The SOHS Library is OPEN to the public at 106 N. Central Avenue in Medford, with FREE access to the SOHS Archives, from 12:00 - 4:00 pm, Tuesday through Saturday. Appointments are not necessary. Please contact library@sohs.org, or call 541-622-2025 ex 200 to ask questions or request research.

 

Tears Flow as Spilled Liquor Drains into Klamath Reservoir

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

 

ShareGoogle+Email

 

 

 

Listen

Listening...

 

1:59

A 1916 article in the Klamath Falls Evening Herald described how tears flowed as people watched the sheriff smash with an axe 168 bottles of “good Wieland’s beer and four kegs of dago red and gin” that drained into Lake Ewauna.
The sheriff had seized the booze in a raid on a bootlegging joint.  Oregon had that year banned the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages, four years before national Prohibition.  It wasn’t illegal to possess alcohol, so people would drive across the border into California to buy their booze. That ended four years later with Prohibition’s national ban that included possession.
Bootlegging offered big profits because ingredients were cheap and beer and liquor were easy to make, requiring only a rustic still, barrels, starch, yeast, fresh water, fuel and some storage casks and bottles.
A member of the Klamath County Historical Society said in a museum presentation in 2013 that most Klamath stills were hidden on ranches, in the woods, or at the Lava Beds in Northern California. 
The Prohibition era was relatively nonviolent in the Klamath Basin, consisting of only a few shots fired and no related deaths in Klamath County.
 
Sources: "Booze Seized in Raid Goes in the Lake." Evening Herald 5 Oct. 1916 [Klamath Falls, Ore.]: Historic Oregon Newspapers. Web. 20 Oct. 2016.

Episode
3059
Date
Author
Kernan Turner