The United States Goes Dry - Alcohol Prohibition I THE GREAT WAR

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  • Опубликовано: 29 янв 2025

Комментарии • 687

  • @TheGreatWar
    @TheGreatWar  5 лет назад +87

    Support The Great War on Patreon and keep it free as an educational resource (despite RUclips's moves against history channel): patreon.com/thegreatwar

    • @franciscomm7675
      @franciscomm7675 5 лет назад +3

      The Great War, happy new year

    • @Jackson-mm3qb
      @Jackson-mm3qb 5 лет назад +3

      The Great War Can you guys make a special on the true story of Alvin York, and how he was actually a fraud?

    • @KonradSeverinHilstad
      @KonradSeverinHilstad 5 лет назад +2

      We also had prohibition during this time in Norway, and I presume in other countries it Northern Europe as well.

    • @hectormorales5306
      @hectormorales5306 5 лет назад +3

      Look at how much the Rockefeller foundation and big oil also funded a lot of this movement so farmers and/or average Americans that were used to extracting a type of alcohol from grain or even potatoes back then could run their own farm equipment on their own fuel. You will see how big corporations used this legislation also to stifle out competition in the fuel or petroleum industry. You should research this and make a follow up to this video it is very significant

    • @hectormorales5306
      @hectormorales5306 5 лет назад +2

      The women's Christian temperance movement was funded in a big way by the Rockefeller foundation.

  • @moosemaimer
    @moosemaimer 5 лет назад +913

    The funniest thing about Prohibition was the companies making things like malt and pressed grapes with warnings on the package that said things like "after mixing with water, whatever you do: make sure you don't drop in a packet of yeast, pour into a jug, and place it in a cool dry place for several weeks, because that would produce an alcoholic beverage _and you don't want that!"_

    • @momcilogavric4930
      @momcilogavric4930 5 лет назад +18

      No way??
      No country cant be so fucked up?!?

    • @TheHiddenPart
      @TheHiddenPart 5 лет назад +15

      cough-solvent traps-cough

    • @alexandrub8786
      @alexandrub8786 5 лет назад +30

      @@momcilogavric4930 'Merica!

    • @exploatores
      @exploatores 5 лет назад +20

      I have seen my self a beer brewing kit. with the text that it it´s ileagla to put extra suger in to it. as the level of alcohol goes to high. Yes it stod how much suger you shouldn´t put in.

    • @HistoryGameV
      @HistoryGameV 5 лет назад +55

      @@momcilogavric4930 Nope, it's true. There were very precise informations on how many other ingredients you absolutely shouldn't put in cause that would turn it into alcohol. xD

  • @tuomopoika
    @tuomopoika 5 лет назад +280

    Finland also had alcohol prohibition between 1919 and 1932. Not surprise to anybody, it created similar results as in the USA. The consumption moved more heavily towards strong alcohol since it was more easy to smuggle than beer. The law also basically destroyed the Finnish beer industry that really did not recover before many decades later.
    Also during the prohibition 40 police officers were killed in the line of duty, which sounds insane when you are talking about Finland. It seems there was some sort of organized crime here as well but I have not read too much about it at this point. Perhaps we had our own "al capone" here as well.

    • @kchall5
      @kchall5 5 лет назад +31

      With access to Russian vodka on one side and Swedish aquavit on the other, it boggles the mind how Finland's sobriety could not last. Just like the US had ready access to Canadian whiskey and Mexican tequila.

    • @jika327
      @jika327 5 лет назад +20

      I guess Algoth Niska could be called 'Finnish Al Capone'. Finnish prohibition lasted from 1919 to 1932 and as tuomopoika said, ~40 officers were killed in duty. This could be compared to the past ~89 years during which roughly 80 officers have been killed. And since no one asked, 8 officers were killed during the first year of independent Finland.

    • @HistoryGameV
      @HistoryGameV 5 лет назад +11

      There must have been plenty of guns after the revolution and civil war, quite surprising the numbers were so low.

    • @scottleft3672
      @scottleft3672 5 лет назад +3

      MORE THAN LIKELY.

    • @joluoto
      @joluoto 5 лет назад +5

      There certainly werealot of smugglers in the southern archipleago, and most of the alcohol was smuggled from Estonia. Smuggling fromSweden also happened, but to a lesser degree due to the Bratt Act rationing system, that basically made booze hard to get hold of in Sweden too. German ships also benefited from this, ships boud for Tallin or Riga stayed outside Finnish waters and waited for the bootleggers, then sold them the booze before continuing to their destination.

  • @Ashfielder
    @Ashfielder 5 лет назад +374

    Years of fighting for your country, and how do they reward you? They take away the fun juice.

    • @thomasbertelsen4486
      @thomasbertelsen4486 5 лет назад +7

      It’s no fun, for me or was the medicine I could get, the best care raising a glass with drunks at a bar. I can’t stand it now but still get jacked.
      That is no fun.
      I’m glad a MJ is legal now, they can self medicate with less collateral damage to society.

    • @graeme3023
      @graeme3023 5 лет назад +7

      "Years" of fighting??????

    • @Ashfielder
      @Ashfielder 5 лет назад +2

      Graeme Entry in 1917, through to the Siberian shenanigans up to 1920

    • @graeme3023
      @graeme3023 5 лет назад +4

      @@Ashfielder "entry into" doesn't equal "fighting"

    • @Ashfielder
      @Ashfielder 5 лет назад +10

      Graeme Well, even 1918 to 1920 counts as years, rather than a year, doesn’t it? Besides, American troops did fight in 1917 to bolster British and French forces.

