SNIPPETS ON SPEAKEASIES OF THE USA
Ramesses III |
The significance of beer in
the average person’s diet was demonstrated at the landing of the Mayflower at
Plymouth, in what is now Massachusetts. The Pilgrims were headed for Virginia,
but the ship was running out of beer. So they halted, went ashore and drank
water that the seamen might have more beer.
Beer production and sales played colourful parts in U.S. history. The first American brewery was opened in Lower Manhattan by the Dutch West Indies Company in 1632. The crude streets of New Amsterdam (today’s New York City) were first paved to help the horse-drawn beer wagons make better progress, which were so often stuck in the mud!
Alcoholic beverages, often
in combination with herbs, were considered the only liquids fit to drink, with
good reason. Household water was commonly polluted. Milk could cause milk
sickness (tuberculosis). But beer, ale, and wine were disease-free, tasty, and
thirst-quenching, crucial qualities in societies that preserved food with salt
and washed it down with a diet of starches.
In England the public
house, or pub, developed during Saxon times as a place where people gathered
for fellowship and pleasure. An evergreen bush on a pole outside meant ale was
served. Each pub was identified by a sign with a picture of, for example, a
Black Horse, White Swan, or Red Lion. These early ‘‘logos’’ were used because most
people could not read.
When Europeans migrated to
America, they brought the tavern with them. It was considered essential to a
town’s welfare to have a place providing drink, lodging, and food.
Mowbray Tavern Massachusetts |
It was also in the taverns
that the spirit of revolution was born. These were the rendezvous spots for
rebels, where groups like ‘the Sons of Liberty’ were formed and held their
meetings. The Boston Tea Party was planned in Hancock Tavern, while in the
Green Dragon, Paul Revere and 30 companions formed a committee to watch the
troop movement of British soldiers.
When Americans pushed
westward taverns sprang up along the routes west. As towns appeared the tavern
was often the first building. Homes and merchants grew up around it. Drinking
places without lodging started to appear. These kept the name tavern, while
more elaborate inns adopted the term hotel. But the hotel kept its barroom; it
was often a showplace, with a handsome mahogany bar and a well dressed
bartender.
PROHIBITION
Prohibition was one of the
two best things that could happen to the Scotch whisky industry and they were
quick to capitalise on it. Prohibition in the United States was a national ban
on the sale, production, and transportation of alcohol imposed on January 16,
1920, and repealed on December 5, 1933. One anomaly of the “Prohibition Act”
(Volstead Act) was that it did not actually prohibit the consumption of
alcohol; consumers quickly stockpiled liquor for their own use in late 1919,
before sales of alcohol became illegal the following January.
The production of alcohol,
although not necessarily its consumption, remained legal in neighboring
countries. Canada imposed prohibition nationally from 1918 to 1920. Canadian
provinces enacted their own prohibition for varying periods between 1901 to
1948. Distilleries and breweries in Canada, Mexico, and the Caribbean
flourished as their products were either consumed, were legal by visiting
Americans or smuggled into the United States. The Detroit River, part of the
border with Canada, was notoriously difficult to police and control, and soon
became a bootlegger’s highway. Nassau, in the Bahamas, became a major center
for the stockpiling of hard liquor destined for the American market and a
staging ground for “rum runners.” When Washington complained to the London that
British officials in Nassau were undermining its law, London refused to
intervene. The province of Ontario enacted a prohibition on alcohol consumption
from 1916 to 1927. The Ontario Temperance Act was the opposite of the Volstead
Act. It prohibited the domestic consumption of alcohol, but continued to allow
its manufacture and transshipment for export outside the province.
The Volstead Act had broad exemptions for the use of ethanol or grain alcohol for “fuel, dye and other lawful industries and practices, such as religious rituals.” Ten licenses were authorised for the production of “medicinal whiskey”, but only six companies applied for them. All of the companies had been in production prior to Prohibition and had stocks to sell.
