Bizarre and hilarious reasons to divorce that made headlines in the early 20th century, 1910s-1920s - 1

This photo collection shows historic newspaper clippings that feature weird and, sometimes, hilarious reasons for divorce that made local headlines in the early part of the 20th century.

By the mid-to-late 19th century, divorce rates in the United States increased, and Americans obtained more divorces annually than were granted in all of Europe.

Previously, divorces in the US were mainly granted to the middle and upper classes due to their cost, but the legal process became less expensive.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 2

Harrisburg Telegraph, Pennsylvania, December 3, 1924.

Other proposed explanations include the popular acceptance of divorce as an alternative to marital unhappiness, decay of the belief in immortality and future punishment, discontent with the existing constitution of society, the habits of mobility created by better transportation, and the greater independence of women resulting in their enlarged legal rights and greater opportunities of self-support.

The divorce rate continued to increase in the early 20th century. In 1890, 3 couples per 1,000 were divorced, rising to 8 couples by 1920.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 3

Oakland Tribune, California, November 2, 1909.

During that time, divorce was considered to be against the public interest, and civil courts refused to grant a divorce except if one party to the marriage had betrayed the “innocent spouse.”

Thus, a spouse suing for divorce in most states had to show a “fault” such as abandonment, cruelty, incurable mental illness, or adultery. If an “innocent” husband and wife wished to separate, or if both were guilty, “neither would be allowed to escape the bonds of marriage.

Divorce was barred if evidence revealed any hint of complicity between spouses to manufacture grounds for divorce, such as if the suing party engaged in procurement or connivance (contributing to the fault, such as by arranging for adultery), condonation (forgiving the fault either explicitly or by continuing to cohabit after knowing of it), or recrimination (the suing spouse also being guilty).

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 4

St Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, August 18, 1907.

Divorce is governed by state rather than federal law, and a number of strategies were devised in several states to make divorce easier.

By 1909, Reno, Nevada was “the divorce capital of the world.” At that time, only six months in Nevada established state residency, and the Nevada courts, well aware of the contribution of divorce seekers to Nevada’s hospitality industry, accepted the resident’s uncorroborated assertion of grounds for divorce, usually “extreme cruelty.”

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 5

Star Tribune, Minneapolis, Minnesota, June 10, 1900.

In 1927, the Nevada Legislature, “in response to a perceived threat to Reno’s divorce supremacy from France and Mexico and a divorce-trade war that had been going on since the end of World War I between Nevada, Idaho, and Arkansas,” lowered the residency period to three months, and in 1931 the Legislature that voted for “wide-open gambling” lowered it to six weeks.

Providing accommodations and other amenities for visitors, who could not leave Nevada during the six weeks, became a major Reno industry; greeters met the arriving trains, and there were a variety of divorce ranches.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 6

Oakland Tribune, California, February 27, 1909.

In 1942, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Williams v. North Carolina that other states had to recognize these divorces, under the “full faith and credit” clause of the U.S. Constitution.

By 1916, the U.S. led the world in the number of divorces. In populous New York State, where adultery was the easiest grounds for divorce, attorneys would provide a divorce package of a prostitute and a photographer.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 7

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, January 7, 1910.

Significant numbers of divorce seekers went to the cities on the Mexican side of the Mexico-U.S. border, or to Haiti, where they found welcoming attorneys, who sometimes advertised in the U.S. A memory of the practice is reflected in the song “Haitian Divorce,” by Steely Dan.

The introduction of no-fault divorce led to a rise in divorce rates in the United States during the 1970s.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 8

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, July 28, 1908.

The National Center for Health Statistics reports that from 1975 to 1988 in the US, in families with children present, wives file for divorce in approximately two-thirds of cases.

In 1975, 71.4% of the cases were filed by women, and in 1988, 65% were filed by women.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 9

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, May 1, 1908.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 10

The Pittsburgh Press, Pennsylvania, August 17, 1919.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 11

The Evening News, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, September 4, 1920.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 12

Evansville Press, Indiana, January 4, 1909.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 13

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, November 8, 1907.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 14

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, May 3, 1906.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 15

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, January 6, 1909.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 16

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, August 4, 1909.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 17

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, August 4, 1909.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 18

The Evening Statesman, Walla Walla, Washington, February 1, 1910.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 19

Oakland Tribune, April 18, 1911.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 20

Pennsylvania, April 29, 1943.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 21

The Oregon Daily Journal, Portland, January 23, 1921.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 22

Vancouver Daily World, Canada, September 1, 1908.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 23

The Star Press, Muncie, Indiana, May 19, 1922.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 24

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, May 21, 1910.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 25

St Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, June 25, 1909.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 26

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, December 8, 1908.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 27

September 19, 1908.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 28

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, August 11, 1909.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 29

Reading Times, Pennsylvania, March 27, 1929.

Bizarre and Hilarious Reasons to Divorce That Made Headlines in the Early 20th Century - 30