At precisely one minute after midnight tonight 100 years ago, the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution went into effect, prohibiting the “manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes.” The prohibition of alcohol gave way to a rise in organized crime. Breweries and distilleries shut down. Some continued to produce alcohol for medicinal purposes (which was still legal with a script). Bootlegging occurred on a massive scale. Politicians accepted bribes and looked the other way when alcohol was transported through towns, stored in warehouses or when speakeasies were established.
Some fun facts
1) The Volstead Act did not prohibit the consumption of alcohol. Wines and liquors were stockpiled for personal use.
2) Budweiser was reformulated to be alcohol free
- Spoiler: show
- and continues to be well into the 21st Century

3) Doctors were able to prescribe medicinal alcohol for their patients.You could legally buy a pint once every 10 days or so. Walgreens grew to several hundred stores due to Prohibition.
4) The KKK was a huge supporter of Prohibition.
5) Yuengling and Anheuser Busch made ice cream. Coors produced pottery and ceramics.
6) “Near beer” was legal contained less than 0.5 percent alcohol.
7) Cocktails were created to mask the taste of bathtub gin and other homemade booze.
8) Prohibition save the rise of homebrewers
9) Saw the rise of the booze-cruise
10) Temperance leaders actually tried to have the Bible re-written, having all references to alcohol removed.
Tomorrow is the 100th Anniversary of that terrible law. I'm sure some Republican in the 1920s told a complaining Democrat to "Amend of STFU".

So, tomorrow raise a pint or have a dram!