A speakeasy
was an establishment which illegally sold alcoholic beverages during the period of United States history known as Prohibition (1920–1932, longer in some states). During this time, the sale, manufacture, and transportation (bootlegging) of alcohol was illegal. The term comes from a patron’s manner of ordering an alcoholic drink without raising suspicion—bartenders would tell patrons to be quiet and “speak easy". [1]
Speakeasies became more popular and numerous as the Prohibition years progressed, and more of them were operated by people connected to organized crime. Although police and Bureau of Prohibition agents would raid them and arrest the owners and patrons, the business of running speakeasies was so lucrative that they continued to flourish throughout America. In major cities, speakeasies were often quite elaborate, offering food, live music, floor shows, and striptease dancers. Corruption was rampant—speakeasy operators routinely bribed police to leave them alone or to give them advance notice of raids.
Blind pig
and blind tiger
are terms for an establishment similar to a speakeasy.
|
SPEAKEASY TICKETS
|
Blind pigs
The term
blind pig
(or
blind tiger
) originated in the
United States in the 1800s; it was applied to establishments that sold
alcoholic beverages illegally. The operator of an establishment (such as a saloon or bar) would charge customers to see an attraction (such as an animal) and then serve a “complimentary” alcoholic beverage, thus circumventing the law.
“In desperate cases it has to betake itself to the exhibition of Greenland pigs and other curious animals, charging 25 cents for a sight of the pig and throwing in a gin cocktail gratuitously.” [2]
The difference between a speakeasy and a blind pig was that a speakeasy was usually a higher-class establishment that offered food, music, or entertainment, or even all three. In large cities, some speakeasies even required a
coat and tie for men, and
evening dress for women. But a blind pig was usually a low-class
dive where only beer and liquor were offered.
Estimates of the number of blind pigs in some major American cities in the mid-1920s are:
- Chicago, Illinois: 10,000
- Detroit, Michigan: 15,000
- New York City, New York: 30,000–100,000
Hidden secrets
In many rural towns, small speakeasies were operated by local business owners as a way of making extra money. These family secrets were often kept even after
Prohibition ended. For example, in 2007 secret underground rooms, thought to have been a speakeasy, were found by renovators on the grounds of the
Cyber Cafe West in
Binghamton, New York.
[3]
Prohibition
The federal
Volstead Act, which was passed with new authority from the
Eighteenth Amendment, put Prohibition into effect on January 16, 1920. It lasted for almost 14 years. After years of lobbying by the
temperance movement (mainly by the
Anti-Saloon League and the
Woman's Christian Temperance Union), the
states had passed laws forbidding the sale, manufacture, and transportation of
alcoholic beverages.
The first state to go entirely “
dry” was
Kansas in 1881. States that did not go dry were called “wet states.”
See also
- Alcohol laws of Kansas
- Dive bar
- Prohibition
- Prohibition in the United States
- Shebeen
- Smokeasy
References
- The City in Slang: New York Life and PopularSpeech
- The Americans at Home: Pen-and-Ink Sketches of American Men, Manners, and Institutions
- Speakeasy found in Cyber Cafe