Celebrations Today – October 28
Holidays and observances
- Christian feast day:
- Abdias of Babylon
- Abgar V of Edessa (Eastern Orthodox Church)
- Eadsige
- Faro
- Fidelis of Como (Roman Catholic Church)
- Godwin of Stavelot
- Job of Pochayiv (repose) (Eastern Orthodox Church)
- Jude the Apostle (Western Christianity)
- Lord of Miracles (Lima)
- Simon the Zealot (Western Christianity)
- October 28 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
- Day of the Establishment of an Independent Czecho-Slovak State, celebrates the independence of Czechoslovakia from Austria-Hungary in 1918. (Czech Republic and Slovakia)
- International Animation Day (ASIFA)
- Ohi Day (Greece, Cyprus and the Greek communities), a national day in Greece.
- Prefectural Earthquake Disaster Prevention Day (Gifu Prefecture)
- Youth Pledge Day or Hari Sumpah Pemuda (Indonesia)
Celebrations Today – USA: October 28
National Chocolate Day
National Make A Difference Day – Fourth Saturday in October
International Animation Day
National Plush Animal Lover’s Day
National Separation of Church and State Day
National St. Jude’s Feast Day
National Statue of Liberty Dedication Day
National Wild Foods Day
Today in US History: October 28
Temperance and Prohibition
We have only to look about us in this great city, to observe the traces of the deadly influence of intemperance. Everywhere, we face crime, disease and death, all testify to the necessity
of the prosecution of the cause, of steadfast and unwavering effort and prompt action
to lead to complete success.The Whole World’s Temperance Convention,
(New York: Fowler and Wells, 1853). p. 10.
[Address by Charles C. Burleigh, New York City, September 1-2, 1853.]
Votes for Women: Selections from the National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection, 1848-1921
On October 28, 1919, Congress passed the Volstead Act providing for enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which was ratified nine months earlier. Known as the Prohibition Amendment, it prohibited the “manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors” in the United States.
The movement to prohibit alcohol began in the early years of the nineteenth century when individuals concerned about the adverse effects of drink began forming local societies to promote temperance in the consumption of alcohol. Some of the earliest temperance societies were organized in New York (1808) and Massachusetts (1813). Many of the members of these societies belonged to Protestant evangelical denominations and eventually organized religion played a significant role in the movements. As time passed, most temperance societies began to call for complete abstinence from all alcoholic beverages.
The Anti-Saloon League, founded in Ohio in 1893 and organized as a national society in 1895, helped pave the way for passage of the Eighteenth Amendment with an effective campaign calling for prohibition at the state level. Their success is reflected by the fact that as of January 1920, thirty-three states had already enacted laws prohibiting alcohol. Between 1920 and 1933, the Anti-Saloon League lobbied for strict federal enforcement of the Volstead Act.
Organizations like the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union and the World’s Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, founded by reformer and educator Frances Willard in 1883, mobilized thousands of women in the fight for temperance.
Willard also worked for women’s suffrage, as did many other women who found their political awareness expanded by involvement in the temperance crusade. Given their political and economic vulnerability, nineteenth-century women’s lives were easily devastated if the men they depended on “took to drink.” Famous for attacking saloons with a hatchet, Carry Nation‘s flamboyant activism evolved from her upbringing in an atmosphere of strong religious beliefs and a failed marriage to an alcoholic. Although few embraced Nation’s extreme stance, Prohibition was viewed by many as a progressive social reform that would improve and protect the lives of women and children.
The Volstead Act ultimately failed to prevent the large-scale production, importation, and sale of liquor in the United States, and the Prohibition Amendment was repealed in 1933.
- Learn a temperance song. The American Memory sheet music collections contain a wealth of songs from the temperance movement and the Prohibition era, including the pathetic “Drink: A Temperance Song,” the virtuous “The Lips that Touch Liquor Shall Never Touch Mine,” and the comical “I Never Knew I Had a Wonderful Wife Until the Town Went Dry.” Search across the sheet music collections on temperance, prohibition, or drink.
- Explore African-American views on Prohibition. Search the collection The African-American Experience in Ohio: Selections from the Ohio Historical Society, 1850-1920 on temperance to read the African Methodist Episcopal Church Review on the subject of drink. Championing Prohibition in 1890, the Rev. J. D. Peterson argued, “while we have temperate drinkers we shall ever be infested with drunkards, for the latter are manufactured from the former.”
- An American Time Capsule: Three Centuries of Broadsides and Other Printed Ephemera includes numerous items related to the temperance and Prohibition efforts including a Family Temperance Pledge and the Anti-Saloon League of America’s analysis of the Supreme Court Decision on National Prohibition.
