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End of Prohibition in 1933 Chicago...



Item # 717904

December 07, 1933

CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE, Dec. 7, 1933

* United States officially ends prohibition
* Repeal of the 18th Eighteenth Amendment 
* Beer & liquor returns for 1st time in 13 years
* Organized crime - gangster era speakeasies ending


The front page has a one column heading: "Horner Acts; Liquor Control Bill Is Rushed" Page 4 has articles related to the end of prohibition with headings that include: "16 Wine Producing Nations Hail U. S. Dry Law Repeal", "CITY COMES UP SMILING FROM MORNING AFTER", "Broadway Gets Only 19 Stores To Sell Liquor" and more. (see images) The end of Prohibition was ratified on December 5, 1933, with the adoption of the 21st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. This amendment repealed the 18th Amendment, officially ending national Prohibition.
When it comes to gangsters, organized crime, and the nefarious activities born out of the Prohibition and Great Depression eras, no city is more in the forefront of our minds than Chicago - and what better newspaper can be found than the Chicago Tribune, self-proclaimed to be "The World's Greatest Newspaper"
Complete with 34 pages, rag edition in great condition. A few small binding holes along the spine. 

AI notes: On December 5, 1933, the United States officially ended Prohibition with the ratification of the 21st Amendment to the Constitution. This amendment repealed the 18th Amendment, which had established Prohibition in 1920. The repeal allowed for the legal return of the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages.
This date marked the culmination of years of growing public opposition to Prohibition, which had led to a rise in organized crime, illegal speakeasies, and widespread disregard for the law. The 21st Amendment remains unique as the only amendment ever ratified to repeal another. The state of Utah cast the deciding vote on December 5, making the repeal official.
In cities across the nation, bars reopened, alcohol flowed legally again, and celebrations erupted—particularly symbolic in cities like Chicago, New York, and St. Louis, where beer and liquor had deep cultural and economic roots.

Category: The 20th Century