Prohibition and the Lost Generation

Learning Objectives

  • Analyze the effects of Prohibition on American society and culture
  • Describe the “Lost Generation”

Prohibition

At precisely the same time that African Americans and women were experimenting with new forms of social expression, the country as a whole was undergoing a process of austere and dramatic social reform as Prohibition was established. After decades of organizing to reduce or end the consumption of alcohol in the United States, temperance groups and the Anti-Saloon League finally succeeded in pushing through the Eighteenth Amendment in 1919, which banned the manufacture, sale, and transportation of intoxicating liquors. The law proved difficult to enforce, as illegal alcohol soon poured in from Canada and the Caribbean, and rural Americans resorted to home-brewed “moonshine.” The result was an erosion of respect for law and order, as many people continued to drink illegal liquor. Rather than bringing about an age of sobriety, as Progressive reformers had hoped, their efforts gave rise to a new subculture that included illegal importers, interstate smuggling (or bootlegging), clandestine saloons referred to as “speakeasies,” hipflasks, cocktail parties, and the lucrative organized crime of trafficking liquor.

Photograph (a) shows several men pouring a large barrel of alcohol down a manhole as a uniformed policeman watches from behind them. Photograph (b) shows a smiling young woman sitting in a café, using a flask hidden at the tip of her cane.

Figure 1. While forces of law and order confiscated and discarded alcohol when they found it (a), consumers found ingenious ways of hiding liquor during prohibition, such as this cane that served as a flask (b).

A mug shot shows front and side views of Al Capone.

Figure 2. Al Capone, pictured here in his U.S. Department of Justice mug shot, was convicted of tax fraud and sent to prison in 1931.

Prohibition also revealed deep political fissures in the nation. The Democratic Party found itself deeply divided between urban, northern “wets” who hated the idea of abstinence, and rural, southern “dries” who favored the amendment. This split the party and opened the door for the Republicans to gain ascendancy in the 1920s. All politicians, including Woodrow Wilson, Herbert Hoover, Robert La Follette, and Franklin D. Roosevelt, equivocated in their support for the law. Publicly, they catered to the Anti-Saloon League, but behind closed doors, they failed to provide funding for enforcement.

The Rise of Organized Crime

Prohibition sparked a rise in organized crime. “Scarface” Al Capone ran an extensive bootlegging and criminal operation known as the Chicago Outfit or Chicago mafia. By 1927, Capone’s organization included a number of illegal activities including bootlegging, prostitution, gambling, loan sharking, and even murder. His operation was earning him more than $100 million annually, and many local policemen were on his payroll. Although he did not have a monopoly on crime, his organizational structure was more efficient than that of most other criminals of his era. His liquor trafficking business and his Chicago soup kitchens during the Great Depression led some Americans to liken Capone to a modern-day Robin Hood. Still, Capone was eventually imprisoned for tax evasion, including a stint in California’s notorious Alcatraz prison.

WATCH IT

During the era of Prohibition, Americans still found ways to obtain alcohol. While some Americans took to brewing their own liquor in makeshift stills, others turned to the black market. Rum-running, also called “bootlegging,” was the practice of bringing illegal liquor into the U.S. to sell. Many bootlegging operations were run by organized crime syndicates like The Italian Mafia. The infamous gangster Al Capone, who rose to control the Chicago Outfit, a branch of the Mafia, got his start running bootleg liquor. In fact, Prohibition is considered a major factor in the rise of organized crime in the 20th century United States. This video will explain more about the connection between Prohibition and organized crime.

You can view the transcript for “How Prohibition Created the Mafia | History” here (opens in new window).

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The Lost Generation

As the country struggled with the effects of Prohibition, many young intellectuals endeavored to come to grips with a lingering disillusionment. World War I, religious fundamentalism, and the Red Scare—a pervasive American fear of Communist infiltrators prompted by the success of the Bolshevik Revolution—all left their mark on these intellectuals. Known as the Lost Generation, writers like F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Sinclair Lewis, Edith Wharton, and John Dos Passos expressed their hopelessness and despair by skewering the middle class in their work. Many lived an expatriate life in open-minded, cosmopolitan Paris, although others went to Rome or Berlin.

