How Did The Prohibition Era Change During The Prohibition Era

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The Prohibition Era, much like it’s sister the Temperance movement, saw America split between the wets and the drys. However, it is in the Prohibition era where we see government on the federal and executive level come out and play a role in the movement. It is also a time of complete and utter chaos, with the upraise of gangsters and high levels of crime that broke out daily. The rise of social justice issues for immigrants whose culture and lifestyle begin to be targeted. It also was a time when America learned that passing a law without the full support of all the people will cause it to fail. This clearly shows that the Prohibition changed American during the 1920s as well as had a lasting effect on America until this day. Among the many …show more content…

The gangsters, Al Capone to name one of them, became important figures along with the other celebrities of the time. He was able to make the forced dry America depend on his illegal alcohol distribution. He along with other gangsters were also able to work themselves up so high in society that they even had connections to judges and police officials. This lead to numerous amounts of “unpunished crime,” (Allen 228.) There was not enough police to enforce the prohibition law and there was even more police officials being paid off by said gangsters to look the other way to many of the crimes that took place. This growing dependency on thugs and gangsters for alcohol, drugs, and even assassination jobs spread like wildfire among the American people. It escalated to the point where top gangsters such as Al Capone was making millions of dollars with the “assortment of these curious enterprises,” (Allen 231.) This advancement in the gang and thug, however not on the idea of illegal alcohol seeing as Prohibition failed miserably, paved the way for modern gangs and their enormous drug and human trafficking schemes that earn them millions as …show more content…

A way that people found to get wet, came in the from of secret places to drink to one’s heart content, they were “the speakeasy, equipped with a regular old-fashion bar, serving cocktails made of gin…” (Allen 219.) The people who flocked the speakeasies where usually immigrants whose culture and rituals were centered on drinking, the wet community who did not want the law to pass in the first pass, and the gangsters who supplied the alcohol through some kind of means. Along with the rise in crimes there was another break through in social norms. Since drinking became something that could be done everywhere before Prohibition, that meant that it also took place within the home. This meant that women came into contact with alcohol and may even had prepared some for guest. This also meant that women got to enjoy their own share of alcohol, so it came as no surprise when being forced dry “brought women into the saloon’s illicit prodigy, the speakeasy,” (Murdock 88.) Women were known as the moral of the family, they also were seen as delicate and therefore had no place in a saloon, which housed men who drank. But with the enforcement of the

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