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Bars where Pete has had a Drink (6,162 bars; 1,764 bars in Seattle) - Click titles below for Lists:


Bars where Pete has had a drink

Monday, January 27, 2025

#6054 - Lou's Little Corner Bar, Pittsburgh, PA - 1/25/2025

Lou's Little Corner Bar, Pittsburgh, PA 
I don't know how long there has been a bar in this location, but it has been at least since the 1930s and there are hints it may go back to the 1890s.

Louis Lardo established Lou's in 1985. It was O'Neil's Bar in the 1960s, Sutony's Bar in the late 40s and the 50s, and the Anchor Inn from at least 1937 into the early 1940s.

In November of 1991, Lardo was charged with two accounts of aggravated assault and reckless endangerment, after he tracked down to black 15-year-olds who stole his car from in front of the bar, and shot them as they fled from him.

Lou's Little Corner Bar, Pittsburgh, PA 
The building attached to the bar has offered rooms to let for well over a hundred years.



































4924 Liberty Ave, Pittsburgh, PA 15224 - (412) 682-9723
Est. March 18, 1985
Previous bars in this location: Anchor Inn, Sutony's Bar, O'Neil's Bar
Web site: facebook - instagram  
Reviews: thegreatpittsburghpubcrawlyelp - reddit 

Friday, December 20, 2024

#6009 - Medieval Tavern U Krále Brabantského, Prague, Czech Republic - 12/10/2024

Medieval Tavern U Krale Brabantskeho
Prague, Czech Republic

In the city of Prague there are many great bars in cellar and cave-like spaces of the old buildings, including multiple bars that provide a "medieval" experience, often with shows. But the "original" of these is Medieval Tavern "U Krále Brabantského," or "King of Brabant," said to have been established in 1375, in the shadow of Prague Castle. From the website
'From 1375, when the tavern was first opened, kings and smugglers used to come here. It is said that Czech kings used secret passages from the castle to get into the tavern and get drunk to forget their problems about Czech lands. Magister Kelly and Arcimboldo, Jaroslav Hašek and Karel Čapek, Mozart and Ondřej Soukup all used to drink here.

It is said that genius W.A. Mozart wanted to compose „Velkou Ranní" during his last visit in Prague. However from unknown reasons he ended up with „Malá Noční“.

At the end of the 18th century, the owner of our tavern was some "regimentstambor" called Krügler - famous showman. He could whistle and use a wooden spoon like he was playing the drums. Or he was just telling stories to his guests.'

 

Third Eye Traveller adds:

"The name comes from Duke John I of Brabant also known as Gambrinus who is the patron saint of brewers.

There are legends that the kings of Bohemia like Wenceslas IV and Rudolf II used to come to drink here in secret with smugglers and thieves.

Famous Czech figures would also haunt these halls like Italian painter Arcimboldo and the Czech writers Jaroslav Hašek and Karel Čapek."

The shows are not for me, so I made my way in the early afternoon, for the decor, atmosphere and some traditional Czech cuisine. The sources for the founding date and descriptions came from commercial sites and traveling sites, and I wish I'd come upon some more well founded and detailed descriptions of the history of the place from someplace like historic scholars or a university. But the decor and vibe definitely live up to the reputation, and show or no show, it would be among my highest recommendations for any visitor to Prague. 

 

















































Thunovská 198/15, 118 00 Malá Strana, Czechia +420 602 524 725
Est. 1375 - Building constructed: 1375
Previous bars in this location: None known 
Web site: krcmabrabant.cz - facebook - instagram 
Reviews: thirdeyetraveller.com - hikeandhostelch - yelp - tripadvisorinstagram (open group) - pragueexperience.com - prague-guide.co.uk - prague.eu 

Sunday, October 13, 2024

#5881 - Log Cabin Tavern, Des Plaines, IL - 9/7/2024

I haven't found much information about the Log Cabin Tavern, in Des Plaines, Illinois, some 5 miles northeast of O'Hare Airport. It is said to have been built in 1934 by Vincent "Charlie" Crement, opening as "Crement's Beer Garden," renamed "Crement's Log Cabin" in 1938, and then "Log Cabin Inn" in 1946. I've found no web site for the place, and the Facebook page is unclaimed. But when you actually come upon it, the old cabin and adjoining patio are quite remarkable.

The inside and especially the outside are crammed full of antiques, odd crafts, and random collections; a row of antique wood pulleys hangs over a set of old milk cans, a collection of meat grinders, nautical items, taxidermy and a koi pond, elaborately crafted birdhouses and framed music albums, tables crafted from tree trunks, sewing machines, a pot bellied stove, and old sewing machines, unfolding in waves as you seem to wander from room to room even on the patio.

