The Canada Temperance Act, also known as the Scott Act, allowed provincial and municipal jurisdictions to formulate their own legislation regarding alcohol consumption based upon the results of a plebiscite; the results could not be challenged for at least three years. Between 1916 and 1919, prohibition legislation passed in all the provinces. The sale of alcoholic liquors, except for medical and scientific purposes, was prohibited, with medical need being interpreted loosely with liquor sold by pharmacists. In 1920, eight of the nine provinces of Canada decided to continue prohibition after the war. The Canadian liquor plebiscite addressed this postwar prohibition.[1]
The plebiscite was set up to pose the question of banning liquor importation to provinces where prohibition had been enforced, but liquor could be ordered and imported by mail order. Ontario also had a plebiscite on the issue under the Temperance Act a few months later in 1921.
By province
Alberta
(October 25, 1920 referendum) — The question up for vote in Alberta was "Shall the importation and bringing of alcohol beverages into the province be forbidden?" After it passed, the federal government waited until February 1921 to ban the inter-provincial trade of alcohol into Alberta and by then many had stockpiled liquor.[3]
(October 20, 1920 referendum) — Voters were presented with the question "Which do you prefer: 1— The present prohibition act? or 2— An act to provide for the government control and sale in sealed packages of spirituous and malted liquors?"[5] By a majority of more than 25,000 voters in British Columbia opted for the sale of liquor under regulation by the provincial government.[6]
Manitoba
(October 25, 1920 referendum) — By a majority of more than 12,000 voters opted in favor of the Canadian Temperance Act, with the prohibition against importing liquor into Manitoba to go into effect in 60 days.[7][8] The vote also cleared the way for the Manitoba Temperance Act of 1920 to be proclaimed, limiting liquor to medical prescriptions of no more than 12 ounces, by government-approved dispensers.
New Brunswick
(July 10, 1920 referendum) — The first provincial vote on whether to retain prohibition took place in New Brunswick, where voters approved the bar against importation of liquor by a majority of 20,000 votes. In another ballot question, the ban against the sale of light wine and against beer was approved a majority of 15,000.[9]
Nova Scotia
(October 25, 1920 referendum) — Voters in Nova Scotia gave a larger endorsement to prohibition than in the prairie provinces, with 40,000 more votes for prohibiting the importation of liquor than against it. Other than Halifax and Dartmouth, no large cities voted "wet".[10]
Saskatchewan
(October 25, 1920 referendum) — By a majority of 10,000 voters in Saskatchewan endorsed the Canadian Temperance Act barring the importation of liquor.[11]
^ abHaydon, J. A. P. (November 1929). "The Liquor Traffic in Canada". Machinist's Monthly Journal. 41 (11). Washington, D.C.: George State University Library, Special Collections Department, Southern Labor Archives: 708, 709, 750, 751. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
^"The Case for Clause "A"". Lethbridge Daily Herald. November 1, 1923. p. 9.; Western Globe, Nov. 10, 1923, p. 8. Slightly different numbers and constituency-level stats given in Edmonton Bulletin, Dec. 11, 1920.
^"What B.C. Voted On", Edmonton Journal, October 21, 1920, p1
^"British Columbia Gives Overwhelming Majority for Government Control", Calgary Herald, October 21, 1920, p1
^"4 Provinces Give Dry Majority of 72,000— Manitoba Rural Ridings Overwhelm Wets of City by Huge Bone-Dry Vote", Winnipeg Evening Tribune, October 26, 1920, p1
^"Manitoba Result— Winnipeg Wet Majority Offset by Rural Vote", Montreal Gazette, October 26, 1920, p1
^"New Brunswick Votes Dry— Majority for Prohibition Over 20,000", Saskatoon (SK) Phoenix, July 12, 1920, p1
^"Prohibition Voted for in 4 Provinces— Verdict Against Importation of Intoxicating Liquors", Montreal Gazette, October 26, 1920, p1
^"In Saskatchewan— Late Figures Indicated Dry Majority of 10,000", Montreal Gazette, October 26, 1920, p1
Further reading
Noel, Janet (1995). Canada Dry: Temperance Crusades before Confederation. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN0-8020-0552-7.