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To: RedMDer

Amazing photo.

Those little glasses of beer look SO SMALL — did that represent a standard drink served, back in the day?


14 posted on 12/25/2014 5:01:12 PM PST by workerbee (The President of the United States is PUBLIC ENEMY #1)
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To: workerbee
From the picture link:

The skills involved in producing calotypes were not only of a technical nature. Hill’s sociability, humour and his capacity to gauge the sitters’ characters all played a crucial part in his photography. He is shown here on the right, apparently sharing a drink and a joke with James Ballantine and Dr George Bell. Bell, in the middle, was one of the commissioners of the Poor Law of 1845, which reformed poor relief in Scotland, and author of Day and night in the wynds of Edinburgh[2]. Ballantine was a writer and stained-glass artist, and the son of an Edinburgh brewer. On the table we see a beer bottle and three 19th-century drinking glasses called “ale flutes”. One contemporary account describes a popular Edinburgh ale (Younger's) as "a potent fluid, which almost glued the lips of the drinker together, and of which few, therefore, could dispatch more than a bottle."[3]
20 posted on 12/25/2014 5:22:32 PM PST by RedMDer (I don't listen to Liars but when I do I know it's Barack Obama.)
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