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This ppt originally appeared on the Langley Secondary School website at http://www.langley-sec.solihull.sch.uk/documents/history/revision/ prohibition.ppt. This site went down in July 2010, so I have copied it here.

America Prohibition

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Page 1: America Prohibition

This ppt originally appeared on the Langley Secondary School website at http://www.langley-sec.solihull.sch.uk/documents/history/revision/prohibition.ppt. This site went down in July 2010, so I have copied it here.

Page 2: America Prohibition

Prohibition

The 18th Amendment

Page 3: America Prohibition

What was ‘Prohibition’?

• A law called the Volstead Act introduced in the USA in January 1920.

• It banned the manufacture, sale and transport of alcohol.

• The federal government had the power to enforce this law.

• It theory the USA became ‘dry’. • It has since become known as the ‘noble

experiment’.

Page 4: America Prohibition

Why was prohibition introduced?

1. It already existed in many states

2. Moral reasons

3. Campaigners like the Anti-Saloon League of America

4. The First World War

Page 5: America Prohibition

What is the message of this cartoon? (6)

Page 6: America Prohibition

What is the message of this cartoon? (6)

Page 7: America Prohibition

What is the message of this cartoon? (6)

Page 8: America Prohibition

What is the message of this cartoon? (6)

Page 9: America Prohibition

What were the effects of prohibition?

1. Speakeasies

2. Moonshine

3. Smuggling

4. Organised crime

Page 10: America Prohibition

Speakeasies• Secret saloon bars opened

up in cellars and back rooms.

• They had names like the ‘Dizzy Club’ and drinkers had to give a password or knock at the door in code to be let in.

• Speakeasies sold ‘bootleg’ alcohol, smuggled into America from abroad.

• Before Prohibition there were 15,000 bars in New York. By 1926 there were 30,000 speakeasies!

Page 11: America Prohibition

Moonshine

• A spirit made secretly in home made stills.

• Several hundred people a year died from this during the 1920s.

• In 1929 it is estimated that 700 million gallons of beer were produced in American homes.

Page 12: America Prohibition

‘Bootleggers’• Smugglers called

‘Bootleggers’ made thousands of dollars bringing in illegal alcohol to America.

• America has thousands of miles of frontiers so it proved easy.

• Famous smugglers like William McCoy made fortunes by bringing alcohol from the West Indies and Canada.

Page 13: America Prohibition

Organised Crime

• The enormous profits to b made attracted gangsters who started to take control of many cities.

• They bribed the police, judges and politicians.

• They controlled the speakeasies and the distilleries, and ruthlessly exterminated their rivals.

Page 14: America Prohibition

Al Capone• By 1927 he was earning

some $60 million a year from bootlegging.

• His gang was like a private army. He had 700 men under his control.

• He was responsible for over 500 murders.

• On 14th February 1929, Capone’s men dressed as police officers murdered 7 members of a rival gang. This became known as the ‘Valentine’s Day Massacre.’