Donald Trump, our President-elect, does not drink. This article was written before the election. Some of the anecdotes are interesting. From
The Spectator:
The 45th president will not be the first to weigh up drinking
options. History indicates a social sip has been a pastime for many of
the previous 44 incumbents, even those unfortunate enough to serve
during Prohibition. Some have abstained, of course, and drinking less
but better is the key – we wouldn’t condone a whiskey while that already
harum-scarum finger hovers over a nuke button. So if they do need a
nip, we hope the president can at least set a precedent for intelligent
imbibing.
The founding fathers were less than moderate, they filled their
bellies with the fire and courage of alcohol. We commonly associate
early colonial anger over British oppression with the 1773 Tea Act, but
the taxes on sugar and the subsequent impact on East Coast rum
production wound the revolutionaries up in equal measure. George
Washington was particularly miffed, the first president needing the
molasses to sweeten his beer, but in lieu of rum he distilled his own
whiskey.
Then there was Thomas Jefferson, who poured more money than sense
into wine and John Adams who substituted his breakfast apple juice for
cider. Even the new constitution was created in the pub, the original 55
signatories celebrating by getting wasted on 54 bottles of Madeira, 60
bottles of claret, eight bottles of whiskey, 22 bottles of port, eight
bottles of hard cider, 12 beers and seven bowls of alcoholic punch large
enough that, according one observer, “ducks could swim in them”. The
bill must have been massive.
For nearly 100 years the White House was awash with booze, from James
Maddison who championed champagne, to James Monroe whose oenophilic
over-spending helped buoy the burgundy market. Some took it too far,
Martin Van Buren drank so doggedly he was known as ‘Blue Whisky Van’ and
Franklin Pierce over-stepped the mark when he said: ‘There is nothing
left… but to get drunk’.
True Abraham Lincoln barely touched the stuff, but he was the son of a
distiller, owned a grocery shop and recognised the economic value of
alcohol. Perhaps unsurprisingly then, a backlash ensued during the
second half of the 19th century, an era peppered with presidents
influenced by a strengthening Prohibition movement. A tug of war between
tipsy and temperance. Ulysses Grant who could spend $1,800 on champagne
during one dinner was succeeded by Rutherford B Hayes who banned booze
from the White House. Grover Cleveland too often in cups as a beer
swiller, was tellingly followed by Benjamin Harrison who was dry.
As the 20th century turned, temperance claimed the victory with a
total ban, but Prohibition proved a daft decision, crippling the
economy, damaging health and only facilitating the organisation of
crime. Interestingly President Woodrow Wilson vetoed the Prohibition Act
in 1919, so we can’t blame him, but three more presidents suffered.
Among them Warren Harding who secretly sipped scotch on the golf course
and Herbert Hoover who was talked into destroying his wonderful wine
collection to honour the regulations. Sanity would be restored by
Franklyn D Roosevelt in 1933, who ended the ban so could enjoy his
beloved martini, shaken each day with his own special set of silver
shakers. (Read more.)
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2 comments:
The current President elect does not partake in any alcoholic beverages. The first sentence of this article could set off another stream of mendacities against him.
Okay, I made certain to emphasize that in the beginning.
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