The New Zealand Alliance derives from the United Kingdom Alliance formed in Manchester in 1853. During the early 1860s several members of the latter emigrated to New Zealand where they formed “Auxiliary” branches of the United Kingdom Alliance, the most notable being at Drury and Port Albert. On 10 September 1869 some members of the Drury Auxiliary formed an auxiliary in Auckland. This soon acquired the status of a “Provincial Committee”, and, for some years, it maintained a careful scrutiny over the Auckland Provincial Government's licensing legislation. The Auckland Auxiliary continued to meet until 1873 when most of its members transferred to the Good Templars Lodge. In 1877 the Auckland Auxiliary was revived and remained in existence until its merger with the New Zealand Alliance.
Early in 1886 certain interested organisations arranged for T. W. Glover, a lecturer from the United Kingdom Alliance, to conduct prohibition missions in various New Zealand centres. On 1 March 1886, at the Rechabite Hall, Wellington, 30 delegates – representing Auckland, Nelson, Hawke's Bay, Woodville, Canterbury, New Plymouth, Dunedin, Wellington, Alexandra (Otago), Invercargill, Greymouth, Masterton, the Blue Ribbon Union, the Good Templars Lodge, the Rechabite Lodge, and the Wellington Alliance – met “to establish a union of the temperance alliances in the colony”. This conference formed and drafted a constitution for the New Zealand Alliance for the Suppression of the Liquor Traffic. Financial arrangements were made for the forthcoming crusade and the following officers were elected: president, Sir William Fox; sixteen vice-presidents, including D. Goldie, Hori Ropiha, Sir H. A. Atkinson, L. M. Isitt, and Sir Robert Stout; executive committee, F. G. Ewington, Edward Withy, George Winstone, H. J. Le Bailey, J. Elkin, Dr C. Knight, John Waymouth, and R. Neal. H. Field (Nelson) became the first general secretary and T. W. Glover the first paid organiser. The conference adopted the United Kingdom Alliance's (1853) declaration of principles and framed the following policy:
This Alliance has been instituted for the suppression and prohibition of the liquor traffic. It seeks to unite in this effort those who are not abstainers as well as those who are…. The immediate aim of the Alliance is to secure for the people the legal direct power to veto the liquor traffic. This Alliance believes that when the people possess this power, with a sufficient facility for its exercise, they will free the colony from the heaviest burden that is laid upon its financial resources, and from the principal cause of its disease, destitution and crime. To attain this result the members of the Alliance are expected to use all the influence they possess to secure the election to Parliament, and to all other positions of power, of such candidates as are favourable to the principles of the Alliance.
From the outset it was understood that the New Zealand Alliance was not a “temperance alliance” for it aimed at the total suppression of the liquor traffic. Although the Alliance has originally intended to be a union of the various temperance organisations, provision was made in the constitution for individuals to become members; and, over the years, efficient branch organisations were created in many districts. In its heyday, the 1920s, the New Zealand Alliance placed most emphasis on political activity and campaigned uncompromisingly for total prohibition. After the 1929 depression increasing financial difficulties led the Alliance to curtail its public campaigns and to concentrate on educating the electorate. To a certain extent it relaxed the demand for total prohibition in favour of fuller public control over the liquor trade; and, in this connection, it has accepted trust control as a desirable, but not ultimate, step forward. Moreover, the New Zealand Alliance continues to exercise a strict and often politically embarrassing scrutiny over every change in the country's licensing legislation.
Nowadays the New Zealand Alliance carries on much educational work through its youth department, the Young Abstainers' League. This organisation, which is the successor of the Young Men's and Young Women's National Prohibition Guilds of former days, functions through church and youth groups. The principal aim of the Y.A.L. is to educate young people to accept total abstinence from alcoholic liquor as a way of life, and it urges this by means of national competitions, rallies, and the distribution of literature.
The official organ of the New Zealand Alliance is The Vanguard, and the Y.A.L. publishes quarterly The Young Abstainer.
by Bernard John Foster, M.A., Research Officer, Department of Internal Affairs, Wellington.