  • @jollybritishchap485
    @jollybritishchap485 5 лет назад +440

    Alcohol Prohibition or "How I learned to stop worrying and join the Mafia"

    • @monkeydank7842
      @monkeydank7842 5 лет назад +2

      Multi Same with all kinds of Prohibition.

    • @JenniferinIllinois
      @JenniferinIllinois 5 лет назад +1

      I see what you did there. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @MrGiygas1
      @MrGiygas1 5 лет назад +16

      YOU CAN’T BOOTLEG IN HERE! THIS IS A SPEAKEASY

    • @MrGiygas1
      @MrGiygas1 5 лет назад

      YOU CAN’T BOOTLEG IN HERE! THIS IS A SPEAKEASY

    • @spydr7768
      @spydr7768 4 года назад

      Excellent reference. 👏👏👏👏

  • @ricardoaguirre6126
    @ricardoaguirre6126 5 лет назад +171

    "To alcohol, the cause of and the solution to all of life's problems."

    • @spudgunn8695
      @spudgunn8695 5 лет назад +13

      Ah, the gospel according to Homer Simpson. I salute you, sir!

    • @spudgunn8695
      @spudgunn8695 5 лет назад +5

      Pour me another Jim Beam, would you?

    • @johnmccallum8512
      @johnmccallum8512 5 лет назад +9

      The human body is 75% water in my case BEER

  • @jessealexander2695
    @jessealexander2695 5 лет назад +130

    Hey folks, hope you enjoy this episode. It was hard not to go on and on about the hooch-running from Canada and the alleged Al Capone hideout in the town of Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan...

    • @zoperxplex
      @zoperxplex 5 лет назад +3

      Mr. Alexander are you Canadian? If so you must have the intestinal fortitude of a Saint Simeon Stylites not to tell stories about the Prohibition era.

    • @jessealexander2695
      @jessealexander2695 5 лет назад +5

      @@zoperxplex I am Canadian - I guess I picked up some of St Simeon Stylite's self-discipline when I visted the supposed remains of his pillar way back when...

    • @oslonorway547
      @oslonorway547 5 лет назад +1

      I was listening to this while cooking. And @@jessealexander2695 read that 10:04 so well, 👍 I thought he was talking about himself, that he was making his own opinions known on the matter. 😁
      Edit: Also wish you guys had included a fun fact about those _Cow shoes_ which moonshiners used to wear, to disguise their human footprints in the fields, while smuggling contraband across vast borderlands. .... Perhaps in a follow up episode filled with Fun Facts of that era.

    • @jessealexander2695
      @jessealexander2695 5 лет назад +4

      @@oslonorway547 Thanks, but as an objective host I will keep my opinions of prohibition to myself of course ;)

    • @BGH1961
      @BGH1961 5 лет назад +8

      Actually Canada had prohibition laws, too. Different ones in different provinces. For instance, the sale and consumption of alcohol in Prince Edward Island in 1901 and in Ontario was prohibited in 1916, but it was still legally allowed to be made for export. It gets complicated because of the difference between Federal and Provincial jurisdictions.
      So liquor was made in Ontario, and legally purchased for export by smugglers who ran it illegally into the U.S. but Canadians in Ontario couldn't buy alcohol and neither could it be imported, even from other provinces.

  • @derrickthewhite1
    @derrickthewhite1 5 лет назад +197

    Lenin: "Then it is necessary to choose between indenture and vodka"
    The Great War: "They Choose Vodka"
    glorious line.

  • @gcircle
    @gcircle 5 лет назад +228

    "Let's ban booze. What could possibly go wrong?"
    Narrator: Everything

    • @Raskolnikov70
      @Raskolnikov70 5 лет назад +4

      *Laughs in Sicilian*

    • @lavrentivs9891
      @lavrentivs9891 5 лет назад +1

      Apart from public health

    • @patrick8116
      @patrick8116 4 года назад +3

      Just like gun control.

    • @lauracurriero303
      @lauracurriero303 3 года назад

      @@patrick8116 Plenty of countries around the world have strict gun laws and they seem to be doing fine, way better thn the US i might add, but i'm not going to stop you from being an idiot

    • @peashootz9917
      @peashootz9917 3 года назад

      Wrong, the world would be MUCH better

  • @herbwag6456
    @herbwag6456 5 лет назад +48

    There was a post-WW1 saying among American doughboys that you missed: "We went to war to save the world for freedom, but when we got home found that we couldn't order a beer."

    • @Ugly_German_Truths
      @Ugly_German_Truths Год назад +1

      A lot of them couldn't before the war either as the Drinking age in much of the USA was already 19 - 21 and the Doughboys would often be below that age even after serving their tour.

    • @deskejtx6211
      @deskejtx6211 Год назад

      ​​@@Ugly_German_Truthsyou can go to war to kill people but you can't order a beer, nice

  • @thevoidlookspretty7079
    @thevoidlookspretty7079 5 лет назад +153

    “We are fighting Germany, Austria, and drink.”
    Cries in Turkish.

    • @alexandrub8786
      @alexandrub8786 5 лет назад +28

      Cries harder in Bulgarian.

    • @Illiteratechimp
      @Illiteratechimp 5 лет назад +4

      When you think the void looks pretty
      The void also admires you

    • @thevoidlookspretty7079
      @thevoidlookspretty7079 5 лет назад +4

      Morty Sanchez I’m not sure if that’s deep, but it does sound both pretty and like a compliment. Thanks.

    • @Illiteratechimp
      @Illiteratechimp 5 лет назад +2

      @@thevoidlookspretty7079
      Credit Nietzsche ^^

    • @thevoidlookspretty7079
      @thevoidlookspretty7079 5 лет назад

      Morty Sanchez Cool.

  • @alexfilma16
    @alexfilma16 5 лет назад +271

    If a homeless person illegally brewed alcohol, would it still be homemade?

    • @channeldmitry8460
      @channeldmitry8460 5 лет назад +17

      //music plays

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero 5 лет назад +1

      @@channeldmitry8460 Proud to know the reference :)

    • @ibnyahud
      @ibnyahud 5 лет назад +10

      if you are going to be overly pendantic like that, then technically even if someone made it at home, it would not be homemade because THEY made it and not the home lol

    • @abraxorcaco
      @abraxorcaco 5 лет назад +1

      Makeshift?

    • @conveyor2
      @conveyor2 5 лет назад +3

      Homelessly Made and Proud

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache 5 лет назад +117

    The government: (Bans America's favorite drink)
    Also the government: What could possibly go wrong?

    • @thatonecrytian8997
      @thatonecrytian8997 5 лет назад +3

      Just Some Guy without a Mustache: Are you sure you don’t have a mustache?

    • @taxax3782
      @taxax3782 5 лет назад +1

      As it turns out everything

    • @monkeydank7842
      @monkeydank7842 5 лет назад +4

      Same with now illegal drugs. Prohibition is doomed to fail.

    • @firemochimc
      @firemochimc 5 лет назад +5

      @@monkeydank7842 exactly, monetization and regulation is a far more humane and profitable course of action

    • @ericiron4520
      @ericiron4520 5 лет назад +2

      Wait Did they ban Coke no no no NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

  • @yourstruly4817
    @yourstruly4817 5 лет назад +160

    So this is how liberty dies...with thunderous applause

    • @monkeydank7842
      @monkeydank7842 5 лет назад +16

      Yours Truly You see the “successes” of the war against drugs.

    • @charlesthepaperman
      @charlesthepaperman 5 лет назад +8

      Ah... Prohibition... Nothing like a decent witch hunt...

    • @monkeydank7842
      @monkeydank7842 5 лет назад +1

      Handsome B. Wonderful On the costs of society.

    • @alexandrub8786
      @alexandrub8786 5 лет назад +1

      @@charlesthepaperman it wasn't truly a witch hunt because they couldn't burn/jail Alfonso with accusations only.

    • @minuteman4199
      @minuteman4199 5 лет назад +10

      By letting women vote.

  • @boahkeinbockmehr
    @boahkeinbockmehr 5 лет назад +49

    Imagine getting back from the war to find your country prohibiting you from having a beer on it

    • @GazB85
      @GazB85 Год назад +1

      Or cocaine, or heroin, morphine and opium.
      Damn you Defence of the Realm Act!

  • @Corium1
    @Corium1 5 лет назад +96

    1918: America's won! The U.S is the best country ever!
    1919 Prohibition: OH CANADA!

    • @Biker_Gremling
      @Biker_Gremling 5 лет назад +5

      LOL 😂

    • @TheCrimsonEssence
      @TheCrimsonEssence 5 лет назад +9

      Funny thing, we Canadians had a prohibition of our own around the same time, but many of our distilleries were allowed to manufacture for export.

  • @LogicalMan6
    @LogicalMan6 5 лет назад +52

    "You really think prohibition will be a success?"
    "Of course it'll be a success, how could it possibly go wrong? That's like asking if the stock market will crash, it's impossible."

    • @monkeydank7842
      @monkeydank7842 5 лет назад +8

      LogicalMan6 Same success as the “war against drugs” is.

    • @davidhoran7116
      @davidhoran7116 5 лет назад +2

      Monkeydank it’s just more prohibition

    • @Zamolxes77
      @Zamolxes77 4 года назад +3

      @@monkeydank7842 “war against drugs” is not a war. Wars end.

    • @monkeydank7842
      @monkeydank7842 4 года назад +2

      @@Zamolxes77 Among all senseless wars, this is among the most stupid ones.

    • @patrick8116
      @patrick8116 4 года назад +3

      Gun control advocates: unintended consequences, that's unpossible.

  • @bliblablubb9590
    @bliblablubb9590 5 лет назад +66

    In Germany the consumption of Beer actually increased at the frontline in WW1. The reason was more a dietary one, since food was becoming so scarce but beer was still somewhat plentyfull and was intended to bolster the rations.

    • @RainbowManification
      @RainbowManification 5 лет назад +9

      Beer is essentially liquid bread

    • @mauricewalshe8234
      @mauricewalshe8234 5 лет назад +20

      Beer is also safer than potentially contaminated water

    • @neurofiedyamato8763
      @neurofiedyamato8763 4 года назад +5

      Wine doesn't help fight the cold. No alcohol helps you fight the cold. It actually lowers body temperature, not increase. However you do FEEL warmer. Quite dangerous since people undergoing hypothermia would get a drink thinking it'll warm themselves, but actually its the opposite. I'm not sure if this was common medical knowledge back in WW1 though.

