"I can't provide a direct correlation between the rise of Dispensationalism, Fundamentalism and anti-alcoholism, but there certainly is an implied correlation."
That is just nonsense. The temperance movement started out as part of the Women's Sufferage movement of the 19th century and was picked up by the Weslyan Methodist Church and spread throughout most denominations, including the Quakers. A quote from the WCTU's history:
"The crusades' primary participants were middle class Evangelical Protestant women. Many felt a national organization should be established of these crusaders. In August of 1874, Martha McClellan Brown, a long-standing temperance worker from Ohio, Jennie Willing, corresponding secretary of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist church and a professor of English language and literature at Illinois Wesleyan University, and Emily Huntington Miller used their extensive church network contacts to circulate a letter to all the women's temperance organizations that had cropped up across the country urging elect a delegatefrom each congressional district to send to a national organizing convention. 16"
"In the Second Presbyterian Church on Wednesday, November 18, 1874, 300 women assembled to establish the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union. Sixteen states were represented, with 135 women registered as delegates. At this convention, the organization was put in place with elected permanent officers and a constitution. Mrs. Annie Wittenmyer was elected president, with Miss Frances E. Willard as corresponding secretary, Mrs. Mary Johnson as recording secretary, and Mrs. Mary Ingham as treasurer. 17 It was also at this meeting that the rule of only women as voting delegates and office holders was firmly incorporated"
Actually, you just proved the point of my post. If there wasn't a correlation, there certainly was a convergence.
Anti-alcoholism became a major "sacrament" of the fundamentalist movement as it emerged from 1878 to the 1920's. There was some major hand-holding going on.