Deputy sheriffs again find liquor at Stensland residence near Redmond on April 27, 1926.

  • By Greg Lange
  • Posted 2/26/1999
  • HistoryLink.org Essay 955
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On April 27, 1926, the King County Sheriff's Department is issued a search warrant to look for liquor at the Ole Stensland residence located one or two miles east of Redmond. Deputies had raided and found moonshine in Ole Stensland's residence on March 26, 1926. This was but one of many raids carried out by the Sheriff's Department during Prohibition.

This time they find two gallon bottles, four quart bottles, and two pint bottles of moonshine.

Prohibition, outlawing the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages, took effect in Washington state in 1916. The year 1919 marked ratification of the "bone dry" Prohibition amendment to the U.S. Constitution, making the manufacture, transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages illegal throughout the nation. The Prohibition amendment was repealed in 1933.


Sources:

Search Warrant No. 3538, Liquor Search Dockets, Vol. 2, Justice Court, King County, Washington State Archives, Puget Sound Regional Branch, Bellevue Community College campus, Bellevue, Washington.


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