yea, Mississippi... you might be legal to drink, but the challenge is going to be finding booze to drink!
Mississippi is uniquely temperance-oriented. It imposed state-wide alcohol prohibition in 1907, over a dozen years before the rest of the country. It was the very first state to ratify the 18th Amendment to create National Prohibition. Following national rejection of Prohibition through Repeal in 1933, the state maintained its own state-wide prohibition for another one-third of a century. After that, it specifically ?reaffirmed prohibition? when it decided to permit local option regarding alcohol.
Today, almost one-half of the counties in Mississippi are "dry" with their own prohibition against the production, advertising, sale, distribution, or transportation of alcoholic beverages within their boundaries. It is even illegal to bring alcohol through a dry county in Mississippi while traveling across the country in the process of, for example, moving a personal wine or spirits collection to one's new residence. 33
and another one I didnt know... not sure if it has been repealed yet,
Wisconsin:
In Wisconsin, an adult under the age of 21 who is married to one age 21 or older can legally drink with his or her spouse.
State Rep. John Ainsworth doesn't like the idea at all and wants to eliminate the right of conjugal consumption.