1929 The Bon Vivant's Companion or How to Mix Drinks by Jerry Thomas

INTRODUCTION

After John Morrissey had purchased the Broadway prop erty Professor Thomas moved downtown, and in August, 1875, opened Thomas's Exchange at No. 3 Barclay Street, which soon became as popular as any of his other places. Morrissey operated the Broadway house as a pool room for a year or so,when it again came into the hands of the Profes sor, and was remodeled as a theater. It opened with a min strel show in which Lew Dockstader made his first hit as a comedian. Dockstader's brother Charley was also a member of the company,as were Tommy Turner,Billy Bryant,Frank Kent, and Charley White, then the dean of minstrelsy. It was soon after he opened his Barclay Street bar that Pro fessor Thomas began toform his notable collection of gourds, which soon crowded cartoons and caricatures out of his mind, and within a few months literally covered the walls of his back room. Professor Thomas's business rivals included many cele brated bartenders, for this was the golden age of the Amer ican saloon, and Manhattan Island was dotted with high- class establishments from the Battery northward to Spujden Duyvil,presided over by men who took their profession seri ously and strove mightily to bring it to perfection. A noted barroom of the period was the Tall Tower in the basement of The Tribune building at Spruce and Nassau Streets,which in earlier years had been the site of the original Tammany Hall, and before that of Martling's Restaurant, commonly called the Pig Pen, where the Tammany organization held its first meetings. The Tall Tower was much frequented by editors and reporters of The Times, The Tribune and other newspapers which had their plantson Printing House Square. It was owned by Roster & Bial, who were also the proprie tors of the famous music hall which bore their name, and Charley Sander was the Principal Bartender. Sander was a young man when he presumed to compete with Professor Thomas as a drink mixer, but he could wiggle his ears, and xli

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