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  1. bootlegging, in U.S. history, illegal traffic in liquor in violation of legislative restrictions on its manufacture, sale, or transportation. The word apparently came into general use in the Midwest in the 1880s to denote the practice of concealing flasks of illicit liquor in boot tops when going to trade with Native Americans.

  2. In U.S. history, bootlegging was the illegal manufacture, transport, distribution, or sale of alcoholic beverages during the Prohibition period, which was from 1920 to 1933. During this period these activities were forbidden under the Eighteenth Amendment (1919) to the U.S. Constitution.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Rum-runningRum-running - Wikipedia

    Rum-running, or bootlegging, is the illegal business of smuggling alcoholic beverages where such transportation is forbidden by law. The term rum-running is more commonly applied to smuggling over water; bootlegging is applied to smuggling over land.

  4. Feb 27, 2024 · Bootlegged music was an unintended result of new technology. When most music was released as records, it was highly controlled by pressing plants and the major labels. Then, in the 1940s, magnetic tape entered the scene, allowing “a new and more flexible form of recording.”.

  5. someone who makes, copies, or sells something illegally: His father was a bootlegger who bought liquor cheap in Nebraska and sold it at twice the price to Indians in South Dakota. The band has spoken out against merchandise bootleggers currently operating outside their gigs. See. bootleg. Fewer examples.

  6. The term “bootlegger” covers a wide field of activities which delivered illicit alcohol to the public which refused to accept government-mandated temperance. Bootleggers smuggled liquor across borders and into coves and inlets of America’s coast.

  7. Feb 11, 2023 · The Prohibition era coincided with the mass production of the automobile, meaning bootleggers were quick to make adjustments to cars that were now more easily affordable. Bootleggers “souped up” their vehicles and adjusted the axles, shocks, and tires to make the cars faster and more capable of dirt-road evasion.

  8. Jan 23, 2023 · Legendary bootlegger Al Capone alone ran a massive, multi-million dollar booze and gambling empire with countless people on his payroll, and History says he pulled in between $60 and $100 million a year just in the alcohol trade.

  9. For most Bootleggers the Sale of Alcohol was hidden within the walls of establishments called speakeasies, blind pigs, blind tigers, beer flats or rat dives. No matter the name or the caliber of these establishments they all centered around one main objective: the sale of alcohol.

  10. Jan 16, 2019 · The illegal manufacturing and sale of liquor, known as “bootlegging,” occurred on a large scale across the United States. Bootleggers relied on creative ways to hide their shipments. This 1926...