    • @mauricewalshe8234
      @mauricewalshe8234 4 года назад +4

      @@neurofiedyamato8763 this was watered wine - the losses from dysentery and waterborne illnesses would be more of a concern

    • @JarthenGreenmeadow
      @JarthenGreenmeadow 2 года назад +3

      ​@@neurofiedyamato8763 "No alcohol helps you fight the cold."
      You must never have been outside in the winter. Beer absolutely does help. You arent going to get hypothermic unless you arent moving for a looooooong time (or in poor gear).
      The feeling of being warm is a MASSIVE morale boost that far offsets the risk of hypothermia (literally isnt even a concern if you're dressed appropriately)
      "people undergoing hypothermia would get a drink thinking it'll warm themselves"
      Is spoken like someone who has never been hypothermic. People with hypothermia dont think *AT ALL* lol. Thats why its so dangerous. People will do some CRAZY stuff when they get cold and yea if you're already hypothermic and you start drinking you'll probably die. But on the whole hypothermia has A LOT more to do with what you're wearing and doing than what you're drinking.
      Source: Snowmaker for 5 years, Vermonter my whole life. We get plenty drunk in the winter.
      Some highlights:
      I've had 18 beers and fell asleep in a snowbank before but since I was in full snow gear (baselayer/facepro/goggles/gloves/hat/sweatpants/snowpants/gaiters/midlayer/jacket/wool socks/Scarpa boots) it was just comfy. Snowbanks are way way better than memory foam.
      I've met a man who lived in an igloo at 3 am, sitting on a plastic lawnchair, drinkin beers in nothing but boxers, not even shoes. This is January it was all of 5°F in the middle of a blizzard, the snow that landed on this guy was literally STEAMING off of him, never seen anything like it. We found him and his igloo about 300 yards into the woods about halfway up the mountain after we saw his lantern. He offered us all a beer and we took him up on it and left him be.
      Ice fishing is basically impossible without drinking. I dont know anyone who goes ice fishing to fish lol.

  • @moffjendob6796
    @moffjendob6796 5 лет назад +111

    "The only RUclips channel that could really go for a little medicinal whiskey."
    Oooh. Shots fired at Indy's end-of-video toast. :p

    • @ActuallyDoubleGuitars
      @ActuallyDoubleGuitars 5 лет назад

      I've only started watching this channel but what happened to him? was it an amicable split?

    • @HistoryGameV
      @HistoryGameV 5 лет назад +4

      @@ActuallyDoubleGuitars From what I know not exactly.

    • @panzerofthelake506
      @panzerofthelake506 5 лет назад +18

      @@ActuallyDoubleGuitars the great war ended and he was fired because of the depression.

    • @ActuallyDoubleGuitars
      @ActuallyDoubleGuitars 5 лет назад +1

      @@panzerofthelake506 the depression? Or was that a joke about the depression.

    • @ActuallyDoubleGuitars
      @ActuallyDoubleGuitars 5 лет назад +1

      @@HistoryGameV Interesting. Also is that his real name because a guy called Indiana who is into history that's too funny.

  • @ebarteldes
    @ebarteldes Год назад +2

    In a country that is so serious about personal freedoms, Prohibition was anathema. Funny thing is, there is still a prohibition party in the United States

  • @cliftondean4333
    @cliftondean4333 2 года назад +2

    My maternal grandfather was opposed to alcoholic beverages. When I was young, we would visit my grandparents. When we took them to dinner, it had to be a restaurant that did not serve alcohol. He was a fine cabinetmaker, and did a lot of interior work on a new church building, and briefly attended services there. When he discovered that they served fermented wine during Communion, he left the congregation and joined one that served unfermented "wine (grape juice.) During Prohibition he discovered an illegal still on his farm property and notified the authorities. Not long thereafter, his house was torched . Not only that, he had a gasoline powered water pump, but when it started, it sucked air. He discovered that his water line from the well had been cut. That experience was not isolated.

    • @carlhull8276
      @carlhull8276 Год назад +1

      Sounds like Grampa NEEDED a drink!!!

  • @t5ruxlee210
    @t5ruxlee210 4 года назад +5

    Prohibition in the USA and elsewhere was also a highly political, Protestant led movement, strongest in smaller cities and rural areas. The temperance movement targeted national governments because alcohol "sin" taxes have always been a very significant source of their revenue.

    • @Susieq26754
      @Susieq26754 Год назад

      It wasn't protestant led. It was led by secret societies. Those sufferagettes did what their masonic husband's told them to do. They all made money off illegal alcohol.

  • @hemmingwayfan
    @hemmingwayfan 5 лет назад +13

    A whiskey prescription from Prohibition: "For stimulation, take 1.5 ounces every hour, on the hour, until stimulated."

  • @ricardoaguirre6126
    @ricardoaguirre6126 5 лет назад +18

    "I'm gonna get you beer baron if it's the last thing I ever do."
    "No you won't."
    "Yes I will."
    "Won't."

  • @GeneralSmitty91
    @GeneralSmitty91 5 лет назад +22

    Al Capone proclaims himself the GOAT before it was cool to use the term 😂

  • @Beowulf_DW
    @Beowulf_DW 5 лет назад +10

    My great-grandfather was a bartender at a speakeasy during Prohibition. He was arrested during a raid, but they let him go because word came in that my grandmother had just been born...Also because they were all Irish immigrants and some of the cops were customers, so...

  • @mikhailbychkov5042
    @mikhailbychkov5042 5 лет назад +90

    Temperance Movement: Finally, an alcohol free America
    Speakeasy clubs, moonshiners and gangsters: *allow us to introduce ourselves*

    • @finchborat
      @finchborat 5 лет назад

      Also a blackmarket, though you expanded on that.

