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On this date in 1915, Minnesotas Polk County voted
to go dry. It was the end of a 25-year era during which East
Grand Forks had enjoyed a booming business from across the river.
When ND enacted prohibition in July 1890, fourteen Grand Forks saloon
keepers immediately moved across the river. Two years later, East Grand
Forks boasted a brewery, a beer depot, and 33 saloons 22 of which
were located in the first block of DeMers Avenue. By 1909, the number
of saloons was up to 48, along with twelve breweries and two wholesale
distributors.
When Polk County went dry in 1915, the Bismarck Daily Tribune reported:
It is understood that the East Grand Forks brewery...and the Kewold
brewery at Crookston will continue in operation maintaining their business
on the basis specified in the option act. If the... distributing stations
maintain their position, a rather interesting legal battle is anticipated...
One local brewery agent says shipments in a single month from one depot
have aggregated as high as $50,000, with these shipments being made into
the dry state of North Dakota.
Ultimately, Polk Countys liquor businesses were given six months
to get rid of their stock. Many just went underground, and for the next
18 years, soft drink parlors became fronts for illegal bars
called speakeasies, with bootleggers supplying beer and liquor smuggled
in primarily from Canada.
A lot of the Canadian liquor actually originated in Chicago, and local
tradition has it that well-known gangsters like Al Capone were supplying
East Grand Forks beer and liquor. During the 20s and 30s,
slot machines were part of the speakeasy scene, with roulette, blackjack
and poker games in the back rooms. The town now had a nickname: Little
Chicago.
One high-class bar called Bobbys Café was considered the
best steakhouse west of Chicago. Whitey Larsons Wonderbar &
Café boasted the Nations first, stainless-steel, horse-shoe-shaped
bar; its said Whiteys had so many slot machines it felt and
sounded just like a Chicago club. Kearnes & Walskis was a professionally-run
gambling operation featuring and elaborate mahogany bar and high-backed
booths.
East Grand Forks lost a lot of money when bars became illegal. To make
up for money normally derived from liquor licenses, city police staged
one or two local raids a year. Guilty bar owners paid their $200 fines
in Municipal Court and then went back to business as usual.
East Grand Forks passed a city ordinance that allowed legalized beer parlors
during the late 1930s, and the area between the DeMers Avenue bridge and
Fourth Street took on new vigor. Discreet storefront signs gave way to
so many flashing signs, Ripleys Believe It or Not declared it the
highest concentration in the world of neon lights in a three-block area.
Despite opposition from temperance groups, a Polk County committee gathered
3,000 signatures in support of once again becoming a wet county, and on
August 1, 1947, residents voted 2-to-1 to reverse its dry option. The
only catch was that, based on population, East Grand Forks could have
only five license-holders. Intense competition ensued to see who of the
35 or 40 applicants would be chosen city council. Whiteys Wonderbar
& Café was the number one selection and is the only one still
in operation. In 1939, it was featured in the Saturday Evening Post and
Time Magazine for its Art Deco design, but the 97 flood destroyed
the building. Luckily, the famed Wonderbar and Art Deco interior
were saved and reinstalled when they rebuilt three doors down.
Source: East Grand Forks Chamber of Commerce; Bismarck Daily Tribune,
May 29, 1915; http://www.whiteyscafe.com/framespage.htm
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