At the
first annual convention of the National WCTU, held at
Cleveland,
Ohio, in 1874, a committee was appointed to consider the establishment of a paper as the organ of the union. This committee consisted of
Annie Turner Wittenmyer,
Pennsylvania;
Susan J. Swift Steele,
Wisconsin; Susan A. Gifford,
Massachusetts;
Elizabeth Eunice Smith Marcy,
Illinois; Emma Janes,
Oakland, California, and
Mary Coffin Johnson,
New York. Being unable to formulate definite plans before the close of the convention, the committee was given full power to act. At the
second annual convention, held at
Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1875, Mrs. E. E. Marcy, secretary of the Committee on Publication Interests, reported that, after overcoming the various hindrances incident to such an enterprise, the project of publishing an official organ had been inaugurated the previous June at New York. The paper was called ''The Woman's Temperance Union'', and six numbers had been issued up to the time of the convention. Wittenmyer, as chairman of the committee, was the active publisher, with
Jennie Fowler Willing as editor and Johnson and Frances Willard as contributing editors. This report included resolutions drafted by the Committee on Publication Interests, one of which was as follows:— :
Whereas, The paper published by the National Temperance Union as its organ is one of the strongest bonds to hold together our interests in separate localities, devoted as it is to our work, :
Resolved, That we, as delegates, pledge ourselves a certain number of subscribers in our several states, and in case of failure, to raise money to cover the amount subscribed. It was recorded that "much discussion followed", and an amendment was adopted eliminating the financial responsibility on the part of the states, but there was a generous pledging of subscriptions,
Maine leading off with a pledge of . Johnson became the publisher at this time, with
Mary Towne Burt as her assistant, and, later, her successor. Willing continued as editor until the
third annual convention in
Newark, New Jersey in 1876, when
Margaret E. Winslow was elected editor, with Mrs. S. K. Bolton, Ohio; Mrs. Helen E. Brown, New York;
Mary Torrans Lathrap,
Michigan;
Julia Colman, New York; Willing, Illinois; Johnson, New York, and Frances Willard, Illinois, as contributing editors. ==
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