported by well-meaning society types, the Church, and those seeking a path out of criminal life.[17] Thanks to her grandson Chuffy McAvoy-Dauntless, she also received support from the Young Stags in guarding a massive stockpile of confiscated honey.[20] The Campaigner turned away revolutionaries, however, as she still held a grudge over John's murder.[21]
As the Election progressed, the Campaigner gradually lost elite support and faced scrutiny over her massive "honey-well," a haphazard attempt at containing a larger problem.[22] However, she gained traction with Clay Men, who recognized her past advocacy on their behalf.[23] While Feducci ultimately won the election,[24] the undeterred Campaigner immediately set out to continue her fight against immorality.[25]
Historical Inspirations
The temperance movement in the United Kingdom emerged in the early 19th century as a response to widespread alcohol consumption and its associated social problems, including poverty, domestic violence, and public disorder. Initially, the movement promoted moderation, but over time, many advocates pushed for total abstinence ("teetotalism"). Organizations such as the National Temperance League, established in 1856, played a pivotal role in promoting these ideals. While the temperance movement did not result in widespread legal success in the United Kingdom, its global prominence in the early 20th century led to longer-term prohibition and restrictions of alcohol sales in Canada, the United States, Norway, Finland, and some provinces of India.
Women were instrumental in the temperance movement, often linking the fight against alcohol to broader social reforms. Figures like Lady Henry Somerset championed both temperance and women's rights. John Cassell, the most likely identity of the Dauntless Temperance Campaigner's late friend, was a prominent temperance advocate and publisher who used his platform to promote temperance and educate the working class. Additionally, like the Campaigner, some temperance activists (e.g. Thomas Bywater Smithies) also campaigned for animal welfare.
References
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