1920's
A bootlegger takes alchohol a speakeasies is an illegal alchohol establishment
Speakeasies were most prevalent during the Prohibition era in the United States in the 1920s.
Moe's
Speakeasies
Speakeasies were secret bars that operated illegally during the Prohibition era. They served alcohol to customers in hidden locations, often requiring a password or secret knock for entry. To avoid detection by law enforcement, speakeasies typically had lookouts and employed other tactics to keep their activities discreet.
Speakeasies and bootleggers were a product of: Prohibition.
Type your answer here... speakeasies
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A bootlegger takes alchohol a speakeasies is an illegal alchohol establishment
Speakeasies
"Speakeasies" were illegal because of a combination of the Volstead Act and the Eighteenth Amendment which, in effect, banned the sale of alcoholic beverages in the United States.
Secrets of New York - 2005 Speakeasies was released on: USA: 12 July 2011
Speakeasies were most prevalent during the Prohibition era in the United States in the 1920s.
Speakeasies were bars or other places that served alcohol illegally and secretly during Prohibition in the United States (1920-1933). They were named speakeasies because they would only admit those who quietly and easily whispered at the front door to be let in.
Speakeasies
Moe's