Prohibition - MrDchshistory
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Transcript Prohibition - MrDchshistory
Prohibition
Definition
The movement to ban
the production,
importation, and
transportation of liquor.
The WCTU (Women’s
Christian Temperance
Union) were leaders in
the movement to ban
alcohol.
Why Enact Prohibition in
Canada?
It was argued that:
Grain should be used to
feed the soldiers
overseas.
The liquor industry, and
its workers, could better
serve our country
producing war supplies.
Therefore, in 1918,
Prohibition was enacted
Prohibition
Between 1915 and 1917, every province
except Quebec outlawed the sale and
consumption of alcohol
In 1918, Prime Minister Borden
incorporated prohibition into Canada’s war
effort
Distillers’ and brewer’ ingredients were
needed to feed the troops
Positive Effects of the Prohibition
Law
Many types of violent crimes
decreased
Arrests for public drunkenness
dropped.
Prohibition did reduce alcohol
consumption by about 80
percent
Workers didn’t spend their
money at bars, but rather on
their families.
Industrial efficiency increased.
Negative Effects of the
Prohibition Law
Became impossible to completely enforce.
Provincial governments lost millions in taxes on
liquor sales.
Unpopular with citizens and voters
It also inspired a wave of crime that created
tensions between Canada and the United States
New types of crime emerged
(bootlegging).
In the United States, prohibition was federal
law from 1920 to 1933
In Canada, however, the so-called “noble
experiment” sputtered out
Quebec never enforced prohibition and most
provincial governments gave up on total
prohibition by the early to mid-1920’s
New Crime: Bootlegging
Bootlegging
The act of producing
and/or selling illegal
alcohol.
Rum Running
The act of transporting
illegal alcohol over the
border of the U.S. and
Canada
New Crime: Bootlegging
Rum Alley
International rivers
where illegal alcohol
was smuggled across
by schooners.
The Detroit River
The Niagara River
New Crime: Bootlegging
Speakeasies
Private illegal clubs
that sold alcohol
during prohibition.
Citizens had to keep
club’s location a secret
(speakeasy) so that it
would not get raided
by the police.
Prohibition laws were hard to enforce
Many people were prepared to break them,
either because they liked to drink or because
they could get rich selling alcohol illegally
And the ingredients and technology for
brewing and distilling were easy to come by
Bootleggers
Rocco Perri (Canadian)
From Hamilton, ON
Specialized in smuggling
liquor from the United
States into Canada.
Al Capone (American)
• From Chicago, IL
• Notorious bootlegger and
murderer.
• Was convicted and sent
to Alcatraz for tax
evasion.
Samuel Bronfman
One of the most remarkable Canadian risk-takers
of the prohibition era was a man name Samuel
Bronfman
His family established a successful prairie hotel
business and Sam capitalized on its success when
he founded the Canada
Pure Drug Company of
Yorkton, Saskatchewan in
1919
Canadian laws allowed Bronfman’s
company to import unlimited amounts of
liquor from Europe for “medicinal
purposes”
This liquor was then distributed to company
warehouses along the Canadian side of the
border
From there, liquor was quietly smuggled
into the United States
Although created in 1904, it became shipped
to the USA in 1919
“Dry” “ginger Ale”
Also masked the smell of home made Hooch
USA crime and prohibition