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Prohibition In The 1920s Essay

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What made the twenties roar? Most people would have said it was the wild parties with the mass amounts of alcohol as shown in the popular book The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Although half of that is true, alcohol was not a legal part of the twenties due to the prohibition of alcohol that lasted from 1920 until 1933. The prohibition of alcohol was a huge factor in which both made and broke the 1920’s, and it has been concluded that it was neither a success nor a failure in the making of American history. Today in 2017, somebody may ask who was insane enough to mention the idea of Prohibition as it was an extremely marketable aspect to our economy during that time. Oddly enough, the Americans got its idea of the Prohibition from Canada …show more content…

In less than four months, sixteen states voted the repeal. These states included Michigan, Wisconsin, Rhode Island, Wyoming, New Jersey, New York, Delaware, Nevada, Illinois, Indiana, Massachusetts, Iowa, Connecticut, New Hampshire, West Virginia, and California. Massachusetts, which had been one of the first eleven states to vote for Prohibition when it first came about, accepted the proposal to repeal the 18th Amendment on June 26, 1932 in less than fifty-five minutes. The end of the Prohibition in the United States came when the 21st amendment passed in December of 1933. Because of the end of Prohibition in 1933, it helped out the shrimp and prawn business because people stopped eating shrimp once they were not able to eat it while drinking a beer. “The revival of one industry helps another. The shrimp and prawn business which has had a hard fight for existence on the South Atlantic Coast is taking on a new life—all on account of 3.2% beer”. It was hoped that two lessons would come from the Prohibition: that people would realize that both national strength and local self-government are necessary for free democracy and that humans continue to

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