Overview
National Prohibition in America outlawed the sale of alcohol
under the 18th amendment to the Constitution in 1919. The Congressional
law to implement the prohibition permitted under the 18th amendment
was the Volstead Act, coming into operation January 1, 1920.
It is important to realise that the alcohol prohibition movement had
a long nineteenth-century background. Prohibition had been introduced
on the state level in the northern states in the 1850s—though
the state legislatures repealed these laws during the period 1855-1865.
Beginning in the 1870s to 1890s the modern organizations that lobbied
for national prohibition emerged. These included the Woman’s Christian
Temperance Union (1874); the Prohibition Party, which was prominent
in the 1880s and 1890s, and the Anti-Saloon League (1893). It was the
latter that took the lead after 1900 in pressing for stricter anti-alcohol
laws. The League focused not on the elimination of drinking (which was
not made illegal under National Prohibition), but on the abolition of
the sale of alcohol through outlets such as saloons. Hence the name
Anti-Saloon League. The saloon was seen by its opponents as a source
of moral corruption and inappropriate political influence on, or in
league with, local “boss” or “machine” politicians.
The 1900-1917 period was one of social reform known as Progressivism,
and Progressives believed that, through alcohol, other social habits
or evils such as prostitution and gambling flourished in association
with saloons.
The League’s tactics focussed on non-partisan lobbying to influence
legislatures at both the state and federal levels. Unlike some earlier
prohibitionist groups, the League was not closely aligned with any one
political party, preferring to support individual candidates from any
party. It was this non-partisan tactic, and its effective lobbying of
legislators, backed by the Protestant churches, that helped the League
build prohibitionist strength. By 1917, on the eve of American entry
to World War I, 18 states had achieved complete prohibition. Prohibitionists
had also achieved a number of key legislative goals, particularly the
Webb-Kenyon Act of 1913 to reinforce the ability of the individual prohibitionist
states to defend their territory against alcohol imports. But the prohibitionists
in Congress launched after 1913 a campaign to make the whole country
dry. They used the media including prohibitionist publications and cartoons
to get the result.
National prohibition was advocated as a wartime measure after the US
declared war on Germany in April 1917 and the prohibition amendment
passed Congress and was sent to the states for ratification late in
1917. The wartime prohibition act was passed in 1918 at the very end
of the war; but the Lever Act August 1917 had already banned distilled
spirits production for the remainder of the war and reserved supplies
of grain for food production, and by 1919, just before the Volstead
Act went into effect nationally, 27 states had enacted full prohibition
laws. Anti-German sentiment worked in the interests of extending prohibition
in wartime because most of the breweries had been founded in the 19th
century by German immigrants to the US, and retained German names. Thus
wartime hostility toward Germans helped the rise of prohibition. But
more fundamentally, the movement drew upon an anti-alcohol culture long
instilled among middle-class people in city suburbs and small towns,
the Protestant churches and their allies in the rural population in
the south and west, and some urban progressives who saw alcohol as a
source of inefficiency, poverty and social disputation in American life.
The war simply gave these disparate groups an opportunity to align their
movement with wartime nationalism and its crusading spirit of self-sacrifice.
Businessmen such as Henry Ford also favoured prohibition because it
would, he believed, benefit workers and make for a more efficient economy.
Thus prohibitionists hoped to make the US a better place. They merged
progressivism and anti-alcohol sentiment and showed that prohibition
was a social reform movement of great significance.
The reform was introduced at the same time that President Woodrow Wilson
was advocating a moralistic foreign policy. The American architects
of prohibition attempted to export prohibition abroad, forming in 1919
a World League against Alcoholism. By attempting to make other countries
abandon alcohol, the prohibitionists wished to safeguard the US against
illegal imports of liquor, and also displayed the moral idealism of
the prohibitionists, showing how their plans enmeshed with Wilsonian
ideals for a new world order. The study of prohibition as a movement
can be used to illuminate the missionizing theme in American foreign
policy at the time of World War I.
Prohibition lasted from 1919 to 1933. During this period, the US was
in theory a “dry” country, meaning that alcohol could not
be sold, except in small qualities for medicinal purposes as prescribed
by a doctor, or for use in religious Communion services. However, home
possession and consumption for personal use was allowed under the law.
At first, particularly in the period 1919-22, alcohol consumption dropped.
This continued a trend during World War I itself, when the temporary
wartime prohibition had been in effect.
The unavailability of legal supplies of alcohol affected social classes
unevenly. The poor found that alcohol became more expensive, because
of the shortness of legal supply, and therefore working-class consumption
declined. The saloons themselves were closed, and thus a source of potential
temptation to working-class drinking was removed. This appealed to the
prohibitionists as evidence of the progressive and ameliorative effects
of the measure on poverty. However middleclass people, not known previously
as heavy drinkers but as abstainers or light drinkers, were able to
afford the higher priced illegal booze, and it became fashionable to
drink cocktails in one’s own home or at parties. Young women were
among those who drank more, in conformity with the image of the “flapper”
and as part of the rise of a mass consumption society in the 1920s.
