:''This article is about Prohibition-era liquor establishments. For other uses, see
Speakeasy (disambiguation).''
A 'speakeasy' was an establishment that was used for selling and drinking
alcoholic beverages during the period of
United States history known as
Prohibition (1920-1933,
[1] longer in some states), when the sale, manufacture, and transportation of alcohol was illegal. The term comes from a patron's manner of ordering alcohol without raising suspicion — a bartender would tell a patron to be quiet and "speak easy".
One former speakeasy,
Chumley's, still exists in New York City at 86 Bedford Street. It was owned by C. Collins and C. Arienti, and remains authentically decorated. There are no signs on the door to indicate that inside lies a bar and restaurant. There is even a secret back door leading out to a passageway on to Barrow Street so that customers could make a quick exit when the police called.
Another former speakeasy still exists in
Petaluma, California. Volpi's Ristorante used to be a market with a speakeasy and bar in back. The door to the alley still exists above the bar, behind the Italian restaurant, and the bar is still in business and does not look much different than it probably did in Prohibition days. Rumors of underground tunnels that cross the downtown area are still told to this day. There was even a brothel that is now Old Chicago Pizza in this western town, and the rumors are that there were more, where these tunnels run to.
Speakeasies became more popular and numerous as the Prohibition years progressed, and also became more commonly operated by those connected to
organized crime. Although
police and
United States Federal Government agents would raid such establishments and arrest the owners and patrons, the business of running speakeasies was so lucrative that such establishments continued to flourish throughout the nation. In major cities, speakeasies were often elaborate, offering food, live bands, and floor shows. The police
corruption at this time was notoriously rampant; speakeasy operators commonly
bribed police to either leave them alone or at least give them advance notice of any planned raids.
Another
slang term similar to a speakeasy is "
blind pig". The difference between a speakeasy and a blind pig is that a speakeasy was usually a higher class establishment, where a blind pig was a lower class
dive.
A modern related term is the
smokeasy, a discreet venue that operates in places where smoking tobacco in bars and clubs is prohibited.
See also
★
Shebeen
★
Underground restaurant
★
Speakeasy A 4-piece rock band out of Springfield, MO http://speakeasyband.com/
References
1. The City in Slang New York Life and Popular Speech, , Irving L, Allen, Oxford University Press US, , ISBN 0195092651