Minot was also the home of many high speed automobile chases in connection with
the bootlegging activities. One national magazine was quoted as saying “Minot
has more high performance vehicles per capita than any other city in America”.
These powerful cars, Buicks at the time, were the favored car of the
bootleggers. One high speed chase resulted in the arrest of the proprietor of
the Last Chance Barbershop on Central Avenue. In a shootout, whiskey-runner
Avery Erickson was fatally shot by Officer F.S. Fahler, who later died from
wounds received in the same encounter. In 1921 when state prohibition forces
opened their northwest regional headquarters in Minot, they announced that
their cars would be equipped with Browning machine guns. The office was closed
a few years later.
Prohibition Poster |
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