    • @richardthomas9497
      @richardthomas9497 5 лет назад

      Don't forget the bootleggers and scofflaws.

  • @GreedPainLove
    @GreedPainLove 5 лет назад +5

    Drinking habits in my country (finland) were destroyed for almost a century due to prohibition. People moved to strong spirits and as in the US crime went up. Then after prohibition, alcohol remained a state monopoly, and they kept a tab on how much you bought (they could deny you drinks if you had bought too much lately), they were allowed to call your family and employer to ask how your habits are etc. etc. This lead to a lot of abuse and the temptation of the forbidden fruit. Since the 90s, there have been a lot of liberalization, and there's talks of even abandoning the state monopoly completely at some point, now that liberalization has lead to youn people consuming beer and wine instead of spirits. Prohibition is a typical example of a well meaning policy, that leads to absolute catastrophe

    • @vksasdgaming9472
      @vksasdgaming9472 4 года назад

      Of course only spirits were smuggled. Thousand liters is thousand liters and if that is 90% pure booze you can/must dilute it and sell way more. If it is beer you cannot dilute it and odds of getting caught and punishment are about as same.

  • @thebestcentaur
    @thebestcentaur 4 года назад +11

    "Wine was issued to frontline troops" is the most French thing I've ever heard.

  • @RolfHartmann
    @RolfHartmann 5 лет назад +6

    Amusing thing to me about Prohibition is that most wealthy countries include a small portion of alcoholic drink in their military field rations, but the US does not. We also increasingly ban our troops from drinking when mobilized including to places that allow drinking. When I was in deployed after Hurricane Katrina drinking was strictly banned for fear of offending the local customs of New Orleans of all places.

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 5 лет назад

      All alcoholic beverages have been banned on US Navy ships since 1914. One July 4 when the ship I was on had been on an extended deployment and had been at sea for several weeks they rigged a "liberty boat" so about 20 sailors or Marines at a time could get on the boat, ride out a few yards from the ship, and drink one beer each. I'm guessing that wouldn't pass muster in today's military.

  • @tombickers
    @tombickers 5 лет назад +4

    One quick point of clarification....Clarence Darrow was NOT the Scopes Trial prosecutor, he was on defense. William Jennings Bryan was the prosecutor.

  • @AshGamer007
    @AshGamer007 5 лет назад +15

    The 18th amendment: Bans Alcohol
    Irish and Italian immigrants: Anyway I started blasting

  • @ViceroyPictures
    @ViceroyPictures 4 дня назад

    I just wanted to say that this is perhaps one of the best history channels out there both in terms of entertainment and education!

  • @Kellethorn
    @Kellethorn 4 года назад +10

    Fun Fact: Utah, one of the States with the most liquor laws today, actually voted to repeal prohibition and was the last state necessary to make it official.

  • @TheLazer3
    @TheLazer3 5 лет назад +15

    According to family legend my great grandfather was involved in Rum running in Boston. Though this was just a drunken admission by my grandfather one night thirty five years so who knows.

    • @tiggergolah
      @tiggergolah 3 года назад +3

      So was Joseph Kennedy. He was probably telling the truth.

  • @geoffwaller8571
    @geoffwaller8571 5 лет назад +2

    Prohibition began five years earlier in 1915 here in Washington State. So many Americans drove up to Canada to party that a number of horrible auto accidents occurred because Canada drove on the other side of the road, like England. Because of this Canada changed to American Standards. There were aircraft that flew up to Canada, loaded up and flew back to the US.

  • @Darwinek
    @Darwinek 4 года назад +2

    Another countries experimenting with prohibition were / still are Scandinavian countries. Also, with quite dubious results as well.

  • @urbanlumberjack
    @urbanlumberjack 5 лет назад +2

    Really happy this channel is still going!

  • @briantayler1230
    @briantayler1230 5 лет назад +6

    G'day from Australia. The name given to the low-quality wine issued to the French troops was "plonk". The Australian soldiers caught onto this name and even today, we use this term "plonk" to describe cheap wine.

    • @hlynnkeith9334
      @hlynnkeith9334 5 лет назад

      Today the daily ration for a Legionnaire is half a litre of wine. The Legion has its own vineyard and bottles its own wine for that purpose.

    • @ChristopherNFP
      @ChristopherNFP 5 лет назад

      vin de blanc is what the French called it.
      the troops picked up on the last word.

    • @hlynnkeith9334
      @hlynnkeith9334 5 лет назад +1

      @@ChristopherNFP Makes sense but seems odd. The French ration is red wine. Blanc is a white wine.

    • @ChristopherNFP
      @ChristopherNFP 5 лет назад

      @@hlynnkeith9334
      in the farms and bistros, were not served just red wine.

  • @ThunderBuddy
    @ThunderBuddy 5 лет назад +4

    I bet this pissed off a lot of returning American soldiers.

  • @t3hmaniac
    @t3hmaniac 5 лет назад +2

    Fun fact about the British method of reducing alcohol consumption. In addition to restricting alcohol somewhat (including banning the sale of spirits on Saturdays) they also arranged social events and increased the sale of food at pubs to compensate for the loss of revenue. This model was so effective even post-war that the pub model based on the government-run models became the defacto default mode of operation for pubs all the way to the 1970s.

  • @hlynnkeith9334
    @hlynnkeith9334 5 лет назад +26

    Prohibition: Another reason to hate Woodrow Wilson.

    • @shawngilliland243
      @shawngilliland243 2 года назад +1

      Though didn't Wilson veto the Prohibition law? (Congress over-rode his veto.)

