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Kevin P. Dincher www.kevindincher.com. Last Call: Prohibition and the Alcoholic Republic. Enshrine social policy in US Constitution Alcohol = major source of social ills Poverty, divorce, violence, gambling, prostitution, other crime “Others” – “Undesirables”
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Kevin P. Dincher www.kevindincher.com Last Call: Prohibition and the Alcoholic Republic
Enshrine social policy in US Constitution • Alcohol = major source of social ills • Poverty, divorce, violence, gambling, prostitution, other crime • “Others” – “Undesirables” • Immigrants (Irish, Italians, Eastern Europeans, Catholics) • Blacks • Purpose • Fix what was wrong with America by fixing the American people • Change American’s attitude • Control American’s behavior Prohibition
Alcohol consumption decreased in the 20th Century • 19th Century Americans consumed 3x as much alcohol per capita as today • But really caused by Prohibition? • Consequences • Culture • Crime and corruption • Women Prohibition
Prohibition and Culture
Jazz Nightclubs Big Bands
Prohibition and Crime and Corruption
Crime And Corruption Family of Carl and Christina Behle, 1913
Crime And Corruption George Remus (1874 – 1952) • 1874: Born in Germany • 1879: Immigrated to Chicago • 1888: Worked at a pharmacy • 1893: Bought the pharmacy • Bought 2nd pharmacy • 1898: Illinois College of Law • 1899: married Lillian Klauff • 1900: Romola Remus King of the Bootleggers
Crime And Corruption • If there ever has been a bigger bootlegger than Remus, the fact remains a secret. Remus was to bootlegging what Rockefeller was to oil…” St. Louis Post Dispatch
Crime And Corruption Romola Remus (1900 – 1987) Wizard of Oz, 1908
Crime And Corruption • 1904: Admitted to Illinois Bar • Famous criminal defense attorney • 1920: $50,000/year • $245,000/year in 2013 dollars • 1918: Divorced Lillian • Married Imogene Holms Imogene Holms
Crime And Corruption George Remus • Prohibition • Defending accused bootleggers • Arbitrariness of judge • Impressed by corruption • 1920: Relocated to Cincinnati • Cincinnati: 40,000 people • Newport: 30,000 people • 30,000 speakeasies
Cincinnati • 80% of America’s “bonded liquor” stored in distillery warehouses within 300 mile radius • Government withdrawal permits to sell to drug companies for medicinal purposes • Remus: • Bought up distilleries • Created own drug company in Covington • Created own trucking company • Own men hijacked delivery trucks • Distribution center: 50 acre farm • “Death Valley” Crime And Corruption
Increased Crime • Cincinnati • 80 % of America’s bonded liquor stored in distillery warehouses within 300 mile radius • Government withdrawal permits to sell to drug companies for medicinal purposes • Bought up distilleries; established own drug company in Covington; created own trucking company • Own men hijacked delivery trucks • Distribution center: 50 acre farm • “Death Valley” • 3000 employees – 3 shifts/day • $80,000/day Glenn Fleshler as Remus in Boardwalk Empire
Crime and Corruption Death Valley Farm Distribution center 50 acre farm
Increased Crime • Government Bribes • 1921: began meeting with Jesse Smith • Member of Warren G. Harding's “Ohio Gang” • Teapot Dome Scandal • Unofficial assistant to US Attorney General Harry Daugherty • $250,000 in bribes from Remus • Withdrawal permits • Protection from prosecution Ed Jewett as Smith in Boardwak Empire
Increased Crime • Government Bribes • 1921: began meeting with Jesse Smith • Member of Warren G. Harding's “Ohio Gang” • Teapot Dome Scandal • Unofficial assistant to US Attorney General Harry Daugherty • $250,000 in bribes from Remus • Withdrawal permits • Protection from prosecution Christopher McDonald as Daugherty in Boardwalk Empire
Increased Crime George Remus • Income: $6million a year • New supply depot in Ohio • 9 distilleries in Cincinnati • Network from Buffalo, NY to Glendale, CA • 1922: New Year’s Party • 100 couples • All the men with diamond watches • Each guest's wife a brand new car • June 1923: Similar party • 100 couples • Gave each female guest a new Pontiac
Increased Crime • 1925: arrested for violation of the Volstead Act • Jury deliberated for 2 hours • Sentenced to 2 years in jail • Franklin Dodge • 1927: Imogene divorced Remus
