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Lansing is Dry!
Here, we see a very thirsty camel. Sadly, he finds no relief in Lansing – or, indeed, anywhere in Ingham County, Michigan.
The above image comes from a post card, post marked “May 1910.” One month earlier – on April 4, 1910 – Michigan held a major election. Ingham was one of thirty-six Michigan counties to include a local prohibition option on the ballot. It passed. Ingham then became a “dry county,” where alcoholic beverages were illegal. Such local option elections were quite common in the decade before 1920, when national prohibition began.
“Awful Two Year Drouth Hits Ingham County!”
…so read the headline of the April 5, 1910 State Republican. The Republican reported that fifty-two Ingham County saloons would be out of business for at least two years. At that point, the local option prohibition would be subject to a new vote.
That new vote did occur in 1912, and this time, the “dry” forces lost. It proved to be a short-lived defeat. Ingham again went dry in 1914, and voters renewed prohibition in 1916. That same year, Michigan voters approved statewide prohibition, which went into effect in 1918. The Michigan Supreme Court declared the law unconstitutional in 1919, but, this “wet” victory was short lived. An amendment to the U.S. constitution brought national prohibition into effect in 1920. It remained in effect until 1933, when the amendment was repealed. With a few exceptional years aside, alcohol was illegal in Ingham County for over two decades.
“Is Owosso as Dry as This?”
The back of our “camel post card” proves as interesting as the front. The card is signed by “Gust. Hass.” of 817 Pine Street, Lansing. He addresses his card to John Metzger of 1325 W. Stewart Street, Owosso. He writes:
Well, old boy, how are you coming along? Is Owosso as dry as this? If it is, I am sorry for you. All we can drink here is soft drinks, but that don’t taste like the real thing.
Your old friend,
Gust. Hass.
In fact, Owosso WAS as dry as Lansing. Owosso sits in Shiawasse County, and Shiawassee voters also opted to enact prohibition in 1910.
Some “Dry” Statistics
Ingham and Shiawassee voters were hardly alone in embracing prohibition. On April 5, 1910, the State Republican reported that twenty Michigan counties voted to go dry. The Republican also noted that an additional twenty were dry already. Following the April 1910 election, then, alcohol was illegal in forty of Michigan’s eighty-three counties (For the record, those counties were: Alcona, Allegan, Antrim, Arenac, Barry, Benzie, Branch, Calhoun, Cass, Charlevoix, Clare, Clinton, Eaton, Emmett, Genesee, Gladwin, Gratiot, Hillsdale, Ingham, Ionia, Isabella, Jackson, Kalkaska, Lapeer, Lenawee, Livingston, Midland, Missaukee, Newaygo, Oceana, Ogemaw, Osceola, Oscoda, Otsego, Presque Isle, Sanilac, Shiawassee, St. Joseph, Tuscola and Van Buren.)
The 1910 Republican article includes these other interesting facts:
*Van Buren was the first Michigan county to enact local option prohibition. It had been dry since 1890, and Van Buren voters renewed countywide prohibition yet again in 1910.
*Ten of the counties voting on local option prohibition were already dry and voting on renewal. Of these ten counties, Oakland and Wexford were the only two that opted to go from dry to wet.
*While much of the lower peninsula was dry after the April 1910 election, the entire upper peninsula remained wet.
Sources Consulted
The “camel post card” comes from the Jerry Lawler Collection, which is housed at the Archives of Michigan. The Jerry Lawler Collection contains many post cards with depictions of Lansing. Items span the entire twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.
Other sources include:
The Story of Reo Joe by Lisa M. Fine
“How A Mayor Helped Crush Lansing’s Spirits” by Robert Garrett. City Pulse. Lansing, Michigan. August 23, 2006.
Out of the Wilderness: An Illustrated History of Greater Lansing by Justin Kestenbaum
Rumrunning and the Roaring Twenties: Prohibition on the Michigan-Ontario Waterway by Philip P. Mason.
The State Republican. Lansing, Michigan. April 4 and April 5, 1910.



