    • @hlynnkeith9334
      @hlynnkeith9334 2 года назад +1

      @@shawngilliland243 Yes, you are correct.

    • @shawngilliland243
      @shawngilliland243 2 года назад

      @@hlynnkeith9334I wouldn't have you think that I hold Wood'n Head Wilson in high regard, however. 🙂

    • @hlynnkeith9334
      @hlynnkeith9334 2 года назад +1

      @@shawngilliland243 Wood'n Head Wilson. I like that. Thank you.

    • @shawngilliland243
      @shawngilliland243 2 года назад

      @@hlynnkeith9334you're welcome! I was inspired by the title of Mark Twain's book, Puddin' Head Wilson.

  • @michaelhaywood8262
    @michaelhaywood8262 3 года назад +2

    In GB, pub opening hours were restricted as an emergency measure in WW1 forcing all pubs to close in the afternoon, and to close at 1030pm. Pubs were allowed to open for a short period at lunchtime and again in the evening. After the war these rules were generally kept with occasional minor amendments. Overall pubs could open fror 9 hours a day, although local magistrates could allow an extra half hour. In my area this extra half hour was given on Fridays and Saturdays all year, and on Mondays to Thursdays from June to mid-September. The afternoon closing was finally repealed in 1988 [although it was retained on Sundays until 1995].

  • @karstenwinkler6923
    @karstenwinkler6923 Год назад +1

    You got a real winning engaging way to speak.

  • @1QU1CK1
    @1QU1CK1 5 лет назад +7

    Standard Oil funded much of the Temperance movement to end competition from alcohol engines and it worked.

  • @kazem766
    @kazem766 5 лет назад +1

    Vow. This was on my recommendations page. It's been so long that all your videos get demonetized and removed from 1st page that I actually was shocked to see one in my recommendations list.

  • @Moffee911
    @Moffee911 Год назад

    This channel is friggin great. I am so glad I found it when I searched for "Downfall Scene Explained"! Subbed!

  • @richardthomas9497
    @richardthomas9497 5 лет назад +2

    There is great documentary of Prohibition by Ken Burns that gives a detailed and wholesome view during that time.

  • @hlynnkeith9334
    @hlynnkeith9334 5 лет назад +8

    I find George V's abstinence to be an affected pretense. In the officers' messes the RFC and the RAF continued to toast the king's health every Thursday evening.

  • @johnyarbrough502
    @johnyarbrough502 5 лет назад +7

    9:54Clarence Darrow appeared for the defense in the Scopes Trial, not the prosecution.

  • @David-fm6go
    @David-fm6go 4 года назад +3

    8:55 Acts do not amend the constitution in the United States. The Volstead act was passed after the 18th amendment was ratified so as to provide for an enforcement mechanism.

  • @tablighibayans
    @tablighibayans 4 года назад +2

    "Capone was pulling in 100 million dollars a year, thats 1.5 billion in todays money!"

  • @GrinderCB
    @GrinderCB 5 лет назад +16

    Ken Burns' PBS film on Prohibition is very informative on the subject. Lots of things came out of Prohibition - organized crime, NASCAR, etc. Interestingly, the exclusive '21' club in NYC got its start as a prohibition era speakeasy. They still use the secret key to open the hidden wall/door as part of the mystique of the place.

  • @brucetucker4847
    @brucetucker4847 5 лет назад +27

    We recognized the right of women to vote and the first thing they did was turn around and ban booze.

    • @patdan123
      @patdan123 5 лет назад +4

      Actually not women as a whole conservative women groups or conservative groups love the idea of banning alcohol. Thats why Warren G harding won.

    • @chrisvickers7928
      @chrisvickers7928 4 года назад +2

      Not quite, the 18th amendment ban alcohol and the 19th gave women the vote.

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 4 года назад +1

      @@chrisvickers7928 15 states had full voting equality for women and many others had partial women's suffrage before the 19th Amendment was ratified.

    • @chrisvickers7928
      @chrisvickers7928 4 года назад +1

      @@brucetucker4847 I will correct my post, the 19th amendment gave women the vote federally. Constitutional amendments have to be passed the the federal congress by 2/3 majority in both houses and ratified by 3/4 of states which I think meant 36 back then. If women in 15 states only could vote that their votes are not sufficient to pass prohibition.

  • @SanitysVoid
    @SanitysVoid 5 лет назад +3

    All the gun banning they want to do will tunr out as stupidly as prohibition.

  • @Camlification
    @Camlification 5 лет назад +2

    3:42 Coors as well (Adolph Kuhrs). According to Wikipedia, Prohibition had started in 1916 in Colorado, and the company had been making malted milk.

  • @jovanweismiller7114
    @jovanweismiller7114 5 лет назад +2

    My home State of Kansas had already been 'Dry' by constitutional action since 1881.

  • @hildoschutte6200
    @hildoschutte6200 5 лет назад +2

    Regarding the quote of Lenin at 7:20 : Already since the end of the 19th century, socialists in Western Europe were fighting alcohol for a number of reasons: It made the workers numbed and complacent and it robbed families of their income with dad spending his wages on booze instead of food and housing for his family. A spearpoint of the socialists In The Netherlands for instance, was to forbid the paying out of wages in bars/pubs to avoid such excesses.

    • @MrKeithtoad
      @MrKeithtoad 5 лет назад +1

      Didn't Lenin say, "Vodka is the opiate of the masses?" Something like that, anyway...