Thus the law changed the pattern of consumption. Beer (the working-class
saloon drink) dropped and the more compact form of alcohol, spirits,
rose in popularity. Nevertheless, per capita alcohol consumption did
not return to pre-World War I levels.The law was widely flouted by the
mid- to late 1920s, and gangsterism and crime based on the profits of
illegal shipment of alcohol flourished. New institutions for drinking,
especially the illegal drinking places known as speak-easies emerged.
Some Americans fought prohibition in legal ways. The Association Against
the Prohibition Amendment (AAPA), took over the campaign for repeal,
led by Pierre DuPont and other powerful corporate leaders. An Organization
called the Women's Organization for National Prohibition Reform seeking
amendment of the 18th amendment was founded in 1929. Other women’s
groups continued to support prohibition. Wealthy Americans and those
who opposed the spread of illegality belonged to these organizations.
They argued that disrespect for the law had been increased as a result
of the prohibition amendment. Though businessmen at first supported
prohibition, prominent capitalists eventually turned against it as did
John D. Rockefeller, on account of the illegality associated with prohibition-related
crime.
Prohibition affected the politics of the 1920s. The Democratic Party
became deeply split between its urban, anti-prohibition wing and the
pro-prohibition rural and southern interests. The conflict paralysed
the party in the 1924 election and aided the triumph of the Republicans
under Calvin Coolidge.
In 1928, the Democrats nominated a “wet” or anti-prohibition
candidate, Governor Al Smith of New York. He galvanised anti-prohibitionist
and Catholic voters, particularly in the urban areas, and presaged the
formation of the coalition of liberals, ethnics, Catholics and urban
people generally in the 1930s under the New Deal. However, the “dry”
majority held in 1928, largely because of the prosperity of the 1920s,
and Herbert Hoover was elected President. He was strongly supported
by the Anti-Saloon League and the WCTU. Smith’s anti-prohibitionist
and Catholic credentials ruined his chances across much of the West,
where Protestant, anti-urban and Republican sentiment was strong.
It was not until the Great Depression (1929-39) that American opinion
turned decisively against prohibition. The Depression brought economic
issues to the fore and dampened the cultural conflicts. The taxes that
could be raised by legalising and taxing alcohol outweighed residual
concern over the moral effects of drinking. The Wickersham Commission
(National Commission on Law Observance and Enforcement) appointed in
1929 by President Hoover was divided over whether to recommend modification
of the prohibition amendment—by allowing the sale of low alcohol
beer. If prohibitionists had accepted the sale of beer, it is likely
that the prohibition on spirits could have retained political support
but they refused to compromise. This failure to compromise lost prohibitionists
a chance to retain partial prohibition.
When the Democratic party gained the presidency under Franklin D. Roosevelt
in 1933 it was committed to the anti-prohibitionist stance pioneered
within the party by Al Smith and Repeal (the 21st amendment) was quickly
passed and ratified.
Prohibition was one of the most profoundly significant social reforms
of the early twentieth century—it illustrates the ambivalence
of Progressivism in its blend of moral reform and the search for efficiency
through a more rational business-dominated organization of society.
An alcohol-free society would have better employees, less social problems
caused by alcohol, and less welfare problems.
The prohibition movement was a part of the vast cultural cleavage in
1920s America that also involved the separate issues of the Ku Klux
Klan and the campaign against evolution, as seen in the Scopes trial
(1925). Cosmopolitan Americans and intellectuals scoffed at rural and
small town people who supported prohibition and those who were anti-evolution,
and there was created a cultural divide in American society not dissimilar
to that over issues such as abortion and other Christian right crusades
of the 1990s and after. Perhaps the roots of the current cultural divisions
could be traced from these 1920s sources, of which the dispute over
prohibition was an important part.
Prohibition represented a profound intrusion on the private lives of
Americans and contributed to the growth of state power. Enforcement
of prohibition was shared jointly between the state and federal governments,
with the Department of the Treasury principally responsible for enforcement
at the federal level. But the FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation)
led from 1924 by J. Edgar Hoover also became involved in combating the
crime which arose from the context of prohibition. Originally called
the Bureau of Investigation, the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover had been
expanded in World War I partly to combat anti-war radicalism, but in
the 1920s it had to deal with issues arising from he criminal activities
of bootleggers.
The anti-alcohol movement left its impact on American life because the
repeal of the prohibition amendment turned regulation of the liquor
industry back to the states and allowed the states which wanted to continue
to restrict alcohol sale and consumption to do so—which they did,
especially in the South and Midwest for the remainder of the 1930s.
American tastes were also changed by prohibition. The cocktail
grew in popularity, while the custom of drinking in restaurants was
in many areas lost.