
New Books in History Elizabeth Kelly Gray, "Habit Forming: Drug Addiction in America, 1776-1914" (Oxford UP, 2023)
Jan 24, 2026
Elizabeth Kelly Gray, Associate Professor of History at Towson University who studies addiction and early American history, traces habit-forming drug use from 1776 to 1914. She discusses widespread medical opiate use, laudanum and morphine among middle-class women, hashish and opium den culture, shifting public attitudes after the Civil War, and how early regulation transformed a health issue into a legal one.
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Free Access Before 1914
- Until 1914 most addictive drugs were freely available across the United States without national restriction.
- Easy access kept addiction largely decoupled from criminality and shaped tolerant public attitudes.
Locked In To Quit, Leapt Out To Find Drugs
- A family locked an addicted woman in a cold room to force withdrawal, but she leapt out a window in search of drugs.
- Her desperate action illustrated how much stronger habituation was than contemporaries expected.
Medical Origins Shift Demographics
- Nineteenth-century physicians often caused addiction by prescribing morphine, especially via injections after the Civil War.
- That medical origin made middle-class white women the most visible habitués and shaped sympathetic responses.






