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Boothby was born in San Francisco in November 1862 to “Forty Niner” parents who had come from the East to California during the Gold Rush of the mid- 1800s. Although they did not find gold, his father from Maine earned a living as a baker and saloon keeper. Upon ending his education in his early teens, William tried several occupations and, as one author put it, “…proved himself at a young age to have a great deal of that useful quality, hustle.”
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By 1891 Boothby was tending bar at the swanky San Rafael Hotel in the nearby town of the same name. Self-described as the “Presiding Deity” of the Rafael barroom, he decided, wisely as it turned out, to publish a drink recipe book, aiming it at “all students of mixology.” Calling himself “Cocktail Boothby” and the “Standard Authority,” he advertised with the line: “Bar-Keepers – You're Not In It If You Don't Read Cocktail Boothby's 'American Bartender’”. An early edition is shown below.
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Just say to all smart booze clerks who question your sense,
And hold all your wisdom at naught:
You’ve been forced to turn knowledge away every night,
And you’ve standing room only for thought.
Boothby’s first edition also contained advice on how to rescue punky beer and tricks for artificially aging beer, using, believe it or not, pickled cucumbers and Seville oranges. His drink recipes ranged from an Absinthe Bracer using the green liqueur and a raw egg, to the Zsa Zsa Cocktail, concocted of Dubonnet sweet wine, dry sherry and orange bitters.
His drinks book brought Boothby the kind of recognition he craved. When offered a larger salary at the San Francisco’s Parker House, he jumped there. The management gave him star billing, painting a life-size picture of him in his “cock’s tail” mode painted on the outside wall of the bar. As his celebrity rose Boothby opened his own saloon and restaurant on Powell Street.
Riding on his personal popularity and as an authoritative author of a mixed drink book, Boothby decided to run for the California legislature. Mark Twain might have understood what was at work: “The cheapest way to become an influential man and be looked on by the community at large was to stand behind a bar, wear a diamond cluster pin and sell whiskey. I am not sure but that the saloonkeeper had a shade higher rank than any other member of society. His opinion had weight.”
In that era Frisco’s saloon owners had been organized into a distinct political block. With their backing, William stood unopposed as the Republican candidate for the city’s Tenderloin neighborhood, the 43rd Assembly District. In a later edition of his book he recognized this help with the dedication: "To the liquor dealers of San Francisco who unanimously assisted in my election to the Legislature by an unprecedented majority.” Serving only one term, he was recognized particularly for championing legislation that might positively affect San Francisco saloons and drinking public. Thereafter he liked to be referred to as “The Honorable Willliam Boothby,”
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Moving once again, William began working at the Pied Piper Bar of the Palace Hotel in downtown San Francisco, shown above. It was there that he is said by some (opinions differ) to have invented the “Boothby Cocktail,” to my mind a glorified Manhattan. Here is the recipe:
INGREDIENTS:
• 1 oz Sweet vermouth
• 2 dashes Orange bitters
• 2 drops Angostura Bitters
• 1 oz Brut Champagne, chilled
• Garnish: Maraschino cherry
PREPARATION:
Add all the ingredients except the champagne to a mixing glass and fill with cracked ice. Stir well and strain into a chilled flat bowl champagne glass. Float some champagne on the top and garnish with a maraschino cherry.
Of Boothby’s personal life, little has been recorded. The 1880 and 1900 Federal censuses showed him living with his mother, Sarah. There is no record of his ever having married. He was a member of the Olympic Club of San Francisco, the oldest athletic club in the U.S. and a gathering place for the elite of the city. As he aged, he donned a mustache, as shown here on a trade card.
Boothby continued as Frisco’s premier bartender until National Prohibition shut down all production and sales of alcohol. Even then he found it hard to stop, continuing to serve drinks “under the counter” at the Orpheum Theatre Annex to his old customers. He was arrested there in 1922 for violating the Volstead Act and paid a fine. Members of his loyal following stepped in to find him jobs, including one as a steward at the St. Francis Hotel. In his mid-60s Boothby was diagnosed with cancer and died of the disease in August 1930, at the age of 68. His funeral was thronged with mourners, including an estimated 100 bartenders from across America, many of them grateful for mentions in Boothby’s books. I have been unable to trace the bartender’s place of burial.
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Note: Although this post has been gathered from a variety of sources, two proved to be most important in telling Boothby’s story: A Difford Guide online biography by Theodora Sutcliffe, no date, and a story in The Daily Beast by David Wondrich, entitled “San Francisco’s Deep Cocktail Roots,” dated April 9, 2018.
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