More of an old neighborhood joint than a dive bar, the staff and many of the regulars are Polish. The kitchen offers a fairly simple menu, a mix of old-time bar food (e.g. burgers, soups) and Polish specialties such as zapiekanka, pyzy, bigos and pierogis. The beer menu is also relatively simple, with just 3 or 4 on tap, and 20 or so additional choices in bottles, but also including Polish options like Tyskie and Żywiec. 

I would probably hang out quite often if I lived anywhere near.







































 































346 Potter Rd, Des Plaines, IL 60016 - (847) 299-1811
Est. 1934 - Building constructed: 1934 
Previous bars in this location: Crement's Beer Garden, Crement's Log Cabin 
Reviews: patch - yelp - tripadvisor - roadtrippers 

Thursday, October 03, 2024

#5877 - Old Tavern Inn, Niles, MI - 9/6/2024

Old Tavern Inn, Niles, MI 

Founded in 1836, the Old Tavern Inn has been recognized by the State of Michigan as being the oldest business in Michigan still operating in its original building. It is not clear to me on what basis it rules out the New Hudson Inn (which claims to have been founded in 1831), nor is it clear to me exactly when it changed its name to "Old Tavern Inn" after operating for many decades as the Sumnerville Tavern. Nevertheless, its own claim to its purported history is unusually strong, as documented by a loose bound book in the establishment itself, full of photos and a brilliantly researched list of owners and transactions over the years.

The book, was assembled by Barbara Cook and her husband Grafton "Grif" Cook, and its a gold mine to people like me who are curious about the history of the place, which locals refer to as "OTI's." As per their book:

"The Sumnerville Tavern is one of the most historic and insteresting buildings in Cass County and was apparently the first building constructed in the newly formed village [Sumnerville, platted in 1836]. For over twenty years it was located on the stage coach route connecting Kalamazoo and Niles."

Ida and Fred Freeman, who ran the business from the mid 1920s to mid 40s, re-oriented and expanded the building, adding a pool table and gas pumps out front of the tavern. But with vehicles (including a hearse carrying a body) failing to negotiate the 90 degree turn and crashing into the pumps, the Freemans eventually built a new concrete basement and foundation, and turned the building itself 90 degrees. "The building which for 80 years faced west was turned to face south. What had been the side of the building, facing north, now faced, as it still does the Indian Lake road. A large porch over the new front was built as well as tow large windows on each side of the new entrance."

The tavern, family restaurant, and former grocery and gas station had changed names to the Old Tavern Inn by the mid 1970s, and it remains plainly a popular place -- quite packed with local families on the Friday afternoon I stopped by, as efficient and friendly servers whizzed to and fro. It is known particularly for its ham sandwich, which unfortunately I was not in a position to sample on this day.

But at least I am glad that they no longer greet first time visitors in quite they way they are said to have done when founder Peabody Cook still owned the joint. The Cooks quote Abner Moon, a newspaperman from nearby Dowagiac, with the following account:

"It was said of Cook's regime that it was a pastime with its sitters about the place to 'initiate' those who came to the house. The candidate would be surrounded and taken down upon the floor where he was held pinioned by wlling hands whilst whiskey was rubbed on his head and then a hot brick was applied while the candidate struggled and yelled 'Ouch!' when the hot brick was applied and the house rang with the laughter and glee of the merry roysters."






 

Friday, September 27, 2024

#5915 - Bay Horse Cafe, Cincinnati, OH - 9/12/2024

Bay Horse Cafe, Cincinnati, OH

While it has been closed and threatened many times over the years, the Bay Horse Cafe traces its history back to 1962 in its current location, back to 1879 under its current name (across multiple locations), and purportedly back to 1817 as a business. Cincinnati Magazine provides this overview:

Bay Horse stakeholders trace the bar’s roots back to 1817, a Water Street location that suffered frequent flooding. It moved a few times, landing on Fifth Street where, in 1878, it picked up its name after a horse broke free of its pen across the street and wandered into the cozy interior.... the drinkery moved to its current location at 625 Main Street in 1968 [sic] when the federal building forced relocation. By 2004, the business had fallen on hard times and, after a shooting occurred outside its front window, the city declined renewal of its liquor license. For a while, the building faced threat of demolition.

Then, in 2017, a local entrepreneur and real estate investor named Fred Berger bought the building and, alongside his partner, Lori Meeker, renovated the bar, returning it to its glory days. The reopened Bay Horse Cafe quickly became a beloved local fixture until the tragic death of Meeker [in May 2022] led to yet another closure. A “For Rent” sign eventually appeared in the front window.

A longtime local bartender, Kyle Smith had been looking for a place to call his own for more than a year when he heard the Bay Horse was for rent. He called the number, and Berger answered. The two instantly hit it off. "He said, ‘You can’t change anything,’” Smith recalls. “’The sign has to stay on the front. I don’t want you to change the name.’ I said, ‘Fred, you don’t have to worry about a thing.’”

