|
Volume 22 Number 6 Finding Sanctuary on September 11In the hours immediately after terrorists flew airplanes into the Pentagon and New York Citys twin towers on September 11, Rich Os Public House publican Roger Baylor paced anxiously between his pub and Pizza Time, the restaurant/bar next door that he also owns. Pizza Time has television sets; his pub does not. "I was freaking out, basically," he said. He began to think of the many people with whom he wanted to talk, whom he should call. "Then I realized that I didnt have to. I thought, Theyll all be in here." Sure enough, as shifts ended, regulars began to drift in. "Theres a group of us; well, Im always here; we all sort of appear at the same time," Baylor said. The regulars discovered that Baylor had put a television on the counter up front--the first time a TV had been in the bar in three years. Those who wanted the latest news could get it, then find seats out of television range. "People would retreat back into the bar to talk, to get away from these images for a while," Baylor said. "The first few days there was only one thing that they talked about." Television news stories in the following days sometimes showed bulging barrooms across the United States, and other times, empty ones in tourist destinations. TV news reported patrons flocked to bars because they did not want to be alone while they watched the horrible images on the television screen, but did not differentiate between people watching alone in a crowd and those who sought familiar faces. "People wanted to go to a place where they felt like they were with family," said Daryl Woodson, who has been running the appropriately named The Sanctuary in Iowa City, IA, for 27 years. "They didnt say that, but people who come in normally at 10 were in at 8." The Sanctuary has two fireplaces (one working) but usually not a television. Woodson brought one in on September 11, and took it out the next day. "People wanted to watch what was happening while the story was still unfolding," he said. "One of our regulars asked where I got a TV with such lousy reception. I told him its called a cheap antenna." Throwbacks to Another EraRich Os and The Sanctuary offer a broader selection of beer than do most bars--the best-selling beer at Rich Os is Three Floyds Alpha King, and if an interesting specialty beer is available in Iowa, The Sanctuary is probably the first place in the state to offer it. These bars may be more noteworthy, however, because they are throwbacks. The population of the United States has more than doubled since the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, but the number of licensed drinking establishments has shrunk by as much as two-thirds. In Chicago, for instance, there were more than 10,000 tavern licenses at the end of World War II, and now there are fewer than 2,500. In The Great Good Place, author Ray Oldenburg notes that what he calls "third-place" taverns have been particularly hard hit. Oldenburg writes that not only have such taverns disappeared or changed--so have post offices, drug stores, grain elevators and similar "third places" (after home, first, and workplace, second) that provide informal gathering spots essential to the survival of any community. The role of the tavern in American community life goes back almost to the time this country was settled. Parts of the American revolution were plotted in taverns. A century later, unions were born in taverns. Celebrations for soldiers heading to (and returning from) two world wars were held in taverns. There are occasional reminders. Visit Cadieux Café, which has served Detroits Belgian enclave since Prohibition, and youll find a large display on the wall listing "Our boys at camp and overseas," with the names of neighborhood boys who became soldiers. Most such places are gone--torn down in old city neighborhoods, never built in carefully planned suburbs. Many watching the September 11 scenes from the rest of the country probably were surprised to find bars full of customers in much of New York City outside of lower Manhattan, but it is still a prototypical city, still has neighborhoods and still has bars that cater to those neighborhoods. Neighborhood BarsThere are enough around that drinkers may choose a nearby place because the owner is Irish, because the happy hour prices are great, or even because the beer is more interesting than whats next door. Across the country, beer with flavor has been an essential component in helping some bars build community, instantly giving would-be regulars something in common. Beer is why many of the regulars started going to OBriens Microbrew Pub in San Diego, but not why they were there the week of September 11. "Lunch times were ridiculous the first couple of days, nuts, just nuts," said owner Jim OBrien. Customers who usually visit only after work for the wide beer selection were also there for lunch, drawn by the food and televisions but also because they knew theyd find a friend on a nearby bar stool. "We pretty much see the same faces on a day-to-day basis," OBrien said. "There was only one subject (of conversation). This place is never quiet and these guys arent afraid to be totally honest about what they feel." Things were quiet at the Country Inn in Krumville, NY, near the Ashokan Reservoir, which serves New York City and which was closed for safety reasons. "The original reaction was numbness; its still numbness," said Larry Erenburg, the owner and guy behind the bar for more than 25 years. The Country Inn doesnt have a television, so customers sat quietly around a radio on September 11 before conversation returned to a normal level later in the week. Beer sales were up for the week, although the place was almost empty on Thursday when President Bush addressed the nation on TV. "This place is a sounding board for people," Erenburg said. But there are house rules against certain topics: politics, softball and chain saws. "There were flags waving, quite a show of patriotism in its own way, but it was just conversation rather than politics," he said. Politics is a more constant subject of conversation at Rich Os, where The Economist and International Herald Tribune are always available for reading. "Theres a certain amount of discussion about the state of the world," Baylor said, but also plenty about beer. "We always talk about beer," he said, finishing with a laugh. The discussion might center on what international company just acquired another smaller brewery or what to do with the firkin of Bells (Kalamazoo, MI) Two-Hearted Ale that accidentally got delivered to the bar. (The decision was to drink it.) Woodson figures that about one-third of The