The jury deliberated only 19 minutes before acquitting him by reason of insanity
Prohibition and Women
American Women 18th and 19th centuries • “A Woman’s place is in the home.” • Women worked and socialized primarily in the home • Economic necessity • Women’s patriotic role
American Boycott of British Goods (1769) • Could only succeed with women’s support and active participation • Recognize women as political • Women could be patriots and had a key role in the patriot cause • Domestic duties and responsibilities have political ramifications • Consumption behaviors had political implications, and women make political decisions whether they intend to or not American Women
American Boycott of British Goods (1769) • Reinforced • “Domestic sphere” of women • “Public sphere” of men • Changed the nature of “women’s work” • Politicized the “domestic sphere” American Women
Republican Motherhood • Philosophy about the role of women in the emerging United States before and after the American Revolution • Women’s political role in the domestic sphere American Women Linda Kerber Department of History University of Iowa
American Women Linda K. Kerber • Women of the Republic: Intellect and Ideology in Revolutionary America (1997) • No Constitutional Right to Be Ladies: Women and the Obligations of Citizenship (1999)
American Women 18th and 19th centuries • “A woman’s place is in the home.”
A "new breed" of young Western women in the 1920s • Flaunted their disdain for what was then considered conventional/acceptable behavior. • Flappers = scandalous Flappers Actress Louise Brooks (1927)
Flappers When someone violates the status quo, we get up in arms, but we also make the scandalous act speakable. Six Women of a Dangerous Generation Judith Mackrell
Flappers The women who defined this age would presage the sexual revolution by nearly half a century and would shape the role of women for generations to come.
Flappers Josephine Baker • 1906-1975 • American-born French dancer, singer, actress
Flappers Tallulah Bankhead • 1902-1968 • Actress and political activist .
Flappers Diana Cooper • 1892-1986 • British actress and socialite .
Flappers Nancy Cunard • 1896 -1965 • British write, heiress and political activist .
Flappers Zelda Fitzgerald • 1900 – 1948 • American novelist, short story write, poet and dancer • Icon of the 1920’s: “The First American Flapper”
Flappers Tamara de Lempicka • 1898 – 1980 • Polish Art Deco painter • First woman artist to be glamour star .
Flappers • Suffragettes thought Flappers were vapid and silly • Disengaged from politics • Overturning Victorian roles • Result of social change • Promoted further social change
Fashion • Clothing • Lingerie • Hair • Make-up • Jewelry Language • Slang • Swearing Flappers
Flappers “Vices” • Drank • Smoked • Causal sex • Petting parties • Drove automobiles • Rode bicycles • Listened to jazz • Got jobs Actress Louise Brooks (1927)
Flappers • 1631: flap = prostitute • 1890s: popular slang in England • very young prostitute • any lively mid-teenage girl • 1907: theatrical slang for acrobatic young female stage performers • 1908: The London Times • “a young lady who has not yet been promoted to long frocks and the wearing of her hair 'up'“ • 1912: a girl who has "just come out.” (debutant) Violet Romer, born in 1886 in San Francisco, California, was an American actress, dancer and flapper
1920: “Flapper” had taken on the full meaning of the flapper generation style and attitudes. • "the social butterfly type… the frivolous, scantily-clad, jazzing flapper, irresponsible and undisciplined, to whom a dance, a new hat, or a man with a car were of more importance than the fate of nations". American Women Actresses such as Joan Crawford built their careers on the flapper image
Vices: scandalous dances • Charleston • The Shimmy • The Bunny Hug • The Black Bottom American Women Joan Crawford
Clara Bow American Women
Blondie Boopadoop: a carefree flapper girl who spent her days in dance halls
1920s Movies • Actresses • Movies about Flappers Tabloids • Sensational crime • Celebrity gossip One Summer: America, 1927 • Bill Bryson Flappers and American Women
1930s Flappers and American Women
Prohibition and Drinking