PROHIBITION
AND AL CAPONE
G'day folks,
January 16, 1920 — The 18th Amendment to
the United States Constitution came into effect on this day, making the
manufacture, sale, and transportation of intoxicating liquor illegal.
It was the start of a 13-year era known as Prohibition that led to gangsterism, “speakeasies”, and widespread flouting of the law.
Speakeasies were
establishments where people could buy an illicit drink. It is widely believed
the term dates back to the 1880s when a woman named Kate Hester ran an
unlicensed bar in McKeesport, Pennsylvania, and would tell boisterous customers
they should “speak easy” to avoid unwelcome attention from the authorities.
Another word that came to prominence during the Prohibition years was
“bootlegging”, meaning the illegal transportation of liquor. This is also said
to date back to the 1880s and referred to the practice of men hiding a flask of
liquor in their boot top when trading with Native Americans.
Prohibition came about because a burgeoning Temperance
movement, which had a branch in almost every state, blamed alcohol for many of
society's ills, especially crime and murder. Members of the movement also
argued that prohibition would stop husbands spending their income on alcohol
and it would prevent accidents in the workplace caused by drunken workers. A
better world awaited.
After the 18th Amendment set the ball rolling, the Volstead Act, officially
known as the National Prohibition Act, clarified the law.
It stated that "beer, wine, or other intoxicating malt or vinous
liquors" referred to any beverage that was more than 0.5 per cent alcohol
by volume. The Act also stated that owning any item designed to manufacture
alcohol was illegal and set fines of up to $2,000 and prison sentences of up to
five years for violating Prohibition.
The Act did not prohibit drinking alcohol but outlawed its manufacture, sale,
and transportation. People were allowed to drink intoxicating liquor in their
own home or in the home of a friend when they were a guest. But they were not
allowed to carry a hip flask or give or receive a bottle of liquor as a gift.
President Woodrow Wilson
vetoed the Act on constitutional and ethical grounds but his veto was
overridden by Congress.
Noting the high demand for alcohol, gangsters such as Al Capone of Chicago
quickly moved to take advantage of the situation. They hired men who came to be
known as rumrunners to smuggle in rum from the Caribbean while others brought
in whiskey and other alcohol from Canada. Speakeasies operated by Capone and
other gangsters flourished while newly hired Prohibition Bureau agents, as well
as police, judges and politicians received substantial bribes to “look the
other way”.
As gangland territorial wars flared bringing murder and mayhem onto the
streets, and resentment against Prohibition grew, demands for the law to be
repealed became more vocal. It was clear, critics, said, that the perfect world
promised by the Temperance movement had not materialised.
The Stock Market crash of 1929 and the onset of the Great
Depression were powerful factors in the fight against Prohibition. Put simply,
people needed jobs and the government needed money. Convincing arguments were
put forward that the abolition of Prohibition would create many new jobs as
well as boosting revenue for the government through sales taxes.
On December 5, 1933,
the 21st Amendment to the Constitution was ratified. It repealed the 18th
Amendment, making the manufacture, sale and distribution of alcohol legal
again. It was the first and only time in US history that an Amendment to the
Constitution has been repealed. And it meant that Prohibition was officially at
an end. Many drank to that.
Clancy's comment: I'll drink to that.
I'm ...
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