Posted on 05/08/2015 8:03:13 PM PDT by SamAdams76
A humble green façade bears the name McSorleys Old Ale House, Established 1854′ in white paint, and only a handful of things have changed about this East Village bar in the last 158 years. McSorleys was the only beer license to remain operational during Prohibition. Women were not permitted to enter McSorleys until the Supreme Court forced them to allow it in 1970 a fact that still causes grumbling among some of the old regulars. The name changed from its original moniker, This Old House at Home, in 1908. But besides that, time like the broken clock on the wall has literally stopped inside this place. To hoist a pint here is to literally drink in history.
Ill give ya $20 to swallow a spoonful of that mustard!
The uttered dare is so thick with Irish Brogue, one might swear we were drinking in Dublin. We are not. Its 3 p.m. in New York, on a Monday. This mustard challenge is not presented to me, but to the portly, gentleman in a suit and tie sitting directly behind me. His chair is so close to my own that our backs are actually touching, and we are effectively leaning on one another. The back room of the bar is jam-packed. Weve nowhere else to scoot.
Twenty dollars? my leaning companion booms. Well, Christ yes! Ill take that bet. Beer mugs are hoisted, a cheer goes up and thick palms pound the table. Wait! my companion yells, suddenly wary. The rowdy table-slapping halts. How bigs the spoon?
This is hilarious to everyone. Spoon size is, indeed, a lasso-sized loophole to consider. The freakish heat of McSorleys Old Ale House mustard is no joke. Neither is the rest of the bar, for that matter. Welcome to the oldest bar in New York City.
SPOON SIZE IS, INDEED, A LASSO-SIZED LOOPHOLE TO CONSIDER. THE FREAKISH HEAT OF MCSORLEYS OLD ALE HOUSE MUSTARD IS NO JOKE.

John McSorley was born in County Tyrone, Ireland in 1827. It was an unfortunate time to come of age in Ireland. As the potato blight wormed its way north, he joined millions of his poor peers and set sail for America. He found work as a blacksmith in a forge on East 7th Street. Just three years later, he hung up his leather apron for a cotton one, rolled in beer kegs, scattered sawdust on the floor and placed a sign out front: The Old House at Home. He married Honora Henley in 1855, and the two started a family. John created another kind of home inside the alehouse for the Bowery neighborhoods tired and thirsty immigrants. According to McSorleys New York, a half-hour, Emmy-winning documentary made about the bar in 1987, tenement slums in the 1850s contained more than half of the citys population. This meant booming and repeat business at McSorleys. He served pints of beer light and dark only chopped onions and cheese, and kept a strict no ladies policy.
THE MEN THAT DRANK INSIDE THE OLD HOUSE AT HOME WOULD HAVE BEEN WORKING CLASS. THE SAME COULD BE SAID OF MANY THAT DRINK HERE TODAY, OFFERS MATTHEW MAHER, THE BARS CURRENT OWNER. MAHER IS 70 YEARS YOUNG, A ROTUND, JOVIAL TYPE WHO IS LIKEWISE QUINTESSENTIALLY IRISH. ORIGINALLY FROM KILKENNY, HES QUICK WITH A JOKE, AND ID ESTIMATE, NOT SOMEONE TO TAKE LIGHTLY IN A DRINKING CONTEST.
It was an honest place for the honest working man, Maher continues. But there were famous people that came in here too. John Lennon drank here. Babe Ruth drank here. Abraham Lincoln too. Arguably the bars most famous patron, that soon-to-be-president concluded a speech at the 7th Regiment Armory and walked across the street to McSorleys. Behind the bar today you can read an original wanted poster for John Wilkes Booth.
In 1856, the McSorleys welcomed their first son Peter, and then their second son William (Billy) in 1861. They moved above the bar in 1865. The upstairs windows offered a view of a city and a nation writhing with growing pains. In the neighborhood, the Astor Library and the Opera House opened. Peter Cooper built Cooper Union, which offered free technical education for working classes. Besides designing and building the first steam locomotive in the U.S., Cooper drank so often at McSorleys that his favorite chair remains perched on a high shelf, eternal decor.

JOHN LENNON DRANK HERE. BABE RUTH DRANK HERE. ABRAHAM LINCOLN TOO.
In 1863, the Civil War draft riots broke out in front of the bar, continues Maher. Theres been a lot of fighting and a lot of change on the streets outside through the years.
In 1878, the railroads came to those very streets of New York. It was also the decade when John McSorley now remarried to Catherine Donovan after Honoras passing began to teach Billy to tend bar. In 1904, The Old House at Home turned 50. The name changed to McSorleys Old Time Ale House when a storm blew down the original sign in 1908, says Maher. The word Time was eventually dropped.
Billy became owner when his father passed in 1910. Where John was gregarious, he was silent, a bit moody but forward thinking. He began to bolt the framed photos to the wall. Today you can read a London Times newspaper from 1815, look at the signatures of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Babe Ruth and perhaps most importantly see sepia-toned photos of turn-of-the-century McSorleys regulars who were not famous outside, but legends within. It was Billy who granted them immortality.
Although time etched the world outside replacing carriages with cars, outhouses with indoor plumbing the only signs of change inside were the additions of framed photos and newspaper clippings added to the walls. Cats at one point 18 in total kept watch for rats, blinking lazily in the front windows and stretching on the laps of calmer patrons. When a dozen of the younger patrons were called to fight in World War I, they hung wishbones on the gas lamp chandelier for luck. Billy refused to dust the bones until they came home. Many never returned, and the skeletons became a ceiling-high shrine of dirt. Sadly, the health department outlawed the cats around 2002 and insisted the wishbones be wiped clean in 2004.
In 1936, Billy McSorley sold the bar to Daniel OConnell, who then passed it down to his daughter Dorothy OConnell Kirwan in 1939. It was ironic given that the slogan was still Good Ale, Raw Onions and No Ladies. She dutifully never set foot in the place.
WHEN A DOZEN OF THE YOUNGER PATRONS WERE CALLED TO FIGHT IN WORLD WAR I, THEY HUNG WISHBONES ON THE GAS LAMP CHANDELIER FOR LUCK.

