
New Books Network Elizabeth Kelly Gray, "Habit Forming: Drug Addiction in America, 1776-1914" (Oxford UP, 2023)
Jan 18, 2026
Elizabeth Kelly Gray, an Associate Professor of History at Towson University and author, explores the fascinating history of drug addiction in America from 1776 to 1914. She discusses the unregulated use of opiates, the initial non-criminal perception of addiction, and the rise of middle-class morphine users. Gray contrasts historical drug use with today's opioid crisis, highlighting societal perceptions that shaped responses to addiction. The conversation reveals insights into how language, class, and policy have long influenced America’s drug landscape.
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Legal Availability Before 1914
- Up to 1914 most addictive drugs were legally available and commonly sold without prescription.
- Elizabeth Kelly Gray shows that the Harrison Act marked a sharp shift from medical availability to legal restriction.
Which Drugs Americans Used
- Opiates (laudanum, morphine, later heroin) dominated U.S. drug use because they treated pain and insomnia.
- Cannabis and cocaine also circulated but were framed differently: cannabis as mind-expanding, cocaine as a stimulant and anesthetic.
Language Shapes Perception
- 19th-century writers used 'habituation' and 'habitué' rather than 'addiction,' affecting perception and blame.
- That language framed drug use as a moral failing or habit rather than a medical brain disease.






