Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Barkeep, a few more like this one, please
Sismondo knows how to mix a heady cocktail with history and detail. (FRANK GUNN / CANADIAN PRESS ARCHIVES)
America Walks into a Bar
A Spirited History of Taverns and Saloons, Speakeasies and Grog Shops
By Christine Sismondo
Oxford University Press, 314 pages, $28
Sometime around the year 1620, America walked into a bar. It's still in there.
But as Toronto writer Christine Sismondo makes clear in this delightfully erudite exploration of one the most peculiar byways of American history, what has emerged from that bar in the centuries since has shaped the United States and changed the world.
Taverns have always been and remain today an important force in American history, politics and social mores.
The Mayflower, bringing the Pilgrims to America, was bound for the Hudson River in New York, but when it began to run short of beer and the captain had to dip into his own stash to keep the passengers happy and then had to start to worry about how he could satisfy his sailors on the way home, he dumped the Puritans 300 kilometres north of that, at Plymouth Rock.
One of the first things those Pilgrims did was to build a tavern, even before a church or a town hall. In fact, the tavern served all three functions until the settlement got better organized. The same scenario played out in most of the English settlements along the Atlantic seaboard -- the tavern became the centre of American life.
That was partly out of necessity and partly because the Puritans -- as hard as it may for us to imagine today -- did like their beer and they consumed it in considerable quantity, along with "cocktails" such as rattleskull, bombo, whistlebelly and flip and bounce:
In 1704, the New England Almanac published an ode to strong drink:
The days are short, the weather cold,
By tavern fires tales are told,
Some ask for dram when they come in,
Others with flip and bounce begin.
Sismondo, a lecture in humanities at York University and something of an expert in strong spirits -- she is also the author of another history called Mondo Cocktail -- is fond of quoting contemporary drinking songs and verses. Most cannot be printed in a family newspaper.
These ditties are just one of many pleasant surprises this book brings. We learn for example that the original Puritans were not just Salem-witch-burning, blue-nosed bigots. They were actually blotto most of time -- they drank from dawn till dusk -- and the Salem witch hunts (the "witches" were actually hanged, not burned) originated at least partly in the taverns of New England.
That is no surprise, perhaps. As Sismondo points out, America itself originated at least in part in the nation's taverns. The first tax revolt came out of a Philadelphia grog house, the Stamp Act riots came out of rage that was fuelled in New England inns and the American Revolution had its roots in the colonies' grog shops where men gathered to talk politics, oppose tyranny and work themselves into a patriotic fervour over copious -- a 21st-century wimp might say astonishing -- amounts of beer and booze.
Sismondo illustrates that what was true at Plymouth Rock in 1620 has remained true throughout American history. Tavern talk has had a remarkable influence on the shaping of the nation, in every century and almost every aspect of life.
America Walks into a Bar is history at its best. It is filled with fascinating detail -- it is hard to find a boring page -- about an important historical phenomenon. One puts it down with a sense of satisfaction and a strong urge for a large glass of flip and bounce and a question: Why can't all history books read like this?
Tom Oleson is a member of the Free Press editorial board.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition August 13, 2011 J7
More FYI
- Back to Top
- Return to FYI
Most Popular FYI
- Safety -- and a new start
- Big culture ON THE PRAIRIE
- Warm-up for the Jewish Olympics
- Higher education: Funding puts reserve school on par with public system
- Our City Our World / Jewish Community
- Risky business
- Prescription for disaster
- Where are the children buried?
- A big heart, a troubled mind: Rick Rypien
- Connecting to her ancestors
- Higher education: Funding puts reserve school on par with public system
- CBC's Lang writes about innovation
- Dam deals
- Risky business
- It's been a Good Week for... It's been a Bad Week for.,,
- Safety -- and a new start
- Big culture ON THE PRAIRIE
- New biography celebrates first female ordained minister
- Prescription for disaster
- "Overheard
- Higher education: Funding puts reserve school on par with public system
- Risky business
- Warm-up for the Jewish Olympics
- Our national shame
- Synagogue to honour longtime Torah reader
- Tibetans burning for freedom
- Safety -- and a new start
- Whiteshell's sacred stones
- The cost of calories: It's expensive to eat healthily
- Changer de cap
- Higher education: Funding puts reserve school on par with public system
- Prescription for disaster
- Risky business
- Journey of a lifetime
- Titanic -- The Manitoba connection
- War brides overcame harsh, unexpected conditions to build new life
- Rough road to redemption?
- Hindle tells Fish stories in self-help book
- Warm-up for the Jewish Olympics
- Manitobans wage war with Lyme disease, skeptical doctors
Ads by Google









You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010; View the changes. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.