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February 2000

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Subject:
From:
Joan McCord <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Alcohol and Temperance History Group <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 13 Feb 2000 15:00:40 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
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Thanks for passing this along.


Robin Room wrote:

> (passed along to me by Barbara Leigh.  Robin Room)
>
> >Letter from the editor BY RICHARD F. SNOW
> >American Heritage, November 1999
> >
> >
> >Bar Keeping
> >
> >COUPLE OF MONTHS AGO, walking down Third Avenue, I committed an
> >honest-to-God Elmer Fudd double-take: Tuesdayıs was gone! Or, more
> >accurately, transformed into Sal Anthonyıs Scheffel Hall Movement Salon,
> >offering gyrotonics, ancestor channeling, and other New Age piffle. All that
> >was left of what it had replaced was a mural up near the ceiling where,
> >varnished by decades of cigar smoke, monks still lifted steins in a dim
> >yellow carouse.
> >The movement salon took its name from the building, Scheffel Hall, a
> >gathering place built for what would today be called ³the German-American
> >community² at a time when New York was nearly as much a German town as an
> >Irish one. The legend scheffel hall is still clearly visible on the
> >buildingıs busy facade (cheffel, actually, the S having been claimed by
> >obliterating time), but itıs the name right next to it‹and equally easy to
> >make out‹that mattered more to me: allaireıs. It had been a saloon, always.
> >Opened during the second year of the Civil War, Allaireıs provided O. Henry
> >with the setting for his story ³The Halberdier of the Little Rheinschloss,²
> >and over the decades its walls acquired a wonderful accretion of lithographs
> >of prizefighters and women in tights and, later, photos of drivers in the
> >coffin-snouted racing cars of the 1910s. By mid-century the bar had become
> >Joe Kingıs Rathskeller, a famous hangout for college kids‹and a particularly
> >appealing one to me, who, in the late 1960s, could go there and see a
> >picture of some long-dead welterweight and later talk to a dour washroom
> >attendant who remembered watching him fight out at Coney.
> >I was growing up or getting a job or married when a restaurant chain took
> >over Joe Kingıs; the next time I went there, it was Tuesdayıs. Iıd gone back
> >in the service of this magazine. Like most journals, we seek ways to draw
> >advertisersı attention to our virtues. In our case this presents a unique
> >challenge: how to suggest to people who tend to be young and not
> >automatically drawn to the study of history that our franchise is a vital
> >and engaging one. Twelve years ago we lit on the idea of taking a group of
> >potential clients on a tour of classic saloons, of which our neighborhood
> >has an impressive supply.
> >I discovered what Joe Kingıs had become while scouting out the route of that
> >inaugural tour. The old barıs new management clearly didnıt care much about
> >its heritage, but the pugilists and heroic-thighed women were still on the
> >walls, and Tuesdayıs became part of our itinerary. So did the nearby Peteıs
> >Tavern (another O. Henry haunt); the scrupulously preserved Old Town (before
> >the opening sequence of the Letterman show made it famous); Chumleyıs (a
> >true speakeasy, and just as hard to find as it was when Helen Worden
> >reported in her 1932 guidebook The Real New York that ³the quickest way to
> >reach 86 Bedford Street is in a local taxi. Even Mr. Chumley canıt find his
> >own gate when he ventures away from it²); the White Horse Tavern (where
> >Dylan Thomas drank himself to death, an oddly morbid and arty association
> >for this workaday spot where draymen on their way to the Washington Market
> >could sink a couple of schooners); and, of course, McSorleyıs Old Ale House,
> >perhaps the most evocative of all bars, its fixtures furred with immemorial
> >dust, its frame-to-frame prints and posters including one calling for the
> >arrest of Lincolnıs assassin before anyone was sure who he was.
> >On the appointed evening, we took our group on what we had christened the
> >American Heritage Pub Crawl, going from bar to busy bar while I brayed out
> >fragments of information and misinformation above the din. Weıve done it
> >every spring ever since, each time with a larger string of guests in tow.
> >And if the dozen years older Iıve become sometimes make the marathon feel a
> >bit more wearing than it did in the roaring eighties, theyıve also brought
> >me an increasing appreciation of the places we stop at.
> >Last May, while our publisher, Ed Hughes, and I welcomed guests to a dining
> >room weıd reserved at Peteıs (weıve found itıs not a bad idea to feed the
> >people embarked on this particular odyssey), it struck me that a few blocks
> >to the north, Grand Central Terminal had just emerged shining and altogether
> >magnificent from its justly heralded restoration‹but that the most modest of
> >the places we were visiting in Grand Centralıs figurative shadow represented
> >an even more miraculous survival.
> >Besieged by time, by changing custom, by federal law (all of them were
> >illegal between 1919 and 1933), they had hung on simply by giving weary
> >people something of value cheap: respite for working folk whose lives would
> >have been unimaginably severe to most of us. Today they offer the same sort
> >of comfort‹and with it an intimate, vital connection to the vanished
> >generations whose elbows helped rub smooth the mahogany under yours.
> >New York has no monopoly on these establishments: Chicagoans can have wurst
> >and lager at the Berghoff; San Franciscans have kept alive the House of
> >Shields; Bostonians Lock-Oberıs. Thereıs likely one soldiering along not far
> >from where you live. Give it a try. It may not be the frigate Constitution,
> >but itıs a historic shrine nonetheless. If it goes the way of Tuesdayıs,
> >youıve lost something, and so have all the rest of us.
> >

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