The Chris Voss Show

The Chris Voss Show Podcast – Gin, Jesus, and Jim Crow: Prohibition and the Transformation of Racial and Religious Politics in the South (Making the Modern South) by Brendan J. J. Payne

May 1, 2022
Brendan J. J. Payne, historian and author of Gin, Jesus, and Jim Crow, unpacks how prohibition reshaped Southern religion and racial politics. He traces prohibition’s role in redefining church practice, fueling Jim Crow disfranchisement, and realigning voting coalitions. Short, vivid conversations explore race, temperance, political strategy, and the unexpected alliances that changed the South.
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INSIGHT

Religious Politics Turned Prohibition Into New Orthodoxy

  • Prohibition reshaped Southern religion by turning political preaching from taboo into recommended practice.
  • From the 1880s to the 1920s evangelicals reframed doctrine and removed communion wine, adopting a new politicalized orthodoxy against alcohol.
INSIGHT

Prohibition Fueled Disfranchisement And Jim Crow Politics

  • Prohibition became entwined with Jim Crow as white prohibitionists pushed disfranchisement to eliminate 'wet' voters.
  • In 1910–1912 African-American voters cast decisive anti-prohibition ballots, prompting whites to pursue voter suppression to secure dry laws.
ANECDOTE

Black Voters Paid Poll Taxes To Defeat Prohibition

  • African-Americans at times organized and paid poll taxes to vote against statewide prohibition measures.
  • Their mobilization produced last mass black voting moments in the South during the 1910s before widespread disfranchisement.
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