What Grandpa Never Told You… A Lot of Northern New York Families Made a Shady Living As Smugglers, Bootleggers, and Booze Runners During Prohibition
- 1920 – First Year of Prohibition: A Watertown police officer leaped from a moving taxi onto a fleeing car to arrest Massena bootleggers.
- Federal agents raided Ogdensburg by land and sea to crack down on rum-running.
- 2 Potsdam ministers helped federal agents conduct righteous speakeasy raids.
- Ogdensburg’s Fred Lassail: Bootlegger and Dad.
- A high-speed chase down the streets of Massena led to the arrest of Potsdam bootleggers.
- An Ogdensburg mayoral candidate defended the city’s leading speakeasy owner.
- 12,000 quarts of liquor were seized on a ship docked at Cardinal, Ontario by Prescott Customs agents after the booze showed up in Ogdensburg.
- An ALCOA crane operator’s suicide in Massena was blamed on bootlegging, smuggling, and gambling.
- Gouverneur’s Fred Scozzafava crashed into the New York Central train in DeKalb while hauling a load of smuggled booze.
- Ogdensburg’s Joseph Rish’s colorful career as a speakeasy owner.
- Burglars robbed the U.S. Customs House for Booze at Rouses Point.
- Cranberry Lake, Norfolk, Pyrites, and others raided.
- Federal G-Men Led Raids Across Northern New York.
Author: James E. Reagen
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: James E. Reagen
Published: 12/09/2022
Pages: 160
Weight: 0.49lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.34d
ISBN: 9781088078600
Language: English







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