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                <title level="m" type="main">Temperance Among the Firemen!</title>
                <author sameAs="#ww">Walt Whitman</author>
                <editor>Jason Stacy</editor>
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                    <persName xml:id="aa">Alex Ashland</persName>
                    <persName xml:id="jb">Jake Byers</persName>
                    <persName xml:id="lr">Lucas Reincke</persName>
                    <persName xml:id="js">Jason Stacy</persName>
                    <persName xml:id="km">Kevin McMullen</persName>
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                <sponsor>Center for Digital Research in the Humanities, University of Nebraska-Lincoln</sponsor>
                <sponsor>University of Nebraska-Lincoln</sponsor>
                <sponsor>University of Iowa</sponsor>
                <sponsor>Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville</sponsor>
                <funder>The National Endowment for the Humanities</funder>
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                    <date>2016</date>
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                <distributor>The Walt Whitman Archive</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Center for Digital Research in the Humanities</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>319 Love Library</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>University of Nebraska-Lincoln</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>P.O. Box 884100</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Lincoln, NE 68588-4100</addrLine>
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                    <p>The text of the original item is in the public domain.</p>
                    <p>The text encoding and textual annotations were created and/or prepared by the
                            <title level="m">Walt Whitman Archive</title> and Alex
                        Ashland and are licensed under a <ref target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons
                            Attribution 4.0 International License</ref> (CC BY 4.0). Any reuse of
                        these materials should credit the <title level="j">Walt Whitman
                            Archive</title> and Alex Ashland.</p>
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            <idno>per.00420</idno></publicationStmt>             <notesStmt>                 <note type="project" target="#ww">This piece is unsigned. However, Whitman was the editor of the <hi rend="italic">Aurora</hi> when this editorial was written, and Herbert Bergman identified him as its author in Walt Whitman, <hi rend="italic">The Journalism. Volume I: 1834–1846</hi> (New York: Peter Lang, 1998). The <hi rend="italic">Whitman Archive</hi> editors agree that the style and content of the piece are consistent with other known Whitman writings of this period.</note>             </notesStmt>
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                            <date xml:id="dat1" cert="high" when="1842-03-30">30 March 1842</date>
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                        <orgName>Original issue held at the Paterson Free Public Library, Paterson, NJ.</orgName>
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                        <title level="a">Temperance Among the Firemen!</title>
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                    <note type="project">Our transcription is based on a digital image of an original issue.</note>
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            <change when="2017-06-08" who="#km">made slight edits to note 4</change>
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            <head rend="center" type="main-authorial">Temperance Among the Firemen!</head>

             <p>Yesterday was a great time with the New York temperance societies, as will be seen by
                 a report on our first page, furnished us by the editor of the Washingtonian.<note xml:id="n1" type="editorial" resp="wwa">
                     <hi rend="italic">The Washingtonian</hi> was a periodical published
                     by the New York Temperance Society (Jack S. Blocker, David M. Fahey, and Ian R. Tyrrell, 
                     <hi rend="italic">Alcohol and Temperance in Modern History: An International Encyclopedia. Vol. 1.</hi> [Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2003], 400-405).</note> They
                had processions, and meetings, and orations, and festivals, and banners displayed,
                and music, and a grand blow out at night to cap the whole. We stood upon the steps
                of the City Hall about 4 o'clock in the afternoon, and saw the passage of the grand
                procession, which certainly cut a very respectable figure. Thousands of people were
                gathered together in the Park to witness the scene.</p>
            
            <p>First came a banner bearing the head of Washington, immediately after which were a
                body of firemen. Whether it be a whim, or from some more tangible cause, we do have
                a fondness for the New York firemen. They are mostly fine, stalwart, handsome young
                men; and in their close fitting dresses and red shirts, we never behold them, but
                the Roman gladiators and the Olympian games are brought to mind. We question whether
                any city in the world can turn out a more manly set of young fellows. It is
                honorable to them, that they engage in this temperance movement. With the generosity
                and ardent devotedness of youth, they throw themselves, heart and soul, into the
                cause. This is a great thing gained. Once make temperance a favorite and fashionable
                custom among the young men of our city, and the whole conquest is over,—the
                enemy is vanquished.</p>
            
            <p>After the firemen came an immense number of citizens, formerly intemperate men, but
                now worthy members of society.<note xml:id="n2" type="editorial" resp="wwa">The Washingtonians were an organization of reformed alcoholics, mostly made up of members of the working class. For more, see: Ruth M. Alexander, "'We Are Engaged As a Band of Sisters': Class and Domesticity in the Washingtonian Temperance Movement, 1840–1850," <hi rend="italic">The Journal of American History</hi> 75, (1988): 3, 763–785.</note> There was a beautiful flag representing a female
                figure, and on each side a gushing spring of water. Then the junior temperance
                societies, with a banner inscribed, "beware of the first glass!" A number of sailors
                followed. Then more firemen, with a beautiful hose cart, No. 18, we believe. The
                hatters' association made a very respectable appearance, as did also the Newark
                society and the Chelsea society.<note xml:id="n3" type="editorial" resp="wwa">Both represent Washingtonians from Newwark, New Jersey and the New York neighborhood of Chelsea, respectively.</note> The banners had a great many quaint devices. One we
                noticed bearing a sheaf of grain, and the motto, "If you eat me, I am life; if you
                drink me, I am death."<note xml:id="n4" type="editorial" resp="wwa">Whitman had a general interest in the temperance movement, and published a temperance novel, <hi rend="italic">Franklin Evans; or The Inebriate</hi> (1842), the same year that this editorial was written.</note></p>

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