Let's raise a glass in a #TuesdayToast to the last day of Women's History Month! We wanted to share the story of Daisy Simpson, known as the “lady hooch hunter." This document is currently on display in our new "Spirited Republic" exhibit.
The Prohibition Bureau hired a handful of women agents, usually assigned to office work. Daisy Simpson’s background as a former member of the San Francisco Police morals squad, her acting ability, and her skill at disguises allowed her to pose as a variety of characters and attempt to buy liquor at speakeasies, hotels, and restaurants.
Daisy went undercover in several well-publicized stings, including one in which she pretended to faint outside a bar. When the owner took her inside and revived her with a sip of whiskey, she arrested him.
Simpson served from 1921 until 1925 when she resigned after the head of the San Francisco bureau declared women could no longer work as agents.
Image: Prohibition Bureau identification card for Daisy Simpson, September 6, 1921 (National Archives, Records of the Internal Revenue Service)





