We feature each week Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books
“WANTED, A BEAUTIFUL BARMAID – Women Behind the Bar in New
Zealand, 1830-1976” by Susan Upton
(Victoria University Press, $NZ50)
Forgive me for presenting you
with a challenge like this, but consider the following paragraph, with which
Susan Upton opens Chapter Two of Wanted,
a Beautiful Barmaid, her informative and thoroughly researched history of
the connection between women and the sale of alcohol in New Zealand.
Upton is here considering New
Zealand attitudes to barmaids in the late nineteenth century:
“Barmaids, or ‘hebes’ as they were colloquially called, first worked in
this country in the goldfield pubs. Respectable New Zealand was shocked to hear
of publicans’ deliberately hiring female, in preference to male, bar staff and
advertising them as an attraction of the House. Barmaids were contracted to
serve drinks and in some instances dance with the miners. The temperance
movement believed barmaids were employed because of their sexuality: their job
being to entice men into the bar and, once there, to persuade the men to buy
expensive drinks and to stay there later than they would normally. To
prohibitionists the occupation of ‘barmaid’ epitomised the greed and immorality
of the liquor trade. The employment of barmaids caused the gender of bar staff
to become an issue in the liquor licensing debate inside and outside parliament….”
(p.38)
If you are like me, then at once
there will spring to your mind stereotypical imagers of hatchet-faced wowsers,
shocked by both drink and irregular sexual relations, and attempting to shut
down people’s harmless fun. And then, immediately, the counter-thought will
come. Actually, the anti-drink campaigners were quite right to see something
devious in the publicans’ hiring practices with bar staff, and they were quite
right to see the connection between sex and the sale of alcohol. And, though it
still hasn’t percolated to the general public consciousness, all serious
historians now agree that in their campaigns, the temperance people had a real
case and were addressing a real social evil. In a way, it is an evil that is
still with us. Are (legitimate) current worries about adolescents’
binge-drinking, or for that matter the harm done by illicit drugs, all that far
removed from fears about destructive drinking habits in colonial New Zealand?
Susan Upton’s book shows a fine
awareness of both the legitimacy of the temperance case, and yet the odd
attitudes towards drinking that were in part encouraged by the temperance movement.
As her introduction tells us – and as most New Zealanders have long since
forgotten - there was a half-century in which women were forbidden by law to
serve alcohol in New Zealand pubs, and were actively discouraged from becoming
hotel licensees.
Not that Pakeha New Zealand was
like this to begin with.
In the wild early days (Chapter
1) of the 1830s and 1840s, a largely male Pakeha population drank itself silly.
A staggering 4,000 barrels of spirits were imported into New Zealand annually
in the 1830s, when the Pakeha population was at most a few thousand. At the
time of British colonisation (after 1840) women were entitled to be licensees
just as men were; but very few took up the option. Until 1883, women who
married lost all their property to their husbands, hence some single women were
disinclined become licensees if they had to pass their licence to a husband
should they marry. However, a male publican’s widow was allowed to retain her
husband’s licence. From the earliest days, drink was commonly associated with
vice and prostitution. To counter this, says Upton, many women licensees worked
hard to build an image of respectability and were happy for their customers to
call them “Ma” or “Mum” or “Mrs”. The attitude of male drinkers to a woman licensee
was often something akin to that of naughty little boys to a stern but
affectionate mother.
The extensive employment of
barmaids began (Chapter 2) in the goldfields at the time of the Otago and West
Coast rushes. Goldfields were very masculine places. At the height of the gold
rushes, there were only 30 females to every hundred males on the fields.
Indeed, in the 1860s and 1870s, in the 20-to-39 age groups, men in the whole of
New Zealand outnumbered women more than two times over. Prostitution and various
forms of the sex trade flourished in such conditions. Barmaids during gold
rushes were specifically employed as an attraction for male drinkers to ogle.
Though the gold rushes were long over by the 1880s, when temperance and
prohibition began to be debated, it was still this image of sexual temptresses,
which the temperance movement used in its campaign against barmaids. Susan
Upton notes that there genuinely was prostitution associated with pubs and
taverns, but she also notes that (a.) most barmaids were also general-duty
servants in hotels; (b.) a high proportion of barmaids were members of the
licensee’s family (wife; daughters); and (c.) a high proportion of barmaids
found marriage partners among their customers. In other words, they were generally
regarded by local communities as “respectable” people.