When they came after us to change the no ladies policy in 1970, there were more than pissed off regulars, sighs Maher. He began tending bar there in 1964 and eventually bought the place from Kirwan. The courts here couldnt decide what to do, and the bloody argument went all the way to the Supreme Court. There wasnt a ladies bathroom for a long time. I used to tell em, ya wanna drink with us, ya gotta piss with us.
A womens restroom was eventually added, but the mens room remains unisex. The urinals are something of an artifact themselves. They are but one symbol of the saloons indomitable spirit where change is concerned. The customers are another, no matter their race, age or sex.
We live in Pennsylvania, but when we come to the city, we always come here, Tom Pinkasavage says. He and his wife Judy joined me that Monday at the busted wood table, a preferred spot where Tom and his McSorleys buddies have been meeting for nearly 20 years.
There was this one guy, laughs Judy, who used to hide a brush up behind that framed American Flag over the doorway. He would take the brush down and brush the cats. Maher later tells me, the flag referenced is from Custers Regiment and more than 100 years old.
Oh, my favorite part of McSorleys is the large gentleman who always wears the hat, counters Tom. Every time he heads to the bathroom, he stops and tips his hat to the picture of the firefighters who died in 9/11. Im not sure if he was a firefighter, but probably. A lot of them drink in here.
For me, the best part of McSorleys is the quality of the light spilling through the front windows. It bathes everything in sepia, fading the same spots, leaving the others in beautiful shadow. During the Christmas season, its appropriately Dickensian and cozy. Long ropes of fresh garland drape outward from a ceiling fan sporting two busted blades, and tinsel hangs from FDRs letter like garish Spanish moss. The sound of glass mugs clinking is crystal bells to weary ears, as the noise level rises and falls like a living, breathing thing. Its McSorleys just as it has been for the past century. And if we are so lucky and so blessed, just as it will be for a century more.
Day, night, weekdays, weekends, always a great experience. And I have eaten a spoonful of the mustard (our version of the challenge involved slathering the mustard on the inside rim of a full mug of dark, then chugging the beer with the mustard). It was an awful experience, with predictable results involving an unplanned visit to the restroom.
My favorite visit was a beautiful afternoon one April, just me and my best friend, sitting at one of the two tables by the front windows, with the sun shining through the window, casting a shadow of the "McSorley's" name painted on the window, onto the old, carved up table, the wood so old and worn it looks almost like driftwood. Sawdust on the floor, wishbones on the light fixture above the bar with dust on them as old as the bar itself, and the walls covered with photos that bring home the history and longevity of the bar.
The interior picture in the article does not do justice to the aura and atmosphere of the place. It really must be experienced in person.
I went there once with college friends & we spent a lot of money & drank their tasty brew...and as long as we could keep up with the pace they wanted us to drink at, they treated us like family & friends.....but the minute we slowed down & didn’t drink up the pitchers of ale as soon as they brought them, they told us to get out & make room for new customers. A real rude tourist trap...but the ale really was quite good....but how fast can you drink after a while?
So maybe it's that we never slowed down enough to get tossed out.
I’ve had the pleasure.
Having had friends at Cooper Union I visited McSorley’s even before I moved to NYC while it was still men only.
The old pot bellied stove seemed to be the only source of heat on cold dank winter mornings after a night of student carousing. Two mugs of Porter and a bowl of chili with crackers and raw onions were a bargain in that rough joint.
Was there with friends the day women gained entry. Nobody was excited when the first Cooper gals came in wearing the youth uniforms of the day and kind of full of themselves.
All went quietly until their designated scout made her move to the toilet. On7e of the young Irish bartenders rushed to beat her to the door. The lass thought she had found the fight she was looking for but to her chagrin he manned the door to prevent males from entering. An unforgetable image, that lad guarding the door for her, arms cross his chest, jaw set, ready to repel any and all male chauvinist pigs from intruding.
After a few moments the door swung open and a young man sheepishly exited to gales of laughter at the bartender’s comic double take.
It was a fine and comfortable rough old place with not an iota of refinement.
The cabbie knew exactly where it was, the bartender says “light or dark?”, then you order a cheese plate, after a few rounds, a pit stop at the historic urinal, and then you leave knowing you have been in NY’s oldest bar.
We pushed her out of the way and strolled in anyway. Those were the good old days.
Yes, the cheese and onion plate is a solid choice, but a liverwurst on rye with McSorley’s mustard and a thin slice of onion is sheer heaven.
A waiter once gave me the recipe for McSorley’s mustard. Simply make a paste of Colman’s mustard powder and McSorley’s light ale, just enough to make your eyes water.
” Make sure you ask for a plate of onions and cheese.”
Yes.
When I was in med school in the 1970’s, we went to McSorley’s one night. Many beers and plates of onion and cheese, eaten with hot mustard.
Unfortunately, the next morning, we were dismissed from ENT Clinic because of a severe case of onion-induced halitosis!
Good ol days for sure....men need to have peace and quiet when doing serious drinking...women make noise and get in the way..............
My Bachelor party started there and ended...somewhere else :-)
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