Why Is Prohibition Important In The 1920s

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Prohibition
Prohibition was the talk of the town during the 1920’s. Prohibition was the act of putting a ban on manufacturing, transporting, importing, exporting and the sale of alcohol. On January 16th, 1920 the United States began enforcing prohibition. The Roaring Twenties was a movement of prohibition that brought great troubles throughout the United States.
Since prohibition is being enforced, new places called “speakeasies” were the big hangout where alcohol was served. Since no one wanted to follow the 18th amendment they decided to open up something that's on the low called speakeasies. Speakeasies were an illegal bar that brought in many customers. Which were often just a hidden room with drinkable booze mostly run by gangsters to …show more content…

The gangsters came well prepared for the 18th amendment and no one was getting in the way of them or their money. In the prohibition era people did not lose the desire for liquor and beer. As the era went on people still drank excessively and people still got hurt. Soon after women and their children started a organization called the Women's Temperance Movement. Women and children were always in the path of their drunk husbands and fathers when they came home from drinking all night. Women and children were beaten to death at times. The movement somewhat worked but no one stayed abstinence from alcohol “The purpose of the movement was to consume little alcohol or none at all” said the staff at History.com. (History.com) Therefore it’s crazy how alcohol can control someone's actions. It was a few years later and the assault and murder cases just kept piling up. Not only regular men were acting out but gangsters of the mob were also killing innocent people. Many gangsters sold alcohol for tremendous profit, used extreme violence to stake turf and protect their interest. Often, police officers and politicians were paid off to turn the blind eye from the tragic murders of many.