In 1834, the first recorded temperance meeting was held in the
Bay of Islands (Northland). The public meeting was led by the Methodist Mission staff in Mangungu on the
Hokianga River. Beginning in the 1860s, many
Non-conformist churches encouraged
abstinence among their congregations, and numerous temperance societies were established throughout the country. Despite the efforts of the temperance movement, the rate of convictions for drunkenness remained constant in New Zealand. New Zealand temperance organisations as of 1885 – separate from clubs centred in a church or mission station - included: •
Independent Order of Rechabites (also known as the Sons and Daughters of Rechab), primarily located in
Auckland (established 1863) •
Band of Hope Union (established 1863), first a City Band of Hope in 1859 in Auckland held in the home of E. Tremain then moved to a schoolroom on Hobson Street under the sponsorship of Richard Archur and F. Battley; after two other Bands formed in the area, the Auckland Union was established in 1865. •
Independent (later International) Order of Good Templars (estab. 1872), with the
Temperance Herald published out of
Dunedin. •
Sons and Daughters of Temperance (established 1871) first in
Dunedin; by 1887 a National New Zealand Division was established, granting charters to new lodges. In 1885 an American temperance evangelist,
Mary Greenleaf Clement Leavitt of Boston, arrived in New Zealand as the first World
Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) missionary. She started in
Auckland where her message for women's leadership in protection of the home was widely appreciated, and the first chapter of what became the New Zealand Women's Christian Temperance Union. She traveled throughout New Zealand, including to
Invercargill where a local WCTU chapter had already begun under the leadership of Eliza Ann Palmer (Mrs. Charles W.) Brown. Leavitt formed eight more unions in the five months she was in New Zealand, and she left the rest of the organizing of local chapters—a total of 15 by the time of the first national convention in 1886—to
Anne Ward of
Wellington. Leavitt carried with her the World WCTU's Polyglot Petition and gathered 4004 signatures to add to what ultimately became nearly eight million signatures calling for world prohibition, freedom from drugs and the end to human trafficking. The NZ WCTU became a beacon for women's rights and protection of children throughout the world, and in New Zealand became an important organising arm for political reform at the municipal level as well as
women's right to vote at the national level. In 1886, a national body called the New Zealand Alliance for Suppression and Abolition of the Liquor Traffic was formed, with
Sir William Fox as the founding president, pushing for control of the liquor trade as a democratic right. Early in 1886, arrangements were made for T. W. Glover, a lecturer from the
United Kingdom Alliance, to conduct prohibition missions in various New Zealand centres. On 1 March 1886, at the Rechabite Hall, Wellington, 30 delegates – representing Auckland, Nelson, Hawke's Bay, Woodville, Canterbury, New Plymouth, Dunedin, Wellington, Alexandra (Otago), Invercargill, Greymouth, Masterton, the Blue Ribbon Union, the Good Templars Lodge, the Rechabite Lodge, and the Wellington Alliance met, to establish a union of the temperance alliances in New Zealand. This conference formed and drafted a constitution for the New Zealand Alliance for the Suppression of the Liquor Traffic and the following officers were elected: president, Sir
William Fox; sixteen vice-presidents, including
David Goldie, Hori Ropiha, Sir
Harry Atkinson,
Leonard Isitt, and Sir
Robert Stout; executive committee, F. G. Ewington,
Edward Withy, George Winstone, H. J. Le Bailey, J. Elkin, Dr C. Knight, John Waymouth, and R. Neal. Henry Field (Nelson) became the first general secretary and T. W. Glover the first paid organiser. The conference adopted the United Kingdom Alliance's (1853) declaration of principles. Towards the end of the 19th century, it became apparent that problems associated with settlement, such as
larrikinism and drunkenness, were growing in society. Increasing
urbanisation heightened public awareness of the gap between social aspirations and reality of the young colony. Generalisations from newspapers, visiting speakers & politicians in the 1890s allowed development of large public overreaction and fervour to the magnitude of the problem of alcohol. ==Political action==