Early on the morning of July 3, 1875, two explosions rocked Westerville, Ohio. They must have awakened everyone in town, including Henry Harrison Corbin. In that fiercely prohibitionist town he had open the saloon shown above. Corbin understood the noise. The Westerville Whiskey War had begun in earnest.
Henry was born in May 1834 into a Virginia farming family, the son of William and Barbara Corbin. His father appears to have been a renter, moving to new land with some frequency. The 1850 census found the Corbins living in Licking County in Central Ohio. Sixteen-year old Henry was working as a farm laborer.
The arrival of children in the Corbin household may have prompted Henry to decide to abandon the plow, move into nearby Westerville, and open a hardware store. It was a good choice. By the 1870s, Westerville was developing into a modern community. Streetcars ran along the major streets, and a railroad connected Westerville to Columbus,15 miles to the south. As population grew, residents needed hardware. Corbin’s store was a success and allowed him to purchase real estate around town.
In 1875, Corbin decided to open a saloon in a building he rented at the corner of Knox and West Main Street, shown above. He did so in full knowledge that it would prove controversial. As early as the late 1850s, Westerville residents had earned a reputation for opposing the sale and consumption of alcohol. Otterbein College (now “University”), affiliated with the conservative Church of the Brethren, dominated the local culture. Town voters passed a law that banned the sale of "fermented spirits," becoming one of the first communities in Ohio to do so.
Recognizing that the local ordinance, in fact, could not be enforced, Corbin opened his saloon in June, 1975. A retrospective news article recalled the scene: “Westerville residents awoke one morning to find a “LAGER BEER” sign flaunting in their faces….Business during the day was good, but that same night certain unappreciative members of the populace entered the place and emptied the contents of Corbin’s casks and bottles on the floor.” Undaunted the owner replenished his whiskey and beer and continued in business.
A few days later, on July 1, 1875, at 9 A.M. a crowd estimated at some 1,000 met to protest the saloon. They then marched to 36 West Main and demanded that Corbin close his doors. He refused. Many residents wanted him to stay, he contended. Expecting trouble, Corbin had armed himself with two pistols. The protesters on that occasion limited activities to speeches, prayers and hymns. The orisons did not move the proprietor.
The protesters, facing defeat, met again that night in the Presbyterian church where they raised $5,000, equivalent to almost $120,000 today. The money was to be used as incentive to persuade Corbin to quit. But hotter heads were not to be denied. The next night, the saloon was pelted with stones for half an hour, breaking windows. Nonetheless, Corbin reopened the next day.
A newspaper photo captured the damage. The crowd that gathered at the wreckage the next morning noticed that the “GER” had been blown out of Corbin’s large “LAGER” sign, leaving only the “LA.” Newspapers nationwide dubbed the conflict the “Westerville Whiskey War.”
Despite this setback, Corbin repaired his drinking establishment and tried to stay in business, but ultimately gave up. Reasons differ for his capitulation. Some say it was discouragement at being forced into costly court battles; others contend it was a second explosion at his Main Street saloon. He and his family were reported to have moved at least temporarily to Columbus.
The Town Council offered a reward of $300 for information leading the arrest of those responsible, paltry beside the $5,000 raised to run Corbin out of town. In 1923 an anonymous article appeared in a United Brethren publication in which an individual confessed to the bombing. He claimed he did it to protect a friend studying for the ministry who like to drink there, presumably to keep him on the straight path to “taking the cloth.”
Note: This vignette was drawn from a rich trove of material abut the Westerville Whiskey War. Two principal sources were an undated story from the Westerville Monitor headlined “Townspeople Dynamite Saloon and Drive Wets Out of Westerville for Good,” and an October 8,1987, article from “The Public Opinion” publication of the Westerville Library written by Harold Hancock of Otterbein College. Renovated as shown below, Henry Corbin’s first (bombed) saloon building still stands in Westerville. In recent times plans have been announced to use it as a drinking establishment.
I (Michael Evans) sold the first legal alcohol since the 1879 Corbin bombing at Michaels Pizza Kitchen on January 12th at 1:49 in Uptown Westerville. Auctioned off to Westerville Jeweler Bill Morgan and money donated to W.A.R.M. Ending Uptown Westerville’s being the “Dry Capital of the World”
ReplyDeletePizza Mike: You are a trend-setter of the highest order. Just watch out for the zealots carry explosives.
ReplyDeleteHey Jack, I am opening up a restaurant in Westerville ohio and would love to have your story available for people to read on the backs of our menu or in our waiting area (with credit given), but wouldn't want to make it available without your permission. Would you be ok with that? you can email me at adam.l.hines@gmail.com.
ReplyDeleteAdam: Thanks for being in touch. I am delighted you can use my piece. Will also be emailing you with the OK.
DeleteAs a westerville local, I'm very interested to hear about your restaurant!
DeleteThis is so cool. I love the weird history of Westerville and alcohol as a resident.
ReplyDelete