Local Officials Pose With Marijuana Plants, Schenectady County, 1940
Suggested Teaching Instructions
The Narcotic Drug Act prohibited the manufacture, possession, sale, prescription, administration, dispense, or compound of any narcotic drug unless otherwise authorized for medicinal use. The law defined a narcotic as “cocoa leaves, opium, cannabis (marijuana), and every substance neither chemically nor physically distinguishable from them.” Cannabis, another term for marijuana, was further defined as “all parts of the plant cannabis sativa L., whether growing or not; the seeds thereof; the resin extracted from any part of such plant; and every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture or preparation of such plant…” Therefore, the location of growing plants on someone’s property would serve as a violation of this law.
In the event that a law officer encountered a violation of this law, all narcotic drugs were to be seized and destroyed. The commissioner of health was required to keep all records related to the confiscated drugs and their disposal, including types, quantities and forms. The above photograph shows law enforcement officers seizing marijuana plants in Schenectady County in 1940. The action taken by these men was required by the Uniform Narcotic Drug Act of 1933.