The law allowed physicians
to “prescribe” up to one pint of whiskey per week to their patients for
“medicinal purposes.” The American Medical Association subsequently lobbied the
U.S. Congress to remove the limit on the amount of whiskey that could be
prescribed on the basis that physicians were “better qualified to determine the
therapeutic value of a substance and the proper rate of its prescription.” In
addition, there were a variety of liqueurs, especially bitters, which were successfully
reclassified as “medicines” and thus exempted from the Volstead Act. The Scotch
malt whisky Laphroaig, a heavily peated, smoky, phenolic whisky from the Isle
of Islay, a whisky that is often described as being “medicinal” in flavor,
successfully had itself reclassified as a “medicine” by the Bureau of Alcohol,
Fire Arms and Tobacco. So too did the blended Scotch, White Horse, which
prominently features another phenolic, single malt from Islay, Lagavulin. The
two Scotch brands were the only ones that could be legally imported during
Prohibition and were available for sale at pharmacies. Their purchase required
a prescription from a doctor.
Prohibition had
predictable results on the Scotch whisky industry.The copious quantities of home brewed “bathtub
gin”notwithstanding, demand for hard liquor remained strong. This demand was
met largely by bootleggers, many of whom were part of organized crime rings
that flourished during this period. A combination of British and Scottish
liquor producers, domestic Canadian spirit producers, and various Caribbean rum
producers, largely met the bootleggers demand. The Scotch whisky industry, far
larger than their Canadian and Caribbean competitors, and already far more
sophisticated in its marketing and distribution than their foreign rivals, was
ideally positioned to capitalize on the burgeoning American demand.
Whisky producers
stockpiled inventory in locations convenient for smugglers. Whisky exports to
the Bahamas, for example, increased from 944 gallons in 1918 to more than
386,000 gallons in 1922, and they continued to increase as Prohibition
progressed. Similar Scotch “depots” were established in Havana, the Turks and
Caicos Islands, and on Grand Cayman. Comparable warehouses were set up in St.
Johns, Newfoundland, and the French islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon in the
Gulf of St. Lawrence. Scotch was also shipped to the province of Ontario for
transshipment to the United States. The Detroit River was a major thoroughfare
for the smuggling of illicit liquor. It was difficult to police despite the
number of revenue agents assigned to patrol it. In 1927 for example, records
from the Ontario provincial government show that boats carrying a total of
3,388,016 gallons of “hard liquor” had left Windsor, Ontario for Detroit. In
that year, US agents were able to seize only a paltry 148,211 gallons—roughly
four percent of what was shipped.
The economics of
bootlegging were not unlike those of the contemporary drug trade. Smugglers
would pick up stock in an offshore “depot” like Nassau and proceed to the
mainland where they would wait just outside the US 12-mile territorial limit.
As long as they remained outside of US territorial waters they were technically
exempt from US jurisdiction. In reality, aggressive Coast Guard patrols often
stopped and boarded smugglers and seized their goods as contraband.
Fast motorboats from the
mainland would go out to the “mother ship” to pick up cargo and deliver it to
shore. Landed on the coast, prices would double again. Delivered to a warehouse
in a major city and from there to a local “speakeasy” would see another
doubling at each stage. By the time a bottle of Scotch had traveled from Nassau
to a “speakeasy” in New York, the price could have increased by a factor of 16
times. If the liquor was diluted the profits were even larger.
Most Scotch whisky exports
were in the form of bottled stock. That made it more difficult to tamper with
the contents and to adulterate them. The result was that of all of the illicit
liquor being smuggled into the United States, Scotch whisky consistently had
the higher quality. Exports from Canada and the Caribbean were usually in
barrel form and were bottled after arriving in the United States. This made it
easier to dilute the contents and the quality of the resulting product suffered
accordingly. The Scotch whisky industry was also in an ideal position to
increase production to meet the American demand. The superiority of Scotch
among the other smuggled hard liquors would serve the industry well when
Prohibition was repealed, and led to an immediate increase in the relative
market share enjoyed by Scotch whisky in the American market. To this day
Scotch whisky has maintained a dominant market position in the United States.
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