American Decades
After the Great War: The "Noble Experiment" Of Prohibition
Prohibition Begins.
The cultural diversity of Americans in the rapidly changing society of the 1920s power- fully manifested itself in the political conflicts associated with Prohibition, which divided Americans according to their religious beliefs, cultural practices, and residential patterns. For almost a century reformers had longed for implementation of this "Noble Experiment," which officially began on 16 January 1920, according to the provisions of the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution. Protestant moralists viewed this ban on the production, transportation, and sale of intoxicating liquor in the United States as a progressive reform that would root out the sins associated with alcohol consumption. The Volstead Act, passed by Congress in September 1919 to codify the newly ratified constitutional amendment, defined "intoxicating liquor" as any beverage that contained as much as 0.5 percent alcohol (thus including beer...
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1920's Government and Politics
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- After the Great War: Isolationism and the Treaty of Versailles
- After the Great War: Antiradicalism and the Red Scare
- After the Great War: Nativism
- After the Great War: Nativism And The Ku Klux Klan
- After the Great War: The "Noble Experiment" Of Prohibition
- Government and Business
- Government and the Farmers
- National Politics: The 1920 Republican Nomination Race
- National Politics: The 1920 Democratic Nomination Race
- National Politics: The 1920 Elections
- National Politics: The 1922 Elections
- National Politics: The 1924 Republican Nomination Race
- National Politics: The 1924 Democratic Nomination Race
- National Politics: The Progressive Party, 1924
- National Politics: The 1924 Elections
- National Politics: The 1926 Elections
- National Politics: The 1928 Republican Nomination Race
- National Politics: The 1928 Democratic Nomination Race
- National Politics: The 1928 Elections
- Rural and Urban Conflict: Congressional Reapportionment
- The Teapot Dome Scandal
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1920–1929
