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- 🌾 Who was Carrie Nation?
🌾 Who was Carrie Nation?
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Good morning, Wichita!
Great to see everyone who was able to make it to the Wichita Life Dinner Club last night! From what I heard, everyone enjoyed their time at the various tables and it was great to meet so many of you at The Arcade after.
Let's get to it!
- Landon Huslig
p.s. New the the Update? Don’t like the deep dives? Let us know what you think!

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Who was Carrie Nation? 🪓

125 Years (and 18 days) ago, Carrie Nation smashed a bar and Wichita is still talking about it.
If you’ve walked around downtown Wichita lately, you may have noticed a very intense woman permanently holding a hatchet outside a champagne bar.
No, that’s not performance art.
That’s Carrie Nation, and her statue sits right outside The Workroom / Bubbles Champagne Bar at Eaton Place, at the corner of St. Francis and Douglas near Naftzger Park.
This placement feels intentional.
🕰️ The Day Wichita Entered History
On December 27, 1900, Carrie Nation walked into a Wichita bar and smashed her way into American history.
"Donkey bed mate of Satan!" - Carrie to bartenders before smashing it up
Armed with something (usually rocks, not actually a hatchet in 1900 because she didn’t start using a hatchet until 1901) and an unshakable moral certainty, she destroyed bottles, barrels, and kegs in protest of alcohol, an act that would become her trademark across Kansas and beyond.
This moment helped cement Wichita’s unexpected role in one of the most dramatic chapters of the temperance movement.
“The temperance movement is a social movement promoting temperance or total abstinence from consumption of alcoholic beverages.” - Wikipedia
🪓 Who was Carrie Nation?

Carrie Nation (age 54 at the time of her smashing in Wichita) was a temperance activist, reformer, and one of the most polarizing figures of her era. She was 6 feet tall which might have helped her intimidate some bartenders.
She believed alcohol was destroying families and communities, and she didn’t write letters or stage quiet protests. She showed up with a hatchet and made her point very, very clear.
Her bar smashing crusades made national headlines, landed her in jail more than once, and turned her into a cultural lightning rod. Some saw her as a hero. Others saw her as pure chaos.
History tends to agree on one thing - she was impossible to ignore.
đź—ż The Statue and the Irony

Fast forward to today.
Carrie Nation now stands in bronze, forever mid lecture, outside a space where people sip champagne, order cocktails, and meet friends after work.
It’s one of downtown Wichita’s funniest juxtapositions.
A temperance icon…
Outside a champagne bar…
In the middle of a revitalized entertainment district
If public art is meant to spark conversation, this one absolutely nailed it.
According to the Public Art Archive (Great resource btw), this statue was created in 2018
🎶 Carrie Nation, But Make It Local
Carrie Nation’s legacy didn’t stop in the history books.
Wichita is also home to Carrie Nation and the Speakeasy, a local band whose name feels like the ultimate wink to Kansas history. If Carrie Nation hated speakeasies, she’d really hate that.
🤔 What Would Carrie Think Today?
It’s hard not to wonder what Carrie Nation would think if she could see downtown Wichita now.
Craft cocktails. Rooftop bars. Brewery patios. Champagne flights.
Honestly, she’d probably grab her hatchet again.
But maybe that’s the point.
Wichita isn’t defined by one moment, one movement, or one moral crusade. We’re layered, contradictory, a little ironic, and very good at remembering our history, even when it makes us laugh.
📍 Next Time You’re Downtown
Take a second to look up at Carrie Nation.
Snap a photo. Read the plaque. Appreciate the fact that Wichita’s past is still standing right there on the sidewalk, quietly judging us while we sip prosecco.
History has a sense of humor. Wichita does too.
Did you learn something today about Carrie Nation? |
What do you want to see us go deep on in a future deep dive?
That's it for today!
If you enjoyed today, share this email with someone who is new to Wichita.
Thanks!
- Landon

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