Last dry town in Connecticut reconsiders Prohibition

DeepseekerADS

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Geez, I didn't know any were left... So much for knowing what the world is all alike!

Last dry town in Connecticut reconsiders Prohibition | Fox News

Published February 22, 2014

prohibitioninternal.jpg

U.S. Prohibition agents destroy a bar in an undated photo held by the National Archives and Records Administration. (Reuters)

HARTFORD, Conn. – The last dry town in Connecticut is considering whether to give up on Prohibition.

Bridgewater, an affluent bedroom community of 1,700 people tucked into the hills of western Connecticut, may have more at stake in a referendum than bragging rights: The town's average age has risen above 50 and the state is threatening to close the only school.

First Selectman Curtis Read says restaurants that serve alcohol could provide a much-needed boost.

"It would tend to enliven the town," Read said.

Repeal has become the hottest issue in Bridgewater, with dozens attending a November town meeting on the issue. Read said it was clear people were reluctant to "show their cards" and a referendum was chosen in part for privacy, so that voters do not have to reveal opinions to neighbors. The timing of the vote, originally scheduled for Tuesday, now remains to be determined after it was postponed to make sure it complies with decades-old blue laws.

Cynthia Bennett, whose grandmother led an effort to keep Bridgewater dry after Prohibition ended in 1933, said she believes many fellow longtime residents will join her in voting against alcohol sales.

"I feel people moved here because Bridgewater is the way it is and I'd like to keep it that way," said Bennett, 55. "I'm not saying you don't, say, have a game of horseshoes and have a beer. There's plenty of it in Bridgewater."

Bridgewater has taken up the issue for the first time since 1930s because two developers proposed opening restaurants, as long as they could serve alcohol. Some residents have bars in their garages but the town, which is home to actress Mia Farrow and a large weekend population of people from New York City, currently does not have a restaurant aside from a village store with a delicatessen.

Read won the top job in November after his predecessor, William Stuart, declined to run for re-election to a position he held for 30 years. A leader of a local fox-hunting club, Stuart championed land preservation and kept development at bay. The FBI raided the town hall in 2012, and Stuart said he assumed was the target, but the FBI has since declined to comment on the status of any investigation.

Today, the town 60 miles north of New York has a median household income of about $100,000, but it has a glut of homes on the market and the last census showed the median age is 51. Farms dot the town that is full of picturesque, winding rural roads but has little downtown beyond the town hall and a post office.

A plan for a consolidated regional elementary school, subject to a vote in April, could lead to the closing of the town's only grade school.

"The town definitely needs a boost," said Read, who said the restaurants could provide a bit of local employment and a place to socialize.

One of the restaurant proposals came from Peter and Leni May, part-time residents from New York City who own the century-old building in downtown Bridgewater that hosts the village store. They suggested opening a pub-style restaurant in an adjacent space left vacant by the closing of a bank last June. Their local agent, Greg Bollard, said he was disappointed by the referendum's postponement, and it could even take the restaurant proposal off the table, but the family is committed to finding a business that will benefit the town center.

"We all want see to some positive growth for the town," Bollard said.
 

Chadeaux

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Dry towns create more alcoholics than anywhere else.

Live in a dry county in Arkansas. It's a 60 mile round trip to the "Bull of the Woods" to LEGALLY buy liquor.

Who's gonna drive that far for a six pack or a single beer? So, you buy enough to make the trip worthwhile.

Now you have all this booze, you might as well drink it ... you know, before it goes bad or something.

Vicious circle.

I'm originally from New Orleans. I see more drunks and alcoholics (there IS a difference) here than I ever saw there.

It's usually all about money. Sheriff's deputies get kickbacks from bootleggers in exchange for not busting them. Sheriff gets kickbacks from deputies.

That is the rule, more often than the exception.

Private clubs are allowed here, but when they don't pay ... well, accidents happen.
 

BC1969

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Jarred my memory, once upon a time, many many years ago, in what nows seems a galaxy far far away, I was your typical punk rebelling teenager. Well I got fed up with my current situation of living in a home for messed up boys in marlette mi.
Well I couldn't take it anymore and me and a couple other guys stole a car and set out for freedom..where ever that may have been. First we ended up in port Huron at some guys house named vodka johns..real crap hole, so off we went..a few gas runs and several hundred miles later..It was my turn to drive, now I was 13 then I think and had only driven a few times from other adventures..so I was not very good at it, and it was obvious, at least to the cop that pulled us over, in a place if I remember correctly.
Was called dry ridge Kentucky..apparently it was a dry town and my driving abilities or lack of..lol..made the cop think I was drunk, and well that was the end of our freedom..there's more to it, the aftermath..Bleh lol, but you get the idea, don't drive crappy like a drunk in a dry county or city.

Mike
 

Limitool

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Heck when I moved from MI. to Tennessee in Jan. 94' it seemed like I was set back to age 17 again and I was 38 then. Didn't want to pay the high prices for any property around Spring Hill so Mr. "Knows It All" heads for the hills and valleys of Hickman Co. It's about 34 miles away. Yep it was cheaper.... a LOT CHEAPER. Bought 8 acres of undeveloped property on a ridge top for less than $4,000. Bought Mamma a chain saw for Mothers Day (another bad decision) and out we go to cut out a driveway and lot for our home to build on. Well it's HOT here then... so to town we go just 5 miles away. Little town called Centerville. I go to every store looking for beer and ice. All I can find is ice. So I finally ask... where in the hell is the beer? It's a dry county I'm told... Damn... this sucked.

They didn't start selling beer here until just a few years ago... and liquor sales just started last year. This was quite an adjustment from my usual mode of operation. No wonder land was cheap!!!!!!
 

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