“‘Gin Crow’ was a close cousin to Jim Crow, as Brendan Payne shows in this stimulating study of the complexities of religion, prohibition, and politics in the South from the late nineteenth century to the 1930s. Neglected religious wets, especially African Americans, get their say here, and southern prohibition’s connection to the rise of the Jim Crow system is deftly explained and deconstructed. An essential work for students of southern religion and politics.”
~Paul Harvey, Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Colorado and author of Christianity and Race in the American South: A History
“This is a fascinating book, one that should be of interest to scholars and students alike. Through clear, accessible prose, with an eye toward understudied movements and shifting alliances, Payne gives readers a new lens through which to see contestations over strong drink and the import of this struggle to the history of race and religion in the American South.”
~Aaron Griffith, assistant professor of history at Whitworth University and author of God's Law and Order: The Politics of Punishment in Evangelical America
“In Gin, Jesus, and Jim Crow, Brendan Payne offers a nuanced description of the motivations and activities of Black southerners who fought against prohibition, a fight they saw as one of their only opportunities to push back against the increasing tide of Jim Crow laws. The inclusion of voices long neglected by scholars marks an important addition to our understanding of the prohibition movement in general, and its role in the South in particular. Payne’s larger thesis that prohibition was intimately bound up in Jim Crow and that the former became less necessary as the latter took greater institutional hold is one that will guide research for many years to come. This is most definitely a work that should be widely read and discussed.”
~Michael Lewis, professor of sociology at Christopher Newport University and author of The Coming of Southern Prohibition: The Dispensary System and the Battle over Liquor in South Carolina, 1907–1915
“The main strength of this well-researched book is how Payne (North Greenville Univ.) views available sources ‘through the twin lenses of race and religion.’ . . . This is an important book.”
~CHOICE
“Brendan Payne’s Gin, Jesus, and Jim Crow makes a thoughtful and carefully researched intervention into the growing body of scholarship on southern prohibition and the increasingly nuanced historiography of liquor politics in the former Confederate states.”
~Journal of Southern History
“Brendan J. J. Payne's Gin, Jesus, and Jim Crow sheds new light on the pivotal role played by Black voters in the debate over liquor prohibition in the post-Reconstruction South. . . . Payne's account of the rise and fall of “Gin Crow” is carefully documented, engagingly written, and largely persuasive. Moreover, the author deserves credit for highlighting the careers of several Black ministers and political operatives . . . who have received comparatively little attention from scholars.”
~Journal of American History
“Creatively framed and carefully argued, Gin, Jesus, and Jim Crow convincingly demonstrates how the region’s anti-liquor campaigns—conceived of and led by white evangelical clergy—and subsequent enforcement regimes overlapped with the institutionalization of anti-Black policies. . . . By weaving together half a century of regional history, Payne has provided an effective roadmap for future scholarship.”
~American Historical Review