It was between the 1880s and the
First World War (Chapters 3, 4 and 5) that the prohibition movement was at the
height of its influence. Although the gold rushes were over, it was still to
some extent a frontier society where there were real problems with drunkenness
and drunkenness-associated violence. Susan Upton notes (p.72) that by 1879, New
Zealanders drank annually 2.12 gallons of hard spirits per head of
population - meaning the drinking part of the population was drinking much
more than that. In 1878 in Christchurch there were only 5 dentists and 5
chemists; but there were 41 pubs and 6 breweries.
Women were a major part of the
temperance debate at both ends of the argument, with the Women’s Christian
Temperance Union (WCTU) pitted against barmaids and female licensees. WCTU
women were angered by such advertisements as this 1893 one in the Lyttelton Times, with its implication
that looks alone counted in such employment: “Wanted, Stylish Barmaid for first-class hotel; if suitable applicant,
previous experience not necessary.” (quoted p.81) William Fox and others
agitated for the outlawing of barmaids under the age of 30. Yet at the same
time there was still a strong strand of public opinion that believed women were
a civilising influence on male drinkers, and that their presence in bars was to
be encouraged.
Under the new Licensing Act of
1881, liquor licences were allocated by local elected boards. This meant that
temperance and prohibition campaigners could be elected to licensing boards and
slow down the rate at which licences were granted. In
1888, a loophole was closed when married women were no
longer able to take out licences in their husband’s name, when they themselves
were running a licensed hotel. But the closure of this loophole was often
honoured more in the breach than in the observance, as many boards gave
licences to women of good character anyway.
Nevertheless, the lobby against
drinking was growing, a sure sign that uncivilised drinking and associated
behaviour were still worrying communities. One argument which members of the
WCTU advanced for the outlawing of barmaids was that it would make more young
women available for domestic service and therefore solve “the servant problem”.
Such an argument would seem to reinforce the idea that many prohibitionists
were middle class people, interfering in the social lives of their social
inferiors. Yet as John Stenhouse and others have noted, this notion is wide of
the mark. In working class suburbs like Christchurch’s Sydenham, the backbone
of the prohibition movement was working-class women, fearful of their husbands
drinking away the family’s income.
The rise of prohibition as a
popular mass movement worried hoteliers who, in 1890, founded the Licensed
Victuallers’ Association (LVA) specifically as a form of self-defence. The
propaganda war over licensing became intense. Often very rough tactics were
used when female licensees and prohibitionists clashed. Susan Upton gives
(p.106) anecdotes of a female licensee luring a prospective audience from a
temperance lecture by offering alternative attractions in her pub; and of
another licensee attempting to have a teetotaller member of the Invercargill
licensing board convicted of sly-grogging. She also quotes examples of rival
stereotyping from the two side of the liquor debate:
“The language The Prohibitionist used denigrated women working in
the liquor trade. If they wrote about a landlady they would sarcastically
italicise ‘lady’, or bracket it with a remark ‘(very much ladies)’. In one
article they presented the stereotype of the female publican. ‘This lady
who is an orthodox landlady in that she is buxom, red faced, and not
overweighted with refinement.’ On the other side, The Observer and NZ
Truth supported the liquor industry and depicted wowsers, in print and
cartoons, as priggish spoilsports and old women. They copied arguments used by The
Bulletin in Australia, frequently pointing out that ‘people will not be
made virtuous by an Act of parliament.’ ” (p.90)
Regardless of the propaganda,
conditions in which female bar staff worked were often unsavoury. A 1913
enquiry found that the New Criterion Hotel in Christchurch was, in effect,
cover for a brothel, with barmaids encouraged to serve men champagne in their
bedrooms. There were also more routine perils that faced women behind the bar:
“All bar staff, male and female, had to cope with violence both verbal
and physical. Although men were said to tone down their language if a woman was
present, swearing was the most common form of assault against a barmaid. If the
culprit was found guilty the penalty was severe. A barmaid in the private bar
of the Albert Hotel in Wellington had a man thrown out for using filthy
language. He returned and went to punch her when she came out from behind the
bar to remonstrate. She was saved by a customer grabbing his fist. There was
the fear that asking someone to leave would cause a fight, although regular
customers frequently came to the rescue of ‘their’ barmaid…” (p.102)
When laws
were passed to prevent barmaids serving after 11 pm, they were seen as
protecting working women. Yet not all WCTU women were anti-barmaid and some saw
the whole issue of attempting to have barmaids outlawed as a distracting side
issue to the great cause of limiting or forbidding the sale of liquor itself.
