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By Joe Sixpack
Posted on Mon, Apr. 7, 2003 on Philadelphia
Daily News
WHAT WAS Philadelphia like during Prohibition?
Though the 18th Amendment banned the sale
and consumption of alcohol nationwide in 1919, the city
was notoriously described as "wet as the Atlantic Ocean."
- Estimated number of illegal taverns
citywide: 8,000. (About 1,300 operate today.)
- Between 8th Street and the Delaware,
north of Chestnut Street, hundreds of saloons and
speakeasies, known as blind tigers operated in a zone
known as the Tenderloin.
- Beers, 5 cents; highballs, 25 cents.
- It was said to be impossible to buy
a lime in the city because the entire supply "had
been bought up by saloon men for their streams of
gin rickeys..."
- Several breweries, including Ortlieb's,
continued to operate well into the '20s. Officially,
they made soda and no-alcohol beer; unofficially,
the mash tuns never shut down.
- Least favorite brew: "near beer," with
less than 1 percent alcohol. The popular quip of the
time was: "Whoever called it near beer was a poor
judge of distance."
- Other no-alcohol beer was dosed with
ether, or sold with a bottle of raw alcohol and a
syringe (a/k/a "needle beer").
- The hard stuff was smuggled from distillers
in Canada and illegal moonshiners in the backwoods
of Maryland. Inside the city, chemists made a vile
brand known along the east coast as Philadelphia Rotgut.
- Ten to 12 people died every day from
alcohol poisoning.
- Philadelphia wasn't the only town to
ignore Prohibition. Pittsburgh was described as "wet
enough for rubber boots."
- City Hall refused to spend money for
the extra police officers needed to enforce the law.
- In 1925 alone, more than 10,000 speakeasy
operators were arrested. But only 10 percent were
brought to trial and fewer than half of them were
actually fined.
- Organized crime syndicates, controlled
out of New York, flourished. Local boss: Irving "Waxey"
Gordon, a bootlegger who later emerged as one of the
nation's biggest heroin dealers in the 1940s and '50s.
- When Prohibition ended in 1933, the
newly formed Liquor Control Board was met with skepticism.
The earliest products were watered down and expensive.
Contact Don Russell at the Daily
News, Box 7788, Philadelphia, Pa. 19101, or via e-mail:
joesixpack@phillynews.com
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