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Prohibition. Support for Prohibition Support for the amendment came from the rural South and West Largely native-born protestant areas Anti-Saloon League.

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Presentation on theme: "Prohibition. Support for Prohibition Support for the amendment came from the rural South and West Largely native-born protestant areas Anti-Saloon League."— Presentation transcript:

1 Prohibition

2 Support for Prohibition Support for the amendment came from the rural South and West Largely native-born protestant areas Anti-Saloon League Church-affiliated, led the way for the amendment Woman’s Christian Temperance Considered drinking a sin

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4 18 th Amendment 18 th Amendment: (January 1920) legally prohibited the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages Reformers considered alcohol the main cause for: Corruption crime wife and child abuse accidents on the job other serious social problems

5 At first…. Saloons closed their doors Arrests for drunkenness declined Most immigrant groups did not consider drinking as a sin but a natural part of socializing (they resented the gov’t for meddling) Many Americans were tired of sacrifices after W.W.I. and wanted to enjoy life

6 It’s fate was sealed… The government failed to budget enough money to enforce the law Volstead Act Established a Prohibition Bureau in the Treasury department in 1919 (agency was underfunded)

7 Enforcement Enforcement involved: patrolling 18,700 miles of coastline and inland borders Tracking down illegal stills Monitoring highways for truckloads of alcohol To be sure none was taken for illegal use Monitor all industries that legally used alcohol Task fell to 1,500 poorly paid federal agents and local police

8 Speakeasies To obtain liquor illegally, drinkers went underground to hidden saloons and nightclubs called speakeasies Called speakeasies because inside, one spoke quietly or “easily” to avoid detection Found everywhere Penthouses Cellars Office buildings Rooming houses Tenements Hardware stores tearooms

9 Speakeasies To be admitted into the speakeasy, one had to present a card or use a password Inside: there were a mix of fashionable middle-class and upper-class men and women Speakeasies would change locations People got bolder in getting around the law

10 Bootleggers People would: Learn to distill their own alcohol and built their own distills Prescription orders for alcohol skyrocketed Sales of sacramental wine increased dramatically Buy alcohol from bootleggers Bootleggers: named for a smuggler’s practice of carrying liquor in the legs of boots, smuggled alcohol in from Canada, Cuba and the West Indies

11 Evading the Law “The Business of evading [the law] and making a mock of it has ceased to wear any aspects of crime and has become a sort of national sport” ~Journalist, H.L. Mencken o Not only did Prohibition generate disrespect for the law, but contributed to organized crime in almost every major city

12 Organized Crime Chicago became notorious during this period as the home of Al Capone A gangster whose bootlegging empire netted over $60 million a year He took over the liquor business by killing off his competition

13 Prohibition comes to an end… 1933 the 21 st Amendment is passed The 21 st Amendment repeals the prohibit of manufacture, sale or transportation of alcohol


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