So I've found another interesting old menu on the New York Public Library's digital collections site. This one is a 1941 tea menu from the New Haven Rail Road. Look inside!
Have you ever seen a tea menu that asked you to "please order by number"? That's a first for me. I'll have the #6, thank you very much, and no fries with that. I believe that the "Bar-le-duc" in #5 refers to a type of currant jelly from France.
It's always fun to look at these old menus, and it's especially fun to see a Tea Menu for Dining Car Service!
Oh, if only we could go back....Not just for the prices, but for the gentility of those days!
ReplyDelete#6 sounds good to me, too! And I was wondering what bar-le-duc was. It is fun to see these old menus.
ReplyDeleteI would take #6 also, but don't know if I could afford it! Wages back then were around .30/hour, house rent $32 a month. Thanks for the tea travel back in time!
ReplyDeleteI love this! What fun it would be to dine there.
ReplyDeleteBut ironically those are hefty prices for right after the end of the Depression and during the WWII years..........it had to be a very classy dining car, actually.
ReplyDeleteNEAT post - I love the history lessons we get visiting your awesome blog, Angela!
Have a wonderful weekend. Hugs. ♥
Thank you for that menu, Angela! It is really neat. I would love it if Amtrak offered afternoon tea nowadays!
ReplyDelete--from Vernona in DC
How neat! Thanks for explaining #5. Saved me a search.
ReplyDeleteA fun find. I am wondering what "Assortment" under the sandwiches means. I love eating on a train. There is something romantic about it even when I have been alone. thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteWhat a neat post, love that tea pot graphic. I would have ordered the number six too, love traveling by train. Thanks for having such a great blog, Joanie
DeleteWhat fun! Love this post. History!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this Angela - love to see what once was.
ReplyDelete