  • @lebedarobert552
    @lebedarobert552 4 года назад +1

    Great episode...thank you ...greetings from the czech republic :-)

  • @JohnnyAloha69
    @JohnnyAloha69 5 лет назад +2

    Fascinating video, very well researched and presented!

  • @biologicalengineoflove6851
    @biologicalengineoflove6851 3 года назад +1

    The Great War made an episode about Prohibition? I'll drink to that!

  • @vksasdgaming9472
    @vksasdgaming9472 4 года назад +2

    In two countries Prohibition was used it got identical results: general lawlessness and INCREASE OF BOOZING. Not to mention loss of tax revenue which made tackling first issue even harder. Alcohol is ridiculously easy to produce as well.

  • @andreascovano7742
    @andreascovano7742 5 лет назад +20

    15:30 As long as it is Medicinal!

    • @Biker_Gremling
      @Biker_Gremling 5 лет назад

      Currently at Las Vegas, quite a few places for 'medicinal' cannabis here 🥴

  • @LastofAvari
    @LastofAvari 5 лет назад +2

    Russians tried to prohibit alcohol right before the Soviet Union had fallen apart and that didn't go quite well either.

  • @gardreropa
    @gardreropa 5 лет назад

    Watched the episode. Thoroughly enjoyed it. Liked and (already) subscribed. Went to empty the bottle of wine in the fridge... On one hand, why am I so feeble? But on the other hand, tomorrow is my birthday, after all, heck! Thanks for yet another great video!

  • @kstreet7438
    @kstreet7438 5 лет назад +1

    Welcome back! Been waiting for this one

  • @HistoryonYouTube
    @HistoryonYouTube 4 года назад +1

    If we are to learn from history the mistakes of the past in order not to repeat them in the future, prohibition is perhaps the best example I can think of. Today the problem is drugs, it appears to me that the war on drugs is what is causing most of the problems, perhaps if some were legalised and brought into the economy with taxation revenues etc then perhaps there would be fewer problems. Just a thought from someone who does not even drink.

  • @Jesse__H
    @Jesse__H 5 лет назад +9

    I felt that thumbnail 😅

  • @paulwoodman5131
    @paulwoodman5131 5 лет назад +1

    Shades of this law exist today. Sunday alcohol sales are restricted in many states. Government liquor stores are in place in others as well. In my state, cold beer sales are only allowed in stand alone liquor stores, and Sunday Carry out sales were allowed just a couple years ago. Liquor laws vary from state to state. My favorite liquor store name is 21st Amendment.

  • @J.D-g8.1
    @J.D-g8.1 Год назад +1

    The only thing more stupid than a law against alcohol is a law against stimulant and narcotic drugs. But luckily we've progressed.. oh wait..

  • @Pandacous
    @Pandacous 3 месяца назад

    The fact it worked by 30% is incredible but also it made the act of drink a violent one. Taking it out of the legitimate private sector and putting it in the criminal one certainly made it an ere of draconian success.

  • @AxShroudedxSeer
    @AxShroudedxSeer 5 лет назад +4

    Welcome to the new year great war channel!😀

  • @elweasel2010
    @elweasel2010 5 лет назад +1

    8:30 I drove thru france once, The rest stops cafeteria sell .5l bottle of wine. Yes, after driving have some wine and then continue driving.

  • @oceannavagator
    @oceannavagator 5 лет назад +2

    Tonics that included alcohol like "Hadacol" and other beef iron and wine concoctions sold like crazy.

  • @gleisbauer25
    @gleisbauer25 5 лет назад +13

    The whole time I had the image of Jesse hiding a tommy gun under the desk😉

  • @Zamolxes77
    @Zamolxes77 4 года назад +2

    When morals are applied with no regard for common sense. Some women were abused by drunken husbands, so all humans had to suffer.

  • @sjnm4944
    @sjnm4944 4 года назад +3

    "Let's examine and address the wider social and economic conditions that drive many to alcoholism."
    "Nah, let's just ban booze lol. Nothing can go wrong!"

    • @patrick8116
      @patrick8116 4 года назад

      The creed of wannabe slave masters everywhere.

  • @Jarod-sm5rf
    @Jarod-sm5rf 5 лет назад +4

    10:30 wise man he’s words would haunt America like a vengeful Wraith.

  • @thenadonation2664
    @thenadonation2664 5 лет назад +2

    it didn't drop it, just 30 to 40% of people weren't saying they were drinking because it was illegal.....

  • @uncleruckus3930
    @uncleruckus3930 Год назад

    That thumbnail is amazing, didn't even need to look at the title to figure out what this video was about 😂

  • @JagerLange
    @JagerLange 5 лет назад

    6:23 - Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese is still there, in Fleet Street in London, and is possibly my favourite pub when in town. The list of monarchs has obviously been updated in the years since this photo was taken... Worth a visit for any history fans in the area.

  • @markoroganovic3338
    @markoroganovic3338 5 лет назад +1

    Drink is the curse of the land. It makes you fight with your neighbour. It makes you shoot at your landlord and it makes you miss him

  • @kanedafx
    @kanedafx 5 лет назад +5

    Me: "I'm a communist."
    Lenin: "A model communist is a teetotaler, a model state does not deal in alcohol."
    Me: "F communism! Viva la liberty!"

    • @lkzhang820
      @lkzhang820 4 года назад +2

      Revolver Ocelot Yes it is important for the revolutionaries to have sharp and clear minds. That is why they should be ware of alcoholic.

