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Books with title Prohibition

  • The Prohibition Era

    Martin Gitlin

    Library Binding (Essential Library, Aug. 1, 2010)
    Discusses Prohibition in the United States, including why it was enacted, its effects on the people and the nation, its connection with criminal activity, and its repeal.
    X
  • The Prohibition Era

    Martin Gitlin

    Library Binding (Abdo Publishing Company, Aug. 16, 1800)
    Excellent Book
  • Prohibition

    Sylvia Engdahl

    School & Library Binding (Greenhaven Press, March 24, 1870)
    None
  • The Prohibition Era

    Martin Gitlin

    Library Binding (Abdo Publishing Company, March 15, 1675)
    None
  • Prohibition

    Jeff Hill

    School & Library Binding (Omnigraphics, Inc., March 24, 1868)
    None
  • Prohibition

    John M. Dunn, illustrations photos

    Hardcover (Lucent Books, Jan. 1, 2010)
    None
  • Prohibition

    Christine Brendel Scriabine

    Paperback (Jackdaw Pubns, Jan. 1, 2005)
    Between 1920 and 1933, the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution made it illegal for Americans to manufacture, sell, or transport alcoholic beverages. The goal of Prohibition was to stop the proliferation of saloons and end the poverty, depravity, family disintegration, and industrial accidents caused by excessive drinking. But Prohibition had unexpected consequences: speakeasies, bootleggers, and criminal gangs flourished as drinking became the thing to do amoung college students, flappers, and respectable middle-class Americans. The primary sources in this Jackdaw--including a letter to law enforcement agents from a distraught housewife, political cartoons, photographs, and exceprts from a Prohibition pro and con debate--trace the prohibition movement from its roots in the early 1800s through repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment in 1933.