Library's roots are in a temperance group

In Quincy in the late 1870s, a little red ribbon helped to create our library. Red ribbons have been used to signal support for different organizations from temperance to anarchists, but more often they are associated with sobriety or politics than with reading.
The good ladies of the Women's Christian Temperance Union also played a part. The group formed May 28, 1877, in Quincy when seven women "profoundly impressed with the conviction of the necessity of temperance work" met at the home of Mrs. William Govert to organize. The club began its work with a request to the mayor and city council to enforce Sunday liquor laws, and it advocated a boycott of all grocers who had added the sale of intoxicants to their inventory.
By fall, the WCTU women were engaged in fundraisers and looking forward to creating a reading room for the public. They set aside the proceeds from a temperance meeting on Oct. 21, 1877, to furnish the reading room. This accomplished, they passed these resolutions: "Whereas, We the officers and members of the WCTU of Quincy, having fulfilled our agreement to the furnishing of the reading room; and Whereas, The same furnishing has been done for the benefit and use of the members of the Red Ribbon club of Quincy; therefore Resolved That we turn over to the officers and members of the Red Ribbon club all our interest in said furnishings, trusting that they may derive pleasure and profit therefrom, etc."
The Red Ribbon society was a small temperance society that grew exponentially when a charismatic speaker, Mr. J.C. Bontecue came to Quincy. Bontecue was traveling in Illinois and Iowa organizing local clubs. Letters received recommended him as "an earnest, sincere Reformer. ..." In Peoria he recruited over 4,000 people to join the Red Ribbon club and its women's branch, the White Ribbon club.
Mr. HiIbben of Peoria wrote to a Quincy friend that, "...his earnest, manly bearing soon won his way into the confidence and hearts of our people. Our city was then asleep and indifferent on the subject of intemperance, no movement of any kind having reached us to arouse us from our slumbers, but Mr. Bontecue's earnest, devoted unselfish labors in our midst awakened an enthusiasm upon the subject that has grown in extent and power until our city has been stirred throughout its length and breadth."
Such glowing reports from Peoria and Jacksonville and Warsaw and Keokuk, Iowa, resulted in an invitation to Bontecue to come work his magic in Quincy. On Dec. 18, 1877, a meeting was held at the old courthouse. The room filled to standing-room-only capacity to hear his story. Bontecue said that he had previously been to Quincy as a working man, and that "eight or nine years ago this city was the turning point" in his life. For years before that he had been a drinking man wandering up and down the river.
Bontecue went on to explain the system the Red Ribbon club offered to help men stop drinking. Only men over 18 years old who had at one time been a drinker were allowed to join. The creation of a reading room was an important part of the success of the club's system. It offered "a resort where young men, who have no place except saloons to pass their idle time, can enjoy themselves." He told stories of heavy drinkers reformed by the system and announced that at the end of the meeting interested men could sign a pledge card.
On successive nights, Bontecue held meetings and elaborated the case for temperance using his own life story as an example of the evils of drink and speaking at length of the causes of drunkenness. He castigated the customs of the "rich and educated classes [which] were to a large degree responsible for drunkenness" and argued that the working classes were more than others interested in temperance, saying "the mechanic, the laborer cannot afford drinking. The stimulant does them harm, unfits them for work and if persisted finally carries them to the bottom of the hill."
The Red Ribbon club rented successively larger lecture spaces as its numbers grew. Members rented a three-story building on Maine Street and the first floor of A. Wickey & Co.'s agricultural house on Fourth Street as a meeting hall. The WCTU women continued their support, hosting a lunch for Red Ribbon members on New Year's Day to encourage their continued sobriety.
In January 1878, the club officially organized as the Quincy Reform Club and adopted the constitution and by-laws used nationally by the Red Ribbon organization.
In the election of officers, Bontecue nominated Thomas H. Brooker, who was elected president. The club then passed a resolution of thanks to the WCTU for causing Bontecue to come to Quincy, and took up a collection for the nearly $300 in debt acquired.
At Bontecue's last lecture in the Quincy Opera House, a crowd estimated at 2,500 attended. The club itself remained successful but continued to accrue debt. The Reading Room of the Red Ribbon Society was open for seven months before it closed as a financial failure. It was decided to turn over operation of the reading room to another organization in order to free all Red Ribbon money for temperance work. Before all of the books, contents and furniture could be given, a new organization had to be created.
The Free Reading-room Association was then organized and received its charter Sept. 6, 1878, with Sarah Denman as president. And, at least in part, it is from Denman and this group that eventually would come the library we know today and the beautiful building at the corner of Fourth and Maine streets. Thanks to a little red ribbon.
Beth Lane is the author of "Lies Told Under Oath," the story of the 1912 Pfanschmidt murders near Payson, and executive director of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County.
Sources:
"Red Ribbon," The Quincy Daily Herald, Dec. 19, 1877
"Red Ribbon," The Quincy Daily Herald, Jan. 8, 1878
"Red Ribbon Reform," The Quincy Whig, Jan. 10, 1878
"Temperance," The Quincy Daily Herald, Dec. 20, 1877
"The Old Reporter Lights his Pipe," The Quincy Daily Herald, Dec. 1, 1923
"The Praise Meeting," The Quincy Daily Whig, June 10, 1894
"The Red Ribbon," The Quincy Daily Herald, Nov. 18, 1877
"The Red Ribbon," The Quincy Daily Herald, Dec. 23, 1877
"The Women's' Christian Temperance" Quincy Daily Herald, Dec. 28, 1877
"Warsaw Notes," Quincy Whig, Nov. 1, 1877
"Wearing the Ribbon," Quincy Daily Herald, Oct. 31, 1877





