Givin’ the People What They Want

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Givin’ the People What They Want by Christopher B. Scharping, Xlibris US
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Christopher B. Scharping ISBN: 9781524557676
Publisher: Xlibris US Publication: November 10, 2016
Imprint: Xlibris US Language: English
Author: Christopher B. Scharping
ISBN: 9781524557676
Publisher: Xlibris US
Publication: November 10, 2016
Imprint: Xlibris US
Language: English

In 1920, the US government, at the request mostly of a new army of female voters in America, turned off the tap that had served Americans cold beer and liquor. The Volstead Act made the sale of alcohol illegal throughout the forty-eight states. A nation surrounded by water rose up to provide. Liquor came ashore from all directions: the Pacific Coast, the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean, the Atlantic Coast, and across the Great Lakes from Canada. Our story looks at the smuggling from Canada across Lake Ontario. Since colonial times, liquor had been brought legally and illegally, usually to sidestep the paying of taxes on the products. Now it was brought into the country to provide what the government had tried to take away. The Volstead Act inadvertently created a whole new smuggling system. New terms came into the general vocabulary: Prohibition agent, speakeasy, rum runners (who brought the illegal cargo in by water), and bootleggers (who drove the liquor along the nations roadways). Our story will be mainly focused on the rum runners, although the bootleggers will be represented as well. My grandfather, Charles Frederick Scharping, owned a farm on Lower Lake Road that bordered Lake Ontario. In 1955, my parents built a cottage on the farm at the edge of the lake. The spot where our cottage was located, on Scharping Lane, was the spot where rum runners would bring their illegal cargoes. They sold them to the bootleggers for cash. These rum runners braved over fifty miles of water from the shores of Orleans County to the pickup points along the Canadian shore. The return trips were challenged by weather, hijackers, and the US Coast Guard. Waves up to eight feet tall were common during the frequent storms. Many lost their lives. This Volstead Law lasted for twelve years. It was a bloody time where fortunes were made and lives lost.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In 1920, the US government, at the request mostly of a new army of female voters in America, turned off the tap that had served Americans cold beer and liquor. The Volstead Act made the sale of alcohol illegal throughout the forty-eight states. A nation surrounded by water rose up to provide. Liquor came ashore from all directions: the Pacific Coast, the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean, the Atlantic Coast, and across the Great Lakes from Canada. Our story looks at the smuggling from Canada across Lake Ontario. Since colonial times, liquor had been brought legally and illegally, usually to sidestep the paying of taxes on the products. Now it was brought into the country to provide what the government had tried to take away. The Volstead Act inadvertently created a whole new smuggling system. New terms came into the general vocabulary: Prohibition agent, speakeasy, rum runners (who brought the illegal cargo in by water), and bootleggers (who drove the liquor along the nations roadways). Our story will be mainly focused on the rum runners, although the bootleggers will be represented as well. My grandfather, Charles Frederick Scharping, owned a farm on Lower Lake Road that bordered Lake Ontario. In 1955, my parents built a cottage on the farm at the edge of the lake. The spot where our cottage was located, on Scharping Lane, was the spot where rum runners would bring their illegal cargoes. They sold them to the bootleggers for cash. These rum runners braved over fifty miles of water from the shores of Orleans County to the pickup points along the Canadian shore. The return trips were challenged by weather, hijackers, and the US Coast Guard. Waves up to eight feet tall were common during the frequent storms. Many lost their lives. This Volstead Law lasted for twelve years. It was a bloody time where fortunes were made and lives lost.

More books from Xlibris US

Cover of the book Zip by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book United States Presidents' Forgotten Details by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book We Who Are Young by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book Windsocks and Boxes by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book From Dilemma to New Dimensions by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book Out of Time by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book Hey, Everybody! by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book The Dove in My Window by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book Where Soul Meets Fire by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book Battle with Parkinson’S by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book Monk¡¦S Hood by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book Silver and Gold by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book Save the Babies by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book Akin Minds by Christopher B. Scharping
Cover of the book The Thompsons and Related Families by Christopher B. Scharping
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy