Date of Award

Spring 2025

Degree Type

Thesis

Abstract

This presentation examines the rise of American Anti-Profanity Leagues during the Progressive Era, with particular focus on the efforts of Roland Sawyer and Arthur Colborne. These leagues sought to eliminate profanity from public and private life, using printed materials, pledge campaigns, public speeches, and media outreach to promote “clean speech” as a moral imperative. Drawing on archival research, including the Roland D. Sawyer Papers housed at the UNH Library, as well as digital newspaper databases, this project investigates how profanity was framed as a threat to civic virtue, and how anti-profanity activism mirrored the goals and methods of other Progressive-Era moral reform movements. The project invites a broader reflection on language, social control, and the enduring tensions between freedom of expression and public morality.

Comments

Originally prepared for the 2025 History Department URC.

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