A savvy storyteller is always popular in a bar, which makes Katie Thornton something of a watering hole superstar. She not only knows how to spin a enticing narrative — she's won a Fulbright fellowship for digital storytelling — but she knows a lot about bars.
Thornton, a multimedia journalist, is the guiding force behind the oral history "A Brief History of Women in Bars: A Minnesota Story in Three Rounds."
More than a run-of-the mill drinking story, this one includes a complex twist. Thornton argues that the presence of bars filled with men led to women getting the vote.
"It's no coincidence that Prohibition and women's suffrage were passed in pretty rapid succession," she says in the documentary, noting that 2020 marks the 100th anniversary of both.
Thornton argues that in the late 1800s and early 1900s, men drank themselves — and, therein, their families — into poverty. Women rose up in protest. Although excluded from politics, women were able to gain a foothold in the temperance movement by insisting that it was a family issue.
Their success in helping push through the ban on alcohol proved — both to them and to skeptical men — that they were capable of exerting powerful political influence.
"For many in the U.S., and here in Minnesota, anti-alcohol advocacy laid the groundwork for women's rights," she says.
But the story goes a lot deeper than that, which is one reason Thornton was interested in it.