Nationwide Prohibition lasted from 1920 until 1933. The Eighteenth Amendment—which illegalized the manufacture, transportation, and sale of alcohol—was passed by the U.S. Congress in 1917. In 1919 the amendment was ratified by the three-quarters of the nation’s states required to make it constitutional. That same year the Volstead Act, which engineered the means by which the U.S. government would enforce Prohibition, was passed as well. The nationwide moratorium on alcohol would stay in place for the next 13 years, at which point a general disenchantment with the policy—affected by factors ranging from the rise of organized crime to the economic malaise brought on by the stock market crash of 1929—led to its disbandment at the federal level by the Twenty-first Amendment. The prohibition of alcohol continued to exist at the state level in some places for the next two decades, as it had for over a half-century prior to the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment in 1919.