Difference between revisions of "Chapter 14"

(Page 92)
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'''captured in local waters by the Drys'''<br />
 
'''captured in local waters by the Drys'''<br />
 
Federal agents (and their local counterparts) were the enforcers who carried out Prohibition law; they were sometimes called "drys”" by slang extension, but technically they were government employees, not activists.
 
Federal agents (and their local counterparts) were the enforcers who carried out Prohibition law; they were sometimes called "drys”" by slang extension, but technically they were government employees, not activists.
 +
 +
'''No Man's Land'''<br />
 +
When locals in the early 20th century talked about "No Man’s Land" on Lake Michigan, they meant a strip of undeveloped or lawless lakeshore north of the city limits, a sort of in-between zone that, during the 1920s–1930s, gained a reputation for bootlegging, roadhouses, gambling, and weekend vice. During Prohibition (1920–1933), the area’s ambiguous status made it a natural haven for: speakeasies and roadhouses serving liquor smuggled in from Chicago or across Lake Michigan; shore-landing points for rum-runners, who brought Canadian whiskey across by boat at night; dance halls and "blind pigs" — unlicensed taverns that often doubled as gambling rooms or brothels. Local newspapers described it as a "shack-studded strip of dance joints and shanty bars" where respectable Milwaukeeans went slumming on weekends.
  
 
==Page 95==
 
==Page 95==
 
'''how jay it’s getting around this joint anymore'''<br />
 
'''how jay it’s getting around this joint anymore'''<br />
 
Dull, unsophisticated, inferior.  Beginning in the Midwest in the early 19th-century, “jay” was common slang for an empty-headed chatterbox, like a bluejay. A “jay” was a hick, a rube, or a downright dupe. A “jay town” was a fourth-rate or worthless place. [https://kinneybrothers.com/blog/blog/2021/01/29/fun-facts-91-jaywalker/ More…]
 
Dull, unsophisticated, inferior.  Beginning in the Midwest in the early 19th-century, “jay” was common slang for an empty-headed chatterbox, like a bluejay. A “jay” was a hick, a rube, or a downright dupe. A “jay town” was a fourth-rate or worthless place. [https://kinneybrothers.com/blog/blog/2021/01/29/fun-facts-91-jaywalker/ More…]

Revision as of 14:30, 9 October 2025

This chapter appears to take place some years before 1932, when Hicks first met Daphne, i.e., analepsis

Page 92

captured in local waters by the Drys
Federal agents (and their local counterparts) were the enforcers who carried out Prohibition law; they were sometimes called "drys”" by slang extension, but technically they were government employees, not activists.

No Man's Land
When locals in the early 20th century talked about "No Man’s Land" on Lake Michigan, they meant a strip of undeveloped or lawless lakeshore north of the city limits, a sort of in-between zone that, during the 1920s–1930s, gained a reputation for bootlegging, roadhouses, gambling, and weekend vice. During Prohibition (1920–1933), the area’s ambiguous status made it a natural haven for: speakeasies and roadhouses serving liquor smuggled in from Chicago or across Lake Michigan; shore-landing points for rum-runners, who brought Canadian whiskey across by boat at night; dance halls and "blind pigs" — unlicensed taverns that often doubled as gambling rooms or brothels. Local newspapers described it as a "shack-studded strip of dance joints and shanty bars" where respectable Milwaukeeans went slumming on weekends.

Page 95

how jay it’s getting around this joint anymore
Dull, unsophisticated, inferior. Beginning in the Midwest in the early 19th-century, “jay” was common slang for an empty-headed chatterbox, like a bluejay. A “jay” was a hick, a rube, or a downright dupe. A “jay town” was a fourth-rate or worthless place. More…

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