  • @hannahskipper2764
    @hannahskipper2764 5 лет назад +1

    Dang, how did I miss this episode for a whole week? 😱 Must have had a few too many grapes in my glass! 🍇🍷😁

  • @sonofthewolfguardianofthef1214
    @sonofthewolfguardianofthef1214 5 лет назад +3

    Imagine being a saloon owner struggling to make ends meet then have a group of angry women march in and bust up hundreds of 1918 dollars worth in alcohol

    • @red9man2130
      @red9man2130 3 года назад

      I would have beaten them like a cheap steak and then bent them OVER for what they had earned for themselves!

  • @colinwolf9730
    @colinwolf9730 5 лет назад +5

    You gotta do top ten stupid moves of the last years of the war soon sometime! This is easily one of the top ones!

  • @grime5652
    @grime5652 5 лет назад +2

    I love the Great War channel

  • @timothyking2296
    @timothyking2296 4 года назад +1

    We never actually did a full repeal. Run a still and see what the ATF will do if you don't pay for permission that is prohibitively costly by the average person. If you don't have $100,000 don't even think about making your own whiskey.

  • @ricardoaguirre6126
    @ricardoaguirre6126 5 лет назад +14

    I highly recommend the documentary series made by Ken Burns on prohibition.

  • @claudermiller
    @claudermiller 4 года назад +5

    I'm from Cincinnati part of the German triangle. I personally think prohibition had more to due with neutering the economic power of German Americans after the war as part of the punishment of Germany in general.

    • @shawngilliland243
      @shawngilliland243 2 года назад

      Many states already had Prohibition more than 20 years before the Great War began.

  • @neildahlgaard-sigsworth3819
    @neildahlgaard-sigsworth3819 5 лет назад +9

    Err, the British licensing laws last until the 1990s virtually unaltered.

  • @timmcdaniel6193
    @timmcdaniel6193 5 лет назад +2

    9:49 Clarence Darrow was not the prosecutor in the Scopes trial. He was the defence attorney.

    • @MTTAMcCall
      @MTTAMcCall 5 лет назад +1

      Glad someone else spotted that error. Clarence, the great defender, is probably turning over in his grave because he was called a prosecutor.

  • @wswordsmen
    @wswordsmen 5 лет назад +1

    Slight correction, amendments to the constitution are always the "Xth amendment". In the case of what you are talking about the 18th Amendment gave the government authority to institute prohibition, which it defined under the Volstead Act.
    Also Clarence Darrow was the defense attorney in Scopes trial. William Jennings Bryan was for the prosecution.

  • @moosemaimer
    @moosemaimer 5 лет назад +14

    Do I watch this now, or do I wait until later, when I have a drink...

    • @Illiteratechimp
      @Illiteratechimp 5 лет назад +1

      Beer in my hand
      Makes it better
      Grab a drink

  • @d.cypher2920
    @d.cypher2920 5 лет назад +2

    You keep your accent from slipping most diligently!! Amazing english. Are you German speaking?
    Great channel

    • @jessealexander2695
      @jessealexander2695 5 лет назад +6

      It's easy to keep my accent in English, since it is my mother tongue!

  • @FIREBRAND38
    @FIREBRAND38 4 года назад +1

    9:50 Clarence Darrow was the prosecutor in the Scopes Trial? That would have been news to him. The noted defense attorney wasn't the prosecutor. He was, oddly enough, defending Mr. Scopes. Fancy that.

  • @charlesthepaperman
    @charlesthepaperman 5 лет назад +10

    "Prohibition"
    ... It didn't work in the movies, how could it then ever work in reality?!

    • @monkeydank7842
      @monkeydank7842 5 лет назад

      Handsome B. Wonderful And it doesn’t help us now.

    • @m2heavyindustries378
      @m2heavyindustries378 5 лет назад +1

      Did none of you get the Simpson's reference? No?

  • @lanceash
    @lanceash 5 лет назад +1

    Clarence Darrow wasn't the Scopes Trial "prosecutor." He was the attorney for the defendant.

  • @richbarr5959
    @richbarr5959 5 лет назад +1

    (A) Darrow was not a prosecutor in the Scopes "Monkey" trial--that was William Jennings Bryan, three-time Presidential candidate. Darrow was a defense attorney.
    (B) Roosevelt did not end Prohibition--U.S. Presidents don't have the power to amend the Constitution; nor does Congress in and of itself. The Twenty-First Amendment ended Prohibition.

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 5 лет назад

      Roosevelt campaigned strongly on repeal of the 18th Amendment while Hoover promised to veto any Congressional act proposing a repeal amendment. It was only after Roosevelt and his New Deal Congress were elected that the act submitting the 21st Amendment to the states could be passed into law (which happened in February, 1933, a few weeks after they took office). So I think it's fair to give Roosevelt much of the credit for repeal.

    • @richbarr5959
      @richbarr5959 5 лет назад

      @@brucetucker4847: Presidents have frequently campaigned on supposed Constitutional amendments that never see the light of day. It's basically posturing for [insert constituency here]; Hoover also did it in 1932 in the opposite direction. It may be said that Roosevelt's election, with the accompanying gain in Congressional seats and takeover of the Senate (though the Senate Democrats didn't have a 2/3 majority in the 73rd Congress), enabled the Twenty-First Amendment to pass Congress, but that is not the same as Roosevelt himself as President ending Prohibition.

  • @Jarod-sm5rf
    @Jarod-sm5rf 5 лет назад +1

    The prison the organizations wanted to get ride of by getting. Rid of alcohol don’t go away they were magnified.