How did religion help get prohibition in america in the 1920s?
The Temperance Movement attempted to reduce the amount of alcohol consumed within a community or society in general — and even to prohibit its production and consumption entirely. The Woman’s Christian Temperance Union is a prominent example of a religion-based temperance movement. Most of its main supporters (in all countries) have been women, often as part of what some describe as feminism[ref?]. The strong temperance movements of the early 20th century found support from women who were opposed to the domestic violence associated with alcohol abuse, and the large share of household income it could consume, which was especially burdensome to the low-income working class. Between 1830 and 1840, most temperance organizations began to argue that the only way to prevent drunkenness was to eliminate the consumption of alcohol. The Temperance Society became the Abstinence Society. The Independent Order of Good Templars, the Sons of Temperance, the Templars of Honor and Temperance, the Anti