An Ancestral Connection with Prohibition

Two men with a whiskey still, sometime between 1920 and 1930. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.
Two men with a whiskey still, sometime between 1920 and 1930. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

Recently I uncovered some interesting information about my husband’s great-grandfather, Peter Consigli. According to the 6 September 1930 Boston Herald,[1] federal agents from Boston carried out several raids in the town of Milford, Massachusetts, and arrested three men, including Peter, for the manufacture of liquor. According to my husband and father-in-law, no one in their family had ever mentioned this incident.

Wanting to learn more, I searched the Milford Daily News for further details about the arrest. I located a newspaper article titled “Federal Agents Seize Big Still on Purchase Street,”[2] which reported that five federal agents arrived at the Consigli residence on the morning of September 4 and entered a barn located on the property. The agents had been informed that a still was kept there, so they waited in the barn in an attempt to catch someone in the act of operating the still. No one entered the barn, so the agents decided to seize the still and other equipment. The still was “the most unique construction of any ever located throughout the state, according to the police. It was found in a separate compartment in the barn and connected with a chimney in the house, therefore preventing tracing through any odor or smoke. The door of the barn had always remained open, which prevented any suspicion.”[3] In the 5 September 1930 edition of the Milford Daily News, it was reported that Peter and his wife were arraigned on charges of violating the 18th Amendment, which prohibited the production or sale of alcoholic beverages. The charges against Peter’s wife were dismissed, but an article published in the 26 November 1930 edition of the Milford Daily News reported that a federal grand jury in Boston returned 120 indictments, including one against Peter Consigli, for violation of the Prohibition Act.

While looking into this story, I learned that in November 1930, two months after Peter Consigli’s arrest, one of the ballot questions voted on by Massachusetts citizens was whether or not to repeal the Massachusetts Alcohol Prohibition Act, also known as the “Baby Volstead Act.” It was approved, with 649,592 voting in favor of the repeal and 368,544 against it.[4] Shortly after the repeal was approved, however, some Massachusetts law enforcement officials stated that they would continue to arrest individuals transporting liquor. A 2 December 1930 article in the Milford Daily News noted that the repeal pertained to the manufacture and transportation of liquor, but that law enforcement could still charge those who “sell liquor or keep and expose it for sale.”[5]

I am still in the process of searching for additional information about Peter Consigli’s arrest and indictment—and also take a closer look at some of the events and debates that took place in Massachusetts related to the repeal of the Massachusetts Alcohol Prohibition Act. Doing so will add another dimension to the story of Peter’s arrest.

[1] “U.S. Agents Seize Stills at Milford: Make Three Arrests During Their Descent on Town,” Boston Herald, 6 Sept. 1930, p. 24.

[2] “Federal Agents Seize Big Still on Purchase Street,” Milford [Mass.] Daily News, 4 Sept. 1930, p. 1.

[3] “Federal Agents Seize Big Still on Purchase Street,” p. 1.

[4] Statewide Ballot Questions – Statistics by Year: 1919-2012, William F. Galvin, Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, at sec.state.ma.us/ele/elebalm/balmresults.html#year1919.

[5] “Will Still Arrest Rum Transporters,” Milford [Mass.] Daily News, 2 Dec. 1930, p. 3.

About Eileen Pironti

Eileen graduated with a B.A. from Saint Anselm College, and received an M.S. from American University. She wrote about her ancestors’ participation in the colonization of Nobles County, Minnesota in “‘An Invitation to the Land’: Reconstructing James and Eliza Conlon’s Migration to Minnesota,” which was published in the Summer 2011 issue of American Ancestors magazine. Eileen's interests include Irish and 19th century New England research.

9 thoughts on “An Ancestral Connection with Prohibition

  1. I, too, have a “prohibition” relative. Family rumors suggest that my aunt was in prison somewhere in the south for making moonshine in Minnesota. I have found records showing that she had placed her two daughters into a Minneapolis children’s home circa 1930. She was also rumored to be a costume designer and seamstress for theater in Minneapolis at that time. I have not been able to locate theater or prison records.

  2. My grandmother’s brother was sent to prison after being caught with liquor a third time during prohibition. I found this information on the Ancestry.com prison rolls. My mother and grandmother would be so embarrassed to know that this deep dark family secret is now open to the world.

  3. My grandparents were married 15 Aug 1922 and their wedding trip was a cruise from NYC to Hamilton, Bermuda and back. I have a letter from my grandfather to his new mother-in-law describing in detail the cocktails the newlyweds imbibed on the trip. It sounded as though alcohol was the main attraction of those cruises, which were quite popular.

  4. My great grandmother was a proud member of an upstate New York chapter of the WCTU (Women’s Christian Temperance Union). My dad remembered his grandmother’s stories of the evils of alcohol. I don’t know how she reacted when Prohibition was repealed.

  5. My late father lived in Detroit until 1926, when he took the train to join his family members in Los Angeles (I still have his trunk, with the remains of the customs manifest on the side). He remembered how most of the buildings downtown were built of brick and in summer the place was unbearably humid. In those days before air conditioning people would go out at dusk in their cars and drive around, somewhere, anywhere, just to feel some air on their skin. At least once my dad drove past a prohibition raid–people from a speakeasy rounded up together waiting for the prison wagon as prohibition agents smashed bottle after bottle on the sidewalk.

  6. Next step in your research should probably be a thorough examination of the court records for this case.

  7. Wow. That newspaper’s reporting was really confused: (1.) Violating the Constitution isn’t a crime. Ergo, you can’t be arrested, indicted, or convicted of violating the Constitution. To implement the Eighteenth Amendment, Congress passed the Volstead Act, which regulated the production of alcoholic beverages and provided for penalties for violation of it. One could be charged with violating the Volstead Act (a law), but not of violating the Constitution. (2.) The Prohibition Act was a Massachusetts state statute, so how could a *federal* grand jury return indictments for a *state* law?

    1. The Volstead act was generally known as the “National Prohibition Act”, whose purpose, as you observed, was to implement the provisions of the 18th Amendment.

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