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American History Tellers

Prohibition - We Want Beer | 6

American History Tellers

Audible

Kids & Family, Education For Kids, Society & Culture, History

4.619K Ratings

🗓️ 14 March 2018

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The people had spoken: They wanted beer, and they wanted it now, but not just for drinking. Protestors wanted the jobs that came with breweries, and the country was desperate from the money that could come from alcohol taxes. As quickly as temperance organizations sprang up in the decade before, anti-Prohibition organizations appeared in every city. But, a constitutional amendment had never been repealed before. The anti-Prohibition leagues realized they needed someone bigger than a governor or mayor to repeal this. They went after the Presidency.

For a deeper understanding of the interplay between beer, taxation and the history of Repeal, Ambitious Brew: The Story of American Brew by Maureen Ogle is essential reading.  

Kenneth D. Rose’s American Women and the Repeal of Prohibition provided insight into Pauline Sabin’s work, as did David J. Hanson’s comprehensive resource, Alcohol Problems and Solutions.

Those who want to do a deeper dive into the 1932 DNC and the mob’s involvement, you can read more in the article from Salon, Corruption for Decades. Lisa McGirr’s The War on Alcohol: Prohibition and the Rise of the American State also explores the relationship between the New Deal and Repeal. For more on Cox’s Army, check out The Bonus Army: An American Epic by Paul Dixon and Thomas B. Allen.

Andrew Barr’s Drink: A Social History of America contains a great chapter about the failure of controls and the legacy of prohibition in state liquor laws and the relationship between California’s wine industry and repeal is well documented in When the Rivers Ran Red by Vivienne Sosnowski. To catch up with the bartenders who are bringing back pre-Prohibition cocktails, David Wondrich’s Imbibe is required reading.


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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, prime members, you can listen to American History Tellers add free on Amazon Music,

0:05.6

download the app today.

0:07.0

Imagine it's 1932.

0:14.3

It's the end of your shift working on a huge new construction project in downtown Manhattan,

0:20.3

a Rockefeller Center.

0:22.0

It's still a year away from being finished, but you can already see what a massive change

0:25.9

is going to have in the area.

0:28.2

As you leave the site, you pass the next shift as they come in.

0:31.0

You don't recognize many of the faces, but that's not surprising, really, because there

0:34.6

are tens of thousands of people working on the project.

0:38.0

The pay isn't bad.

0:39.0

With so many people out at work, there's no shortage of hands willing to work for almost

0:42.6

nothing, but Old Man Rockefeller has promised to pay a decent salary, and you're glad for

0:47.2

the job, clearing some of the 200 properties that used to be on the site.

0:51.9

You meet up with a friend and head up the street, passing the empty lots.

0:55.9

One in particular makes you nostalgic.

0:58.4

And the nights I had in that place.

1:00.3

Sad to see the species go.

1:02.6

You can't find a drink for a mile around.

1:05.0

Yeah.

1:06.0

Did you know Rockefeller got one of the leases from that mobster who was shot over a card game?

1:10.6

What was his name?

...

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