- The Nineteenth Century in Print collections of books and periodicals contain extensive documentation of the temperance and Prohibition efforts in the political and educational arenas. From items such as the Text-book of Temperance and Ruined by Rum to articles reporting on legislative activities in the states, one can get a good overview of the strategies of those involved in these movements.
- Search the collection California Gold: Northern California Folk Music from the Thirties collected by Sidney Robertson Cowell on temperance and prohibition to find recordings of “The Drunkard’s Dream,” “The Drunkard’s Child,” and “Goodbye, Booze.”
Taken from Inventing Entertainment: the Early Motion Pictures and Sound Recordings of the Edison Companies in American Memory, the following recordings from the early 1920s lampoon Prohibition. “Dinnie Donohue” relies on the ethnic stereotype of a drunken Irishman, while “Save a Little Dram” features a minister complaining that his congregation is stingy with their gin.
Gilbert Hovey Grosvenor and The National Geographic Society
October 28 marks the birth date of Gilbert H. Grosvenor, the editor credited with transforming National Geographic Magazine from a small scholarly journal into a dynamic world-renowned monthly. Born in Istanbul, Turkey, in 1875, Grosvenor’s family immigrated to the United States when he was fifteen, where he became an honor student, eventually studying at Amherst College in Massachusetts. Grosvenor joined the magazine in 1899 as an assistant editor.
Gilbert Grosvenor was recommended for the position by a friend of his father’s, inventor Alexander Graham Bell, who was at the time, president of the National Geographic Society. Bell became his father-in-law shortly thereafter when, in 1900, Grosvenor wed Bell’s daughter, Elsie May. Four years after joining National Geographic, Grosvenor took over as editor-in-chief and in 1920, he was elected president of the the society. Grosvenor filled the dual roles of editor of the magazine and president of the society until 1954, when he resigned to become chairman of the board, a position he held until his death in 1966.
The National Geographic Society was founded in Washington, D.C., in 1888 to support “the increase and diffusion of geographic knowledge.” The society’s founders, an eclectic group of well-traveled men, considered a magazine one means of accomplishing this mission. They published the first National Geographic nine months after forming the organization.
In its early years, National Geographic was a plain-covered journal with a circulation of less than one thousand. Under Grosvenor’s leadership, the magazine developed its extraordinary photographic service and map department, ultimately boosting membership from 900 in 1899 to more than 2 million at the time of his retirement in 1955.
During Grosvenor’s tenure, using revenues from the magazine, the society sponsored many notable expeditions and research projects including Admiral Robert Peary‘s 1909 expedition to the North Pole; Hiram Bingham’s 1911 discovery of Machu Picchu, and William Beebe’s record-setting undersea descent in 1934. The National Geographic Society continues this tradition, and has sponsored more than 8,000 research projects and more than 500 expeditions around the globe. Richly illustrated within the magazine, these explorations of land, air, and sea have introduced millions of people to amazing new worlds.
Today, the National Geographic Society is the largest nonprofit scientific and educational organization of its kind. In addition to publishing its flagship magazine, the society produces a wide array of educational materials and programs. The subject of many of these is the conservation and protection of wildlife, causes long championed by Gilbert H. Grosvenor.
- Search on Grosvenor in America’s First Look into the Camera: Daguerreotype Portraits and Views, 1839-1864 to retrieve ten daguerreotypes of the Bell family, part of the Gilbert H. Grosvenor Collection of Photographs of the Alexander Graham Bell Family. Included are images of Alexander Graham Bell’s wife, Mabel Hubbard, and his grandfather, Alexander Bell.
- The family tree of Gilbert Grosvenor and Elsie May Bell and photographs of the Grosvenors and their children are among several Bell family trees and numerous photographs found in the collection, The Alexander Graham Bell Family Papers at the Library of Congress. Don’t miss the photograph of Bell flying a kite with his grandson, Melville Grosvenor.
- For more information about Grosvenor’s father-in-law, Alexander Graham Bell, see the Today in History features on Bell’s telephone and photophone inventions.
- An American Time Capsule: Three Centuries of Broadsides and Other Printed Ephemera includes a flyer for an 1892 lecture held at the National Geographic Society by Mrs. French-Sheldon, “the first white woman who has ever visited Mount Kilma-njaro in Central Africa.”
- Search the Today in History Archive on conservation to find features on subjects including:
- Learn more about the movement to conserve and protect America’s natural heritage. Visit The Evolution of the Conservation Movement: 1850-1920.
Today in History – October 28-External Links
Today’s Weather in History
Today in Earthquake History
This Day in Naval History
Today’s Document from the National Archives
Today’s Events, Births & Deaths –Wikipedia
Today in History by AP
On this Day -1950 to 2005 – Today’s Story–BBC
On This Day: The New York Times
This Day in History –History.com