Thursday, July 28, 2011

Enduring Traditions

Cincinnati,
1853 & 1884


When the Burnet House opened in Cincinnati in 1850, the London Illustrated News called it “the finest hotel in the world.” Located on the corner of Third and Vine Streets, the five-story building was designed by architect Isaiah Rogers, already well-known for Boston’s Tremont House (1827), New York’s Astor House (1836), and the Exchange Hotel (1841) in Richmond. Crowned by a dome forty-two feet in diameter, the hotel featured panoramic views of the Ohio River and the Kentucky hills. Large, ornate, and expensive, the Burnet House catered to a well-to-do clientele, as shown by two menus, one reflecting a passing social custom, the other reminiscent of a historic event for which the hotel would be long remembered.

This dinner menu from 1853 was printed for the ladies’ ordinary, the regular dinner served in the women's  dining room that was graced by four Corinthian columns. The dishes on this menu were probably the same as those served in the other dining rooms that day. Although it is unclear when the ladies’ ordinary passed out of fashion at upper-class hotels, it appears to have been an old-fashioned custom by the early 1860s.




Called the “Queen of the West,” or by the less flattering nickname “Porkopolis,” a joking reference to its large hog-packing industry, Cincinnati was then the sixth largest city in the country, boasting a population of over 115,000 people. It was about the same size as New Orleans, ranked fifth according to the 1850 census, followed in ascending order by Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New York.1 Having already out-grown its early reputation for pork production, Cincinnati was a progressive city, distinguished by its role in the Underground Railroad, the network of secret routes and safe houses that helped slaves escape from the South. In fact, Harriet Beecher Stowe lived there until 1850, writing much of her anti-slavery novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin there.

Cincinnati, Ohio (1850)
In its heyday, the Burnet House hosted many famous guests, including president-elect Abraham Lincoln who stayed there in 1861 on his way to Washington for the inauguration. In March 1864, Generals Ulysses S. Grant and William T. Sherman met in “Parlor A” of the hotel, spreading out their large maps in order to plan the final military campaigns of the Civil War. When visiting Cincinnati a quarter of a century later, Sherman recalled, “Yonder began the campaign. He was to go for Lee and I was to go for Joe Johnston. That was his plan. No routes prescribed...It was the beginning of the end as Grant and I foresaw right here.” Indeed, it was in Parlor A that Sherman’s "March to the Sea" was conceived, a military advance that cut across Georgia and through the Carolinas, spreading misery and destruction along its path.

Rutherford B. Hayes
After the war, the famous parlor became something of a shrine for Union veterans who gathered at the hotel for their reunions. One such banquet on February 6, 1884 was held by the Ohio chapter of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, a patriotic association that traced its beginnings back to the day that Lincoln died in 1865, when three Union officers met to discuss forming an organization to help thwart future threats to the national government. The order eventually grew to over 8,000 members, a roster that included notable generals and flag officers, and five presidents—Grant, Hayes, Arthur, Harrison, and McKinley. In fact, one of the speakers at this banquet was former President Rutherford B. Hayes who was the City Solicitor in Cincinnati when the war broke out. Wounded several times, he earned a reputation for bravery in combat, rising to the rank of major general. By the time of this banquet, Hayes thought of the Legion as a social club, preserving the comradeship forged during war. “Where is there a better place to form and to test friendships that are to last,” he asked rhetorically during his speech that evening, “than life in the army? You cannot really know someone in a short period of time,” he continued, “but we spent four years together where it was, indeed, a hard road to travel.”

The elaborate menu shown below was right in step with President Hayes’ remarks about the hard-traveled road. Created by a local stationer named Peter G. Thomson, the bill of fare was placed in a miniature backpack of the type used by Union soldiers. Presented in a custom-made box, the backpack features realistic details like a leather flap, a wool bed roll, and a brass “U.S.” insignia. This charming memento has a toy-like quality, perhaps causing many of them to have been surrendered to grandchildren, making their survival as historical artifacts all the more improbable.



The banquet includes green turtle soup, sweetbread croquettes, and Canvasback duck, all served with fine wines and champagne. After dinner, cigars were handed out to accompany the speeches, for this was the age of cigars, marked by the ritual pleasures of choosing, smelling, and rolling the unlit cylindrical roll of tobacco between one’s fingers, before finally lighting it. Cigars always appeared at the end of such dinners in the late-nineteenth century, causing clouds of smoke to be unleashed, its distinctive smell infusing even the best banquet rooms in the country with a lingering odor.


By 1884, Burnet House was in decline, its magnificent architecture a remnant of a bygone era. While the idea of a separate dining room for women had been abandoned long before civil rights leader Susan B. Anthony stayed there in 1878, some of its other rooms remained unchanged. The bedroom where Lincoln slept, and the parlor where Grant and Sherman planned their campaigns, transformed the hotel into a pilgrimage site where Northern veterans regularly convened, as did their male descendants, until it was demolished in 1926.

Note
1. The population of Philadelphia adjusted to include the adjacent Spring Garden neighborhood, now officially part of the city.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thank you for this post. I was researching a possible family member on the 1850 census in Cincinnati, and I could see she was a servant at a hotel but the name was unclear. Now when I look at the census record I can see that it is the Burnet House Hotel that is written in the margin.

David S. Shields said...

Louis Schultz, who had cooked in Baden Baden and had been hired by Lorenzo Delmonico in 1849, was secured as the inaugural chef of the Burnett House. He no doubt prepared the menu/dishes in the first of your menus--the 1853 Ladies' Ordinary bill of fare. Schultz presided over the Burnett kitchens from 1850 to 1863 when Balthasar Roth poached him for his new St. Nicholas Restaurant.

Steve rogers said...

I found The Burnett House from a link to General Burnside who was there.I'm checking my ancestry because I'm a Rogers & am related to Burnsides. My great uncle's parents are buried outside of Dayton. Headstones are from 1824. They were originally from. West Virginia. Wow..this cool. Even more intreaging a Rogers was it's architect.