Capone Helped Whisky Barons Beat Prohibition
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Capone helped whisky barons beat Prohibition
IT WAS a curious encounter in an exclusive wine and spirit merchants that linked the Scottish whisky industry to the notorious gangsters of Prohibition America.
Jack “Legs” Diamond, one of Americas most notorious bootleggers, walked into Berry Brothers & Rudd on Londons St Jamess Street one day in 1920 and ordered several hundred cases of their best Scotch.
His request may have raised some eyebrows, given that the firm had been purveyors of wine and spirits to royalty and nobility for more than 300 years. But he wasnt turned away.
New research by a Scottish author suggests that Berry Brothers & Rudd were secretly involved in smuggling Scotch whisky into the United States during the 13 years it was “dry”.
George Rosie, author of Curious Scotland, Tales from a Hidden History, which chronicles the antics of the bootleggers, said the very profitable relationship between respectable whisky firms and American mobsters “is one of the great stories that has never been told”.
In 1920, the United States was among the most lucrative markets for the whisky barons of Glasgow. So when Congress passed the Prohibition Act it became clear that for the whisky industry in Scotland to survive, the legislation would need to be circumvented.
Mr Rosie claims that Francis Berry, the junior partner at Berry Brothers & Rudd during the time of Prohibition, travelled to Nassau in the Bahamas, where he struck up a deal with a Scots-American seaman from Florida called Bill McCoy.
The deal was simple. Berry Brothers would legally ship their Cutty Sark Whisky into the British colonial governments warehouses in the Bahamas. From there, the whisky would be uplifted by McCoys schooner and taken to the international waters off the New York/New Jersey coast.
Once there it would be sold to American gangsters such as Charles “Lucky” Luciano, “Bugsy” Siegal and “Nucky” Johnson, who used high-speed motor boats to smuggle Scotch on to the mainland, where it would be distributed among other organised gangsters, including Al Capone.
Mr Rosie said: “The arrangement worked well. The gangsters could not get enough of the product, Bill McCoy added to his substantial bank balance, the Berry Brothers distilleries in Scotland did brisk business, and the firm carved itself a niche in the American market which it was able to exploit when Prohibition ended in 1933.”
Exports of whisky to the Bahamas rose astonishingly during the period – from 944 gallons in 1918 to more than