
Prohibition
Adolphus Busch
Show title: Prohibition
Video title: Adolphus Busch
Video duration: 3m 57sVideo description: Adolphus Busch was the leader of the Brewers Association. He threw himself in front of the Prohibition movement and held it off for as long as they could.
Watch Clip

The Good Bootlegger
6m 9s
Roy Olmstead, a Seattle police officer turned to bootlegging and was known to provide the best product on the west coast. He used bribery instead of violence, and was known as 'The Good Bootlegger.'
Watch Clip

Lois Long
7m 44s
Lois Long, pen-name 'Lipstick,' wrote about speakeasies for the New Yorker. Women who could not afford to live the decadent lifestyle got to read about her exploits.
Watch Clip

Mabel Walker Willebrandt
5m 52s
Mabel Walker Willebrandt was the Asst. Attorney Gen. and in charge of the Prohibition enforcement policy.
Watch Clip

Neal Dow
2m 49s
Wealthy Mayor of Portland, ME. In 1851 he demanded the state legislature ban the sale of alcohol.
Watch Clip

George Remus The Primrose Path
8m 41s
George Remus, King of the Bootleggers, is caught by the government, then put on trial for murdering his wife.
Watch Clip

Absolute Shall
6m 25s
The problem of drink would have to be overcome through legislation rather than voluntary abstinence.
Watch Clip

Satan's Seat (NYC)
1m 50s
New York was the city with the most illegal speakeasies, and the toughest city to crack down on drinking.
Watch Clip

Retribution
8m 54s
The Anti Saloon League successfully combined propaganda, religion and political coercion to make alcohol a wedge issue in elections.
Watch Clip

The Roots of Prohibition
6m 4s
A review of alcohol's influence in America. Beer and Wine are overtaken by hard liquors.
Watch Clip

Two Americas
7m 57s
The 1924 Democratic Convention between William McAdoo and Al Smith pitted rural vs. urban america and would set the stage for 1928.
Watch Clip

Rum Row
3m 46s
Rum Row started at the tip of Maine and continued down to the coast of Florida. Boats would wait three miles off the coastline then bring in illegal alcohol at night.
Watch Clip

America, A Multi-Ethnic Nation
9m 14s
At the beginning of the 20th century most of the population shifted from rural to urban through immigration.
Watch Clip

Al Capone Downfall
5m 4s
In 1931, Al Capone is finally caught by the government for failing to file income tax.
Watch Clip

The Volstead Act
3m 15s
The Volstead Act was much stricter than most Americans had anticipated, including Wine and Beer in Prohibition.
Watch Clip

Al Capone Murder to Massacre
7m 31s
Feb. 14, 1929: George Moran's gang is gunned down in cold blood and Capone is thought to have ordered the hit.
Watch Preview

Extended Look | The Jazz Age
3m 6s
Ken Burns, Lynn Novick and Wynton Marsalis discuss what it takes to put together the score for Prohibition, and how the music takes on a life of it's own.
Watch Clip

Washington, D.C. Mass March
51s
On Dec. 10, 1913 Washington, D.C. citizens saw their first mass march. The protesters were to demand a Prohibition Amendment.
Watch Clip

Pauline Sabin
10m 2s
Pauline Sabin, an heiress disillusioned with the Republican party, began the Women's Organization for National Prohibition Reform.
Watch Clip

The Time is Now
13m 20s
With the passage of the 16th Amendment, the Goverment no longer needed taxes from Alcohol. By 1914 a prohibition amendment seemed within reach.
Pagination
Supported by