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132:, held in St. Louis in 1904. Her incessant warfare against narcotics was effectively promoted by her skill in authorship and pictorial illustration. She wrote a series of pamphlets, presenting in telling form the testimonies of businessmen and physicians as to the effect of the cigarette habit in spoiling a business career and undermining health.
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Her last message to the women of the St. Louis WCTU, a few days before she died, was typical of her nature: "Give the women my love and tell them to push on." Ingalls died
February 9, 1918, after a continued illness of almost three years.
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By appointment of successive governors of
Missouri she served on the State Board of Charities for many years, and was one of the local commissioners for the National and World's WCTU exhibit at the
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in 1879, Ingalls becoming secretary. Later, she was made vice-president-at-large of the
Missouri State WCTU, a position which she filled for 11 years when
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A Woman of the
Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life
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in all forms. She was assisted in her work by State superintendents, and the results were shown by the enactment of laws in nearly every
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was its president. She was then elected president of the St. Louis
District WCTU, and was continued in that office for 27 years.
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She served as superintendent of the Anti-Narcotics
Department of the National WCTU. Her special mission was the eradication of
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34:(August 24, 1848 – February 9, 1918) was an American temperance activist. Active in local and national activities of the
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is of such great importance that other things seem to sink almost into insignificance." -Eliza B. Ingalls
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Interested in temperance work early in life, she was admitted by special dispensation into the
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She received her early education in the local public schools, later taking a college course in
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337:"Mrs. Eliza B. Ingalls, for Many Years a National Worker, Summoned Home, by Nellie G. Burger"
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346:. Vol. 45–46 (Public domain ed.). National Woman's Christian Temperance Union.
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Eliza ("Lide") Buckley was born at Cherry Hill Farm, 10 miles (16 km) south of
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WCTU for 27 years (1891-1918); and as
Superintendent of the National WCTU's Anti-
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Writing Out My Heart: Selections from the
Journal of Frances E. Willard, 1855-96
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Contemporaries whom she entertained at her home included
Frances Willard,
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Standard encyclopedia of the alcohol problem., Vol. III, Downing-Kansas
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This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
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This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
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This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
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Willard, Frances
Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893).
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In 1880, she married Fred H. Ingalls, a merchant in St. Louis.
230:. Westerville, Ohio: American Issue Publishing Co. p. 1324
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Cherrington, Ernest Hurst (1926). "INGALLS, ELIZA BUCKLEY..".
93:"Work against other narcotics has gone steadily on, but the
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Cigarette Wars: The Triumph of the Little White Slaver
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Presidents of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union
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National Woman's Christian Temperance Union (1918).
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367:(Public domain ed.). Moulton. p.
78:International Organisation of Good Templars
38:(WCTU), Ingalls served as President of the
412:. University of Illinois Press. p.
16:American temperance activist (1848-1918)
450:Works by or about Eliza Buckley Ingalls
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102:The WCTU was organized in St. Louis by
444:Woman of the Century/Eliza B. Ingalls
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404:Willard, Frances Elizabeth (1995).
121:prohibiting the sale of tobacco to
36:Woman's Christian Temperance Union
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500:American temperance activists
383:Tate, Cassandra (June 2000).
344:: A Journal of Social Welfare
238:– via Internet Archive.
130:Louisiana Purchase Exposition
510:Tobacco in the United States
274:Willard & Livermore 1893
259:Willard & Livermore 1893
389:. Oxford University Press.
164:wrote Ingalls' obituary in
80:(IOGT) at 14 years of age.
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46:Department for 10 years.
505:Activists from St. Louis
50:Early life and education
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108:Clara Cleghorn Hoffman
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25:A Woman of the Century
144:Eliza Buckley Ingalls
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32:Eliza Buckley Ingalls
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150:Lady Henry Somerset
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119:State in the Union
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442:Works related to
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396:978-0-19-514061-3
154:Anna Adams Gordon
23:Portrait from a "
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469:Biography portal
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319:Attribution
234:15 February
479:Categories
172:References
286:Tate 2000
56:St. Louis
44:Narcotics
40:St. Louis
60:Missouri
452:at the
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