The distillery of Deacon Giles seen as the work of the Devil. Coloured wood-engraving after G. B. Cheever, ca. 1835.

  • Cheever, George B. (George Barrell), 1807-1890.
Date:
[1835?]
Reference:
25753i
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About this work

Description

"Cheever joined the temperance reform movement in 1833; two years later he attained national prominence with his enormously popular temperance tract, 'Enquire at Amos Giles' distillery'. The essay, cast in the form of a dream, was a thinly disguised portrayal of John Stone, a well-liked Unitarian deacon in Salem (Mass.) who owned a distillery. Cheever’s neighbors were outraged by his slander: he received a public horsewhipping, was sued and convicted for libel, and was sentenced to thirty days in jail. He immediately became a cause celebre among the nation's temperance reformers and abolitionists….and a popular reform hero"--American national biography

Publication/Creation

[New York City?] : J.S. Redfield, [1835?]

Physical description

1 print : wood engraving, with blue wash ; border 16 x 24.8 cm

Lettering

Lettering on the sign above the distillery counting room reads "Deacon Giles's counting room, bibles for sale". Lettering on the distillery barrels reads "Dea Giles distiller" "N. E. Rum" "sickness" "poverty" "death" "hell"

Reference

Wellcome Collection 25753i

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