100 years ago today, while families slept and dreamed of eggnog and wrapping paper, the Windsor-Detroit riverfront was anything but peaceful. It was Christmas week, 1925, and the frozen river had become the "Windsor-Detroit funnel"—the epicenter of a global black market for alcohol.
In a recent segment, Jon Liedtke joined Gene Valaitis on 610CKTB to discuss his article, Rumrunner’s Christmas: When a frozen Detroit River ran on Whiskey-fueled Studebakers.
It’s the story of how a frozen river, a legal loophole, souped-up vehicles, and Canadian whiskey kept the Roaring Twenties roaring in the United States, how Windsor was a silent co-founding partner of Las Vegas, and how "The Big Flip" occurred, switching Canada from the supplier of whiskey to the gatekeepers of American alcohol due to retaliatory tariffs & actions.