『The Volstead Act: When America Went Dry by Law』のカバーアート

The Volstead Act: When America Went Dry by Law

The Volstead Act: When America Went Dry by Law

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In this episode of Prohibition, host James Hartley examines the Volstead Act of 1919, the comprehensive legislation that transformed the Eighteenth Amendment from constitutional text into enforceable law. Named after Minnesota Congressman Andrew Volstead, this National Prohibition Act defined alcoholic beverages as anything containing more than 0.5% alcohol and established the federal enforcement apparatus for Prohibition.

Discover how the Act created the Bureau of Prohibition, outlined penalties for violators, and established exceptions that would later become exploitable loopholes. Learn about the immediate enforcement challenges, including understaffed agencies, widespread corruption, and the geographic patchwork of compliance that varied dramatically between rural and urban areas.

Hartley explores the Act's unintended social consequences, from the rise of speakeasies that welcomed both men and women to the strengthening of organized crime networks. The episode traces how economic incentives favored bootleggers over law enforcement and examines why this ambitious social engineering project ultimately failed.

The discussion covers the Act's fourteen-year lifespan, from its 1919 passage through its obsolescence following the Twenty-first Amendment's ratification in 1933. Perfect for history enthusiasts interested in American legal history, social movements, and the complex relationship between legislation and social behavior during the Prohibition era.
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