It was huge...prohibition, in my opinion, is what made the biggest change to society. Prohibition created the speakeasies, the mafia (especially Al Capone), it spiked crime rates, kicked off jazz, flapper dresses, and countless numbers of other things.
Prohibition, most of all, taught the U.S. government a big lesson. Prohibition created tons of problems. It made people feel rebellious, it made life exciting, prohibition made people want to drink. Bootleggers would transport alcohol and sell it. Alcohol could be mixed with dangerous substances since the government wasn't regulating its production. Any old guy with a couple acres of backwoods land could make his own moonshine. Police were told to prevent it...but plenty of officers didn't support prohibition and would drink alcohol. The government lost a lot of money trying to fix the problem but also because they couldn't tax alcohol anymore.
Prohibition was what created the mystery, the excitement, and rebel-without-a-cause feeling in everyone's hearts that lived during the roaring 20's.
In the end, the 18th Amendment was the only amendment removed from the Constitution.
The Roaring 20s.
A major result of prohibition during the 20s was an increase in gang activity.
It occurred during the 1920s, which was referred to as the "roaring 20s" However, prohibition was also nicknamed the "noble experiment"
how about prohibition in the '20s? how about discrimination in employment?
Nicknames for the decade of the 1920s include The Roaring 20s, The Jazz Age or The Prohibition Era.
Between the end of WWI and the beginning of the Great Depression....unsure of the exact years, but I would guess 1918-1932. Look up Roaring 20s and Bootleggers.
Post WW1, the 2nd industrial revolution formed the roaring 20s. New inventions, middle class society, economic success, and welfare capitalism all contributed to the success of American Living in 1920s.
Moonshine is illegally made alcohol. During part of the 20s alcohol was illegal because of prohibition, but people still wanted to drink. Therefore they drank moonshine.
The largest cultural split in the U.S. in the 1920s resulted from the enactment of the Volstead Act, which made illegal the production, sale, purchase, and consumption of alcoholic spirits, otherwise known as Prohibition. Prohibition was accompanied by wide-spread law-breaking, and contributed to a general breakdown of respect for Law and Order.
The Roaring Twenties was a time in the 20s when bobbed hair, Prohibition, parties, Harlem Renaissance and jazz was popular. The term was coined by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
A monthly income like that was HUGE back in the 20s. Especially because of prohibition. 1000 dollars was almost as much as the annual income.
In reference to the Roaring 20s, one changing attitude of people living in developing suburbs was that they became more politically conservative. They also became more politically active in general.