US History


Prohibition And Its Repeal

When clocks struck midnight on January 16, 1920, the United States officially went dry. The age of Prohibition had begun. Brewers, distillers, and saloon keepers were required to stop selling alcohol as the vending of spirits became criminalized. Within thirteen years, however, alcohol was again allowed by the US Constitution. What happened?

Initially, advocates of alcohol prohibition anticipated the dawning of a healthier, happier America. Many women in particular supported banning alcohol, for they experienced the connections between a husband’s disappearing paycheck, alcohol abuse, and domestic violence. Employers such as Henry Ford likewise supported Prohibition, believing that alcohol abuse was lowering workers’ productivity. Banning beer even took on a patriotic, xenophobic zeal during World War I; many breweries at the time were German-owned, and the Anti-Saloon League urged the US government to investigate breweries “owned in part by alien enemies.”

Prohibition was not actually imposed overnight in 1920; more than half of America had already banned alcohol. By 1916, nineteen states banned the sale of alcohol. In 1918, President Wilson instituted “partial prohibition” as part of the wartime grain conservation effort; beer was limited to 2.75% alcohol, and production was cut to 70% of the previous year’s supply. Within nine months, Wilson banned wartime production of beer altogether!

The Eighteenth Amendment set forth early terms for national Prohibition. Initially, the law banned specifically “intoxicating liquors” – leaving some with hope that beer and wine would remain legal. Within a year, however, the Volstead Act decreed that no legal drink would contain more than half a percent of alcohol.

However, Prohibition’s challenge was enforcement. Smuggling and bootlegging became immensely profitable. Congress initially estimated enforcement costs would be $5 million, but within just a few years, this estimate skyrocketed to $300 million.

Culturally, Prohibition was especially out of place in northern cities. New York City, for example, was largely comprised of European immigrants. Many were accustomed to drinking in moderation as part of daily life. New Yorkers as a group resisted federal enforcement of Prohibition. They passed laws that forbade local officers from investigating violations. Consequently, of approximately 7,000 reported violations in New York State, fewer than twenty resulted in convictions. Five other states similarly outlawed local enforcement.

Did Prohibition bring the positive health effects that proponents had expected? Initially, yes: medical records showed dramatic decreases in death from cirrhosis and alcohol- related crime. The nation seemed safer once Anheiser-Busch was forced to brew ginger ale and root beer instead of alcoholic beverages.

However, as Prohibition plodded on, alcohol-related homicides increased. The citizenry learned to wound its way around liquor laws, and ultimately people drank more alcohol. Sometimes a drink’s source was in Canada, Mexico, or the Caribbean. Other times, alcohol was home-brewed and more potent than what legal distributors had offered. Home-brew equipment was relatively inexpensive, and the ingredients – chiefly corn, potatoes, and sugar – were readily available. Within seven years, an estimated 30,000 illegal speakeasies had appeared to distribute these underground drinks; this was about twice the number of legal bars before Prohibition.

With citizens resorting to brewing gin in their bathtubs, high-ranking politicians and mobsters like Al Capone could profit enormously from the illegal trade in alcohol. In Washington, President Harding’s attorney general was known to accept bribes from bootleggers. In Chicago, Capone employed half the city’s police officers as alcohol distributors. His operation reportedly processed $60 million in 1927 alone. Underground operations absorbed the consumer base and cash flow that had once participated in a legal alcohol industry.

It was soon clear that the national prohibition of alcohol was resulting in the opposite of its aims. Prohibition was undertaken to reduce crime and corruption, to relieve the tax burden created by prisons and poorhouses, and to improve residents’ health. But Prohibition bred some of the nation’s largest crime syndicates, alcohol became more dangerous to consume, and drinking grew in popularity. Prohibition removed a significant source of tax revenue (about $500 million each year), and enforcement costs greatly increased government spending.

As noble as Prohibition’s intentions had been, the law proved much easier to decree than to enforce. In 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt (a martini drinker) amended the Volstead Act. The Cullen-Harrison bill allowed the manufacture and sale of lighter beers and wines. That same year, the Eighteenth Amendment was fully repealed, and the Twenty-first Amendment was ratified. This amendment, still in effect today, gives states the right to restrict alcohol sales. Thus, Mississippians lived with Prohibition until 1966. New Yorkers, in contrast, were quick to legalize the bottle.

 

 

Search This Site

US History

 

 

 

US History


Equality And The Seneca Falls Convention

... self-evident: that all men and women are created equal At different times in US history, different groups have emphasized shortcomings of the Constitution as it relates to human equality. In a New York town in 1848, men and women met to discuss the legal limitations that American women faced. This was ... 

Read Full Article  


General Harriet Tubman And The Underground Railroad

... level of success. For example, if a baby was being transported, she carried sedatives to keep it quiet. She would start a trip North on Saturday, since reports of fugitive slaves wouldn t be published until Monday. Harriet was also a master of disguise; sometimes people she knew didn t even recognize ... 

Read Full Article  


Gold Fever And The Growth Of California

... publisher shouted down the streets, Gold from the American River! Within three days of the news arriving, 400 of the 600 settlers had left to trample Sutter s land. By the end of the year, gold prospectors traveled to California from as far as Oregon, Hawaii, Mexico, and Chile. And around that time, word ... 

Read Full Article  


Prayer, Persecution, And Portsmouth: A Story Of Colonist Anne Hutchinson

... and other religious dissenters. After Hutchinson s husband passed away, she relocated again to New Amsterdam. There, in 1643, she and several of her children were murdered in an attack by natives. No doubt, Governor Winthrop viewed the difficult death as corroboration of his critique. In 1945, however, ... 

Read Full Article  


France And The American Revolution

... winning tangible French support; traveling with his wit and charm, Franklin visited Paris in 1776 to rally support for the colonists cause. France first assisted the rogue colonies in May of 1776 by sending 14 ships loaded with gunpowder and other war supplies. In February of 1778, the colonists and the ... 

Read Full Article