Zusammenfassung der Ressource
PROHIBITION
Anlagen:
- WHAT WAS IT?
- the selling, transporting
or drinking of alcohol
- the 18th amendment
made it part of US
Constitution
- it was the final success of
groups who thought alcohol
brought poverty, broke up
marriages, caused crime and
destroyed industry
- Temperance Union
- founded in 1874
- Anti-Saloon League
- founded in 1895
- VOLSTEAD ACT
- defined an alcoholic
drink as any more
than 0.5% alcohol
- 1917
- EFFECTS
- the ban wasn't popular most people
saw nothing wrong with having a drink
and found ways of getting round the
law
- 'MOONSHINE'
- home brewed
alcohol that often
caused illness and
even death
- an illegal industry
started with illegal bars
and imports
- they sold smuggled in alcohol
from the West Indies and
whiskey from Canada
- 'BOOTLEGGERS'
- 'SPEAKEASIES'
- there were a quarter
of a million in the USA
- 30, 000 in New York alone
- ORGANISED CRIME
- vast profits could be made from illegal alcohol
this attracted gangsters
- AL CAPONE
- Italian immigrant
- 700 men
- armed with sawn-off shot
guns and machine guns
created his own privet
army
- rival with the 'Bugs'
Moran gang
- operated in
Chicago
- many of Chicago's
judges, police officers
and politicians were in his
pay
- POLICE CORRUPTION
- many gangsters ran
speakeasies and protection
rackets. they were involved in
prostitution and drug
trafficking
- gangland murders increased as rival
gangs found for each others territory
- in Chicago 277 gang members were
murdered in 4 years without anyone
being convicted
- POLICE CORRUPTION
- St. Valentines masacure
- 1929
- Al Capone's men
machine gunned down
7 members of the
'Bugs' Moran gang
- FAILURE OF PROHIBITION
- Roosevelt repealed
the 18th amendment
- December 1933
- the Prohibition Bureau employed only 4000
agents for the whole of America most of
whom were ineffective
- 1 in 10 were
sacked
- some were effective
notably Eliot Ness
Anmerkungen:
- leader of the famous law enforcement team 'THE UNTOUCHABLES' in Chicago.
- popular support
didn't back
prohibition so more
Americans were
prepared to break the
law than stick to it
- the crime associated with
prohibition was gradually brought
under control
- all they could eventually
arrest Al Capone for was
tax evasion
- 1932