Menus can transport us back to the everyday life of the past, whether to a lavish banquet in the Gilded Age or a food-relief eatery during the Great Depression. Coming into general use in the United States in the 1840s when hotels and restaurants began to replace inns and taverns that served a limited choice of domestic-style meals, menus offered guests a greater variety of dishes and added an element of anticipation to the experience. While most menus were intended for short-term use and never meant to be saved, some were finely crafted by leading stationers like Tiffany’s and Dempsey & Carroll, whose artists decorated them with silk ribbons and finely rendered watercolor scenes.
"A Century of Dining Out" features 225 menus that reflect the first hundred years of their use in American society, ranging from restaurants and hotels to Mississippi steamboats, utopian communities, and grand estates. Highlights include rare examples from the haunts of Edgar Allan Poe and Walt Whitman in New York City, eateries in San Francisco during the California Gold Rush, and special events such as Abraham Lincoln’s second inaugural ball and Mark Twain’s birthday party at Delmonico’s. The exhibition is curated by Grolier Club member Henry Voigt from his collection, and an accompanying publication will be available in Spring 2023.
Mon - Sat 10am - 5pm
Sun CLOSED
Free & open to the public
Ground Floor Gallery
The Grolier Club of New York
47 East 60th Street
New York, NY
40.76400956369, -73.9699713
A Century of Dining Out: The American Story in Menus, 1841-1941