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2763128
PROHIBITION
Description
mind map on prohibition
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aqa b history
gcse
prohibition
history
history
paper two
gcse
Mind Map by
jessicasusanevans
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
jessicasusanevans
over 9 years ago
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Resource summary
PROHIBITION
Attachments:
Prohibition
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Roosevelt repealed the 18th amendment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
Annotations:
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
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