The 1817 date is very far from certain, and we know from primary sources that the move to the current location was in 1962 rather than 1968, but in any case we know that the business is very old. I first discovered it when it was still closed due to the death of Meeker, so I was delighted to be able to go not too long after it re-opened in early April 2024. It was Meeker and her partner Berger who were most critical to its survival and current form, for it was they who rescued when it had been closed for 12 years and slated for demolition in 2016. Not only did they revive the business, but they rescued it from a troublesome clientele, and restored much of its former glory, exposing the old tin ceilings and tile floors, and restoring the great early mid-century neon sign.

"The Bay Horse became to be known as a neighborhood trouble spot. In 2005 it was closed after it was found that it was operating without a liquor license and also after a shooting occurred during the day right outside its door. After the its closing, Quikstaff operated an employment firm for a short time but it appears the building has been vacant for some time. It had been for sale but now the owner has applied for a demolition permit that has to be reviewed by the Historic Conservation Board." 
(diggingcincinnati)

Much of the bar's history is documented on the walls of the bar itself, e.g. a Jan 15, 1936 article from the Cincinnati Post which notes:

"The Bay Horse was originally opened by William Brothers, who was proprietor until 1891. During the great panic of 1891 to 1896, the cafe was sold half a dozen times. Gus Schmleg worked for each of its owners. He acquired it, together with a partner, Ed Schott, who is now 76 and works for Mr. Schmleg, in 1896. The building housing the cafe was erected in 1829 by William Thoms. A sun dial bearing the name and date may be found on the building at the intersection of Main and Fifth streets."

Another article notes that customer Robert O'Hara, a clerk for Board of Elections in town, came in 1906 and had come in every working day since up to at least the publishing of the article in 1952.

Yet another notes that Bill Marck took over in 1938, and we know that he still ran it when it was forced to move again and merged into the Grand Cafe, then at its current location. It is likely that it was at this point that the bar finally allowed women customers, as we know that it had not previously, but the Grand Cafe had.

So cheers to owner Kyle Smith and the entire string of owners known and unknown who kept this wonderful old place alive. The Queen City today has a rich selection of bars again, from craft cocktail emporiums to great old dives, but I'll try and make my way to the Bay Horse at least once whenever I visit.























625 Main St, Cincinnati, OH 45202 - (513) 975-0335
Est. 1962 (current location), 1879 previous location - Building constructed: 1829 
Previous bars in this location: Grand Cafe 
Web site: facebook 
Articles Ranked: cincinnatimagazine - cincinnati.com - diggingcincinnati - savingplaces.org - ronnysalerno - diggingcincinnati 2 - thegnarlygnome - cincinnatibites - citybeat - citybeat 2 - 5chw4r7z - local12 - yelp















Monday, July 29, 2024

#5376 - Rudy's Tavern, East Stroudsburg, PA - 9/4/23

Rudy's Tavern, East Stroudsburg, PA


It's said that not much has changed at Rudy's Tavern since Rudy Manheim opened the joint in 1933, after obtaining one of the first Pennsylvania liquor licenses following federal prohibition. You can believe that stepping into the place. If feels warm and old -- too much of community meeting place for me to think of it as a dive bar. The web site mentions "a history that stretches back to the early 1900s," but I wasn't able to find out anything about that.

Rudy passed away in 1981, leaving the bar to his bartender and manager Denny Deardorff, apparently to the surprise of the Marine veteran. "On Super Bowl Sunday 1981, Deardorff drove his friend to the hospital. Manheim died in the night at age 84. To Deardorff's surprise, Manheim had left him the bar." (poconorecord)

Deardorff, who had served in Vietnam, ran the place until he passed away in 2015. The bar remained in Denny's family, run by his daughter Kelly and her husband Joe "Giggy" Quaresimo.

It was quiet on the Monday afternoon that we dropped in, but it's not always that way. It's said that back in the day Rudy had to cut off Jackie Gleason himself when the star broke a light swinging a golf club. More recently, in September of 2014, the staff celebrated with a group of U.S. Marshals and and Pennsylvania State Police, drinking after capturing survivalist cop killer Eric Frein. The 15-20 men where part of a force that had grown to over 1,000 people, after Frein left his parents house where he lived and fired on the state police barracks in the Pocono Mountains, killing one office and seriously wounding another, before escaping into the surrounding wilderness.

Nowadays the bar often features live bands on weekend evenings, and can totally pack the place with events like veterans benefits, and when the Edward P. Maloney Memorial Pipe Band left the Pocono Irish American Club St. Patrick's Day parade for an impromptu concert in the bar.

We had a fairly brief stop before starting back on the remaining 300 miles across the state to home.