It should also be remembered that there was nothing peculiar to New Zealand in
the campaign against barmaids. The employment of barmaids actually was actually
outlawed in the USA and Canada at the time the issue was being debated in New
Zealand.
Finally, on 12 November 1910,
barmaids were outlawed in New Zealand by act of parliament. The move was fully
supported by the LVA, which wanted to clean up its image in fear of the rising
prohibition vote, and to deprive prohibitionists of a useful propaganda tool
linking sex and booze.
For fifty years, then, from 1910
to 1961 (Chapters 6 and 7), and in a move largely supported by male-dominated
trade unions, no new barmaids could be employed. Those who were working in
1910, at the time the new act was passed, could continue working, so long as
they were listed on a register that was set up in 1911. Some younger women
found dodges to get on the register, and in some country areas the register was
simply ignored. Even so, the net result of the legislation was that it was just
a smaller but hardy group of aged barmaids who soldiered on. Now the
stereotypical New Zealand image of a barmaid became that of a middle-aged or
elderly woman who had the authority to control drinkers and calm rowdy
behaviour.
The absence of female bar staff
hastened the introduction of six o’clock closing, in 1917, at a time when the
First World War meant a greater absence of men to serve drinks. The whole
liquor trade suffered a major downturn in the depression of the 1930s, when
most New Zealand males simply couldn’t afford to drink as prodigiously as they
once had. New Zealand drinking habits changed once again during the Second
World War when, only partly influenced by the habits of American servicemen
stationed here, more women began to drink in public bars, from which it had
hitherto been customary to banish them. In 1948, it became illegal to not serve
women in all bars, but convention on the whole kept women to lounge bars and
out of the public bars. There was another major change in 1952, when the law at
last allowed women (married or unmarried) to hold liquor licences once again. Pub
owners now feared a loss of custom to newly licensed clubs and restaurants.
There was a rush to make bars more salubrious by carpeting them etc. and once
again there was the argument that women were a good civilising influence on
male drinkers.
“By the
mid 1950s some hoteliers began to prepare for the end of 6 o’clock closing and
view women as potential customers. There was talk of ‘civilised drinking’, with
lounge bars where men and women could sit at tables and chairs to be served
alcohol.” (p.150)
So at last, after fifty years,
barmaids were legalised again in 1961, in a quiet parliamentary debate that
caused little controversy. Thus much had the power of the temperance and
prohibition movements faded since the beginning of the century.
However (Chapter 8) it was not
really until after the introduction of extended drinking hours in 1967 and the
abolition of the “6 o’clock swill”, that many new barmaids were employed, and
even then they had to be a minimum of 25 year of age. There was still much
resistance from hotel workers’ unions to the over-employment of women in hotels,
just as there was much public resistance to women serving drinks in public
bars. The tradition continued of men wanting a fully male drinking environment.
The new licensing of taverns underlined this, with the new breed of “booze
barns” in the 1960s and 1970s. These were often centres of old-fashioned
masculine rough-house. For all that, attitudes changed gradually. By the late
1970s, gender discrimination in the workplace was made illegal. There were
attempts to de-genderise language and to promote gender-neutral terms such as
“bar staff” and “bartenders”. But as Susan Upton’s very last pages clearly
show, you cannot separate sex from the selling of liquor, and the barmaids
Upton interviewed see themselves as giving a “performance” for male customers.
This should be the end of this
informative history, except that Susan Upton’s conclusion shows that public
drinking is still a problem in New Zealand. She writes:
“Many of the barmaids I interviewed who started working in the 1960s
were appalled by what they see as a more destructive society today: Ladies’
nights, poor manners, women drinking too much, vandalism, blocked toilets and
obscenities scrawled in lipstick on mirrors. Some felt lowering the drinking
age to 18 in 1999 had made matters worse.” (p.180)
So the problematic story of women
and booze continues in New Zealand.
I have purposely written this
notice in the form of a summary rather than a commentary for a very simple
reason. Wanted, a Beautiful Barmaid
is solidly researched (60 pages of notes, bibliography and index), agreeably
written, well-illustrated and nuanced in its interpretations. Upton does not
take sides in the alcohol-versus-prohibition debates but simply notes their
tactics, justifications, appeal and impact. More than anything, though, the
book tells me that there will always be debates over the sale and conditions of
sale of liquor. It may have a focus on women, but its central impact is to
recapitulate the whole history of licensing in New Zealand. Because of this, it
is a book that appeals by its deployment of facts, and it is these I have
summarised.
No comments:
Post a Comment