Temperance Fountains |
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In downtown Washington, DC is a temperance fountain donated to the city in 1884 by Henry Cogswell, a San Francisco dentist and prohibition advocate (he is not known to have been a Prohibition Party candidate, however). It soon fell into disrepair, but survives to this day near its original location at Pennsylvania Avenue and 7th Street, NW. It was entered into the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. |
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Catholic Total Abstinence Fountain, PhiladelphiaThe large, ornate public fountain in West Fairmount Park was erected in 1876 by the Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America. It was restored by the City in 2016-17 at a cost of more than $600,000, using marble from the original quarry in Italy and granite from Maine. |
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Philadelphia Fountain SocietyIn addition to these two grand fountains, there are several smaller fountains and horse-watering troughs around the city which were erected by the Philadelphia Fountain Society. The Society still exists but did not respond to a 2020 enquiry. |
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Columbian Exposition Fountain (1893) Anna Gordon, a WCTU member and Superintendent of the Juvenile Department of the WWCTU, raised $1800 from children to construct a bronze fountain at the Chicago World's Fair. The design was of a little girl offering a cup of water. |
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Cogswell Fountain in Pawtucket, Rhode IslandAll across America people ridiculed and smashed Henry D. Cogswell’s fountains, but this one survives in downtown Pawtucket. To learn more, click here. |
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Tompkins Square Temperance Fountain,
Manhattan, New York
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Sarah ("Annie") Wittenmyer Fountian, Pottsville, PennsylvaniaA temperance fountain named for Sarah ("Annie") Wittenmyer is located in Pottsville, Pennsylvania. Wittenmyer was a social reformer and the first president of the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union. The Iowa Soldier's Orphan's Home in Davenport is named for her, as are several other community facilities there. |
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