Prohibition may have banned alcohol sales in the 1920s and early 1930s, but instead of killing off bars, it just sent them undercover. Speakeasies (so named because you talked quietly about them), sold booze on the sly to patrons who found the right door, said the right words and possibly knew the right person inside. Prohibition ended in 1933, but the fascination with hidden hooch survives.
Today, several Chicago bars still maintain an air of speakeasy secrecy, whether they’re tucked away or require a certain local knowledge for admission.
Here are 10 to search for.