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Guns, Gangsters and Rum-Runners. Prohibition and Bootlegging in 1920s Canada. Prohibition. Prohibition was an attempt to legally ban selling and drinking of alcohol.
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Guns, Gangsters and Rum-Runners Prohibition and Bootlegging in 1920s Canada
Prohibition • Prohibition was an attempt to legally ban selling and drinking of alcohol. • Widespread in Canada, in most provinces drinking establishments closed and the sale of alcohol was banned with some exceptions. • Alcohol was still sold through the government for industrial, scientific, mechanical, artistic and medical uses. Distillers sold their products outside their own province with proper documentation.
The Temperance Movement • Though seen as a patriotic duty to help win WWI, prohibition was also the result of years of effort by Temperance workers to close the bars and taverns, which were the sources of much drunkenness and misery in an age before social welfare.
The Beginning of Bootlegging • Bootlegging, the illegal sale of alcohol, exploded during the 1920s, as people sought ways to get their favourite brew. • The term bootlegging is thought to come from the common practice hiding flasks of alcohol in knee-high boots
Rum Running • As demand in Canada and the US for alcohol grew, criminal gangs became involved in bootlegging. • By boat or tunnels, they would smuggle alcohol across the US border, a practice which often led to violent encounters with police.
Rum Running • A dramatic aspect of the prohibition era was rum running. By law, the US was under even stricter prohibition than was Canada from 1920 to 1933: the making, sale, and transportation of all beer, wines, and spirits were forbidden there
The Moose Jaw Connection Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan was known as “Little Chicago” for its maze of tunnels used for bootlegging, or the illegal sale of alcohol. It is rumoured that American gangster Al Capone visited often, using the town as a base of operations.
The Speakeasy • Speakeasies hid in plain sight among other types of businesses. Typically they were very plain on the outside, and were sometimes even located behind the storefront of a legitimate business. Patrons needed a secret password or knock to get in.
Speakeasies • Speakeasies were in almost every community, serving up all the illegal alcohol their customers wanted. Some featured jazz bands and gambling as well. • Before Prohibition it would have been in extremely poor taste for a woman to be seen in a saloon, but women flocked to speakeasies in the 1920s.
Rocco Perri-Canada’s Gangster • Rocco Perri was called "Canada's King of the Bootleggers" and "Canada's Al Capone." He was also one of the most fascinating characters in the colourful history of North American organized crime.
The Calabrian Mob • Perri was the head of the Calabrian mob in southern Ontario and his right-hand person, was his common-law wife, Bessie Starkman, the only Jewish woman in history to command an Italian mob.
The Turnip Empire • Selling liquor to the United States from Canada was perfectly legal here--but it took Rocco and Bessie Perri to send it on its way. Strangely although it was legal to manufacture and export the stuff, it was illegal to sell it in Ontario, so Rocco doubled his profits by "re-importing" some of it back into Ontario. • Beginning in Hamilton, Ontario, Rocco laundered his liquor as turnips and sent boxcar loads south to New York and west to Chicago.
The Decline of Prohibition • In 1920, British Columbia votes to make alcohol available through the government. Manitoba and Saskatchewan follow a year later. • Ontario is 1927 and created the Liquor Control Board of Ontario, permitting the sale of liquor in the province though under heavy regulation. • The remaining provinces vote against prohibition by 1930, with the exception of P.E.I., which stays dry until 1948.