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Rumrunners: Liquor Smugglers on America's Coasts, 1920-1933

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In 1920, the 18th Amendment made the production, transportation and sale of alcohol not merely illegal--it was unconstitutional. Yet no legislation could end the demand for alcohol. Enterprising rumrunners worked to meet that demand with cunning, courage, machineguns and speedboats powered by aircraft engines. They out-maneuvered the U.S. Coast Guard and risked their lives to deliver illicit liquor.

Smugglers like Bill McCoy, the Bahama Queen, and the Gulf Stream Pirate, along with many others, ran operations along the U.S. coastline until Prohibition was repealed in 1933. Drawing on legal records, newspaper articles and Coast Guard files, this history describes how rumrunners battled the Dry Navy and corrupted U.S. law enforcement, in order to keep America wet.

208 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 18, 2016

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J. Anne Funderburg

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Profile Image for Robert Pohtos.
7 reviews
December 12, 2023
Good Read

Good overview of the subject. A deeper dive in the historiography required, but a good place to start. Also, prohibition wasn’t a complete failure. The saloons that negatively impacted more income makes never resurfaced.
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