In 1885, the association was affiliated to the
World Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WWCTU), of which body Lucas was the first president. The pledge of the BWTA was, "I promise by God's help to abstain from all intoxicating drinks, and to try to induce others to do the same." The association's internal organisation consisted of: • National Executive Committee: National President, Vice President, Secretary and Treasurer as well as representatives from County Unions • County Unions - to support branches in their areas and establish new ones • Branches (throughout Great Britain) and from 1879, an autonomous but affiliated BWTA
Scottish Christian Union. The departments of the association were: Organization; Speakers' Bureau; "Y" (Young Women's) B. W. T. A. ; Temperance Legions; Evangelistic; Bible Lessons and Study : Unfermented Wine at the Sacrament; Preventive; Social Purity; Social; Drawing-Room Meetings; Facts: Educational; Health and Hygiene; Adult Schools; High Schools and Private Schools; Legal; Brewster Sessions; Police Matrons; Women as Poor Law Guardians; Members of School Boards, etc.; Work Among Women Municipal Voters; Political; Literature and Press; Inebriate Women; Native Races; Traveling. In the year 1893-94, 1,500 meetings were held by members of the National Executive Committee, and 2,000 in all were reported to headquarters; 300 new societies were formed; 8,500,000 pages of literature were issued, including the organ, ''The Women's Signal'', which had a circulation of 16,271 per week. Temperance clubs worked to provide public drinking fountains, sometimes called a "
temperance fountain" which were often placed opposite public houses to provide alternatives to alcohol. In response to a call by Lady Somerset in 1896, the White Ribbon Children's club funded the construction of a fountain with a bronze portrait of a "
Cold Water Girl" mounted on a granite base. The fountain is now placed in the Eastern Victoria Gardens near to Victoria Embankment in London. During the World Wars, the branches and county unions set up kitchens, mobile canteens, recreation and refreshment rooms for military personnel. After a contentious annual meeting in 1893 during which Lady Somerset led the change in club policies to include the support for women's suffrage, the organization split. A new group was formed, the
Women's Total Abstinence Union (WTAU), which focused solely on temperance, electing former BWTA officers
Lucy Ann Brooks, Docwra, and Martha Holland as WTAU officers. The BWTA was re-named the National British Women’s Temperance Association and its honorary secretary was
Jane Aukland. The Association supports a whiteribbon (publishing) company, an industrial farm home, a retreat for inebriate women, St. Mary's Training Home for Girls Alpha House, a preventive and rescue home. A
Scottish Christian Union independent but affiliated to the British Women's Temperance Association was organised in 1876 -9, and had grown to 80,000 members, 332 branches by 1908. ==Activities==