 



























Rudy's Tavern, East Stroudsburg, PA
(Print from inside the bar itself, artist unknown)




















90 Washington St, East Stroudsburg, PA 18301 - (570) 424-1131
Est. 1933  
Web site: rudystavern.com - facebook - twitter - instagram 
Articles: xplorethepoconos.com - poconorecord - abcnewsyelp - tripadvisor - discovernepa 



Thursday, July 25, 2024

#5367 - Pineville Tavern, Buckingham, PA - 9/1/23

If you love American history you have to love Bucks County, and if you love old bars this is prime territory. One of these is the Pineville Tavern, constructed circa 1742 here in a village that straddles the townships of Buckingham and Wrightstown, just north of Philadelphia. For more history I will cite the tavern's web site:

'Built in the 18th century, the Pineville has seen many transformations—from feed mill to general store to hotel and, finally, to the Tavern.

By 1765, the original residence was converted to an inn along the busy Philadelphia-New York City route, serving stagecoach drivers and hungry locals alike. It became a central meeting place within the community. A landmark. 

With an addition to the property in 1797, the Pineville Hotel was born. In the mid 1800s, when liquor licenses became mandatory, we were one of the original 13 recipients of the distinction within the storied Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

Pineville Tavern, Buckingham Township, PA

Fast forward to the 1950s when we became a general store to boot. Then, in 1969, the Turner Brothers (Hugh, Jack and Joe) purchased the Pineville. At the time, the bar only seated nine and offered cold sandwiches. That bar was expanded, and the kitchen was renovated with the addition of a grill, fryer, and pizza oven. Shaffer, Schlitz and Schmidt's were the tavern’s main taps. 

The Abruzzese family purchased the Pineville Tavern in 1989 and have subsequently flourished the brand with strategic additions to the property, an elevated menu, and an unwavering commitment to excellence.'    (pinevilletavern.squarespace.com


Of course this part of the country was deep into the Revolutionary War, and the website further describes the tavern itself as briefly right in the thick of it:

'In December of 1776, Alexander Hamilton negotiated the release of Continental General William Alexander, formerly known as Lord Sterling, from his captivity among the fable and feared Hessian forces.

On December 15th, 1776, Sterling rejoined Commander-In-Chief, George Washington & Hamilton at their traveling headquarters on Pineville Road: less than 1 mile from the    Pineville Tavern. Sterling, who had yet to procure lodgings, was then accompanied by Hamilton to the Pineville Inn. Sterling urgently insisted that he speak to the Army's Chief Intelligence Officer in private once the pair arrived at the then-35 year-old hotel.

Once arrived, Sterling, who was formally educated in Frankfurt, Germany, and thus fluent in the Central German dialect, disclosed to Hamilton and the Intelligence Officer, that, toward the very end of his captivity, he had overheard that the balance of the Hessian forces were currently barracked not 10 miles down the Delaware River in Trenton, NJ.

Then, in what is now the Pineville Tavern, Alexander Hamilton began to articulate what became known informally as the "Pineville Plan." Just 10 days later, on Christmas Night 1776, Washington would execute that exquisite plan by crossing the Delaware River to lay siege upon the unsuspecting Hessian forces. This masterful military stroke would turn the tide of the Revolutionary War and help solidify, in perpetuity, the since- timeless conviction that the world ought never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens could forever change the world.'     (pinevilletavern.com)


(Note: I am compiling a list of the oldest and most historic bars in Pennsylvania here:
https://www.rotgut.org/home/oldest-bars-in-pennsylvania )

While the Abruzzese family have attempted to restore it to its 1797 appearance, retaining an original fireplace, downstairs door, chestnut wood bar and some original windows, they have also substantially expanded upon it. Today it seats 135 indoors, with 70 more seats in the former patio, now converted to a fully enclosed garden space with banana trees, vines, hanging ferns, and lush foliage.

The menu is highly diverse selection of comfort foods mixed with upscale choices, including a famous snapper turtle soup, pan roasted sea bass, and eggplant Napoleon. The inside bar features an interesting, ornate, antique back bar, which seems like it may have been originally designed for a barber shop or soda shop? This is surrounded by a bar room that has somehow retained it's divey old neighborhood joint vibe, with wooden panels holding up animal heads. "The Garden" room also contains a small bar.

If anyone has any additional historical insights, I would love to hear them.























































































1098 Durham Rd, Pineville, PA 18946 - (215) 598-3890
Est. 1765 or earlier - Building constructed: 1742
Previous bars in this location: None known 
Web site: pinevilletavern.com - facebook - instagram 
Articles Ranked: buckscountymagbuckscountytaste - phillyburbs - onlyinyourstate - buckscountyherald - buckscotodayyelp - tripadvisor - paeats6abc - buckscountytaste