F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Lost Generation writer that best exemplifies the mood of the 1920s was F. Scott Fitzgerald, now considered one of the most influential writers of the twentieth century. His debut novel, This Side of Paradise, describes a generation of youth “grown up to find all gods dead, all wars fought, all faith in man shaken.” The Great Gatsby, published in 1925, exposed the disappointment and stasis that often follows a fun, fast-paced life. Fitzgerald depicted the modern millionaire Jay Gatsby living a profligate life: unscrupulous, coarse, and in love with another man’s wife. Both Fitzgerald and his wife Zelda lived this life as well, squandering the money he made from his writing.

F. Scott Fitzgerald on the 1920s

In the 1920s, Fitzgerald was one of the most celebrated authors of his day, publishing This Side of Paradise, The Beautiful and Damned, and The Great Gatsby in quick succession. However, his free-spending lifestyle with his wife Zelda sapped their funds, and Fitzgerald struggled to maintain their lifestyle. Below is an excerpt from “The Crack-Up,” a personal essay by Fitzgerald originally published in Esquire in which he describes his “good life” during the 1920s.

It seemed a romantic business to be a successful literary man—you were not ever going to be as famous as a movie star but what note you had was probably longer-lived; you were never going to have the power of a man of strong political or religious convictions but you were certainly more independent. Of course within the practice of your trade you were forever unsatisfied—but I, for one, would not have chosen any other.

As the Twenties passed, with my own twenties marching a little ahead of them, my two juvenile regrets—at not being big enough (or good enough) to play football in college, and at not getting overseas during the war—resolved themselves into childish waking dreams of imaginary heroism that were good enough to go to sleep on in restless nights. The big problems of life seemed to solve themselves, and if the business of fixing them was difficult, it made one too tired to think of more general problems.

—F. Scott Fitzgerald, “The Crack-Up,” 1936

How does Fitzgerald describe his life in the 1920s? How did his interpretation reflect the reality of the decade?

A photograph shows Ernest Hemingway reclining in a chair in front of a fireplace.

Figure 3. Ernest Hemingway was one of the most prominent members of the Lost Generation who went to live as expatriates in Europe during the 1920s.

Ernest Hemingway

Equally idiosyncratic and disillusioned was writer Ernest Hemingway. He lived a peripatetic and adventurous lifestyle in Europe, Cuba, and Africa, working as an ambulance driver in Italy during World War I and traveling to Spain in the 1930s to cover the civil war there. His experiences of war and tragedy stuck with him, emerging in colorful scenes in his novels The Sun Also Rises (1926), A Farewell to Arms (1929), and For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940). In 1952, his novella, The Old Man and the Sea, won the Pulitzer Prize. Two years later, he won the Nobel Prize in Literature for this book and his overall influence on contemporary style.

Not all Lost Generation writers were like Fitzgerald or Hemingway. The writing of Sinclair Lewis, rather than expressing disillusionment, was more influenced by the Progressivism of the previous generation. In Babbitt (1922), he examined the “sheep following the herd” mentality that conformity promoted. He satirized American middle-class life as pleasure seeking and mindless. Similarly, writer Edith Wharton celebrated life in a now-vanished old New York in The Age of Innocence, in 1920. Wharton came from a very wealthy, socialite family in New York, where she was educated by tutors and never attended college. She lived for many years in Europe; during the Great War, she worked in Paris helping women establish businesses.

Link to Learning

Listen to an audio of Hemingway’s Nobel Prize acceptance speech, as he wont the Nobel Prize for literature.

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Review Question

Why did the prohibition amendment fail after its adoption in 1919?

Glossary

bootlegging: a nineteenth-century term for the illegal transport of alcoholic beverages that became popular during prohibition

Eighteenth Amendment: an amendment passed in 1919 that banned the manufacture, sale, or transportation of alcohol. It was eventually repealed by the 21st Amendment in 1933.

expatriate: someone who lives outside of their home country

Lost Generation: a group of writers who came of age during World War I and expressed their disillusionment with the era