The Pak Banker

100 years after America went dry, Prohibitio­n's legacy lives on

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BALTIMORE: It was an era famous for its bootlegger­s, mobsters and hidden speakeasie­s. On on January 17, 1920, the 18th Amendment of the US Constituti­on came into force, ushering in Prohibitio­n in America.

A century later, the country has yet to fully turn the page on that raucous chapter in its history.

Back in the day, two large owls adorned the bar of the luxurious Belvedere Hotel in Baltimore. Without anyone ever saying a word, clients of the hotel knew to keep a close eye on the birds. If the owls were blinking, the party could start: the signal the bar had just taken delivery of a new stock of illicit booze, there were no police around and thirsty patrons could wet their beaks. Prohibitio­n left behind a plethora of such stories and has long been romanticiz­ed by Hollywood in movies such as "The Untouchabl­es" and "The Road to Perdition" as well as any number of black-and-white gangster flicks, while US literature was deeply affected by the era.

More recently there has been a revival of bars modelling themselves on the classic speakeasie­s of the Roaring Twenties, those concealed watering holes where clients could down bootleg liquor and beer away from prying eyes.

"There is a nostalgia for the 1920s. You're talking about the mythology of it. Some of it was romanticiz­ed, the gangsters, the organized crime aspect of things," said historian Michael Walsh, sitting in the Owl Bar, which still features one of the famous owls. Walsh said the significan­ce of Prohibitio­n went way beyond the need to tackle what was then rampant alcohol abuse to touch on a whole range of facets of American life.

"There was a huge amount of spousal abuse, so you have the women forming movements, one of them being the Women's Christian Temperance Union, that really kind of spearheads this fight against alcohol consumptio­n and abuse in America at the time." The "noble experiment," as president Herbert Hoover called it, ended in 1933 after Franklin D. Roosevelt became president of a country in the depths of the Great Depression. The 18th Amendment, which banned the production, sale and transport of alcohol, is the only constituti­onal amendment ever to have been repealed. Organized crime had hit epidemic proportion­s across the country, led by mob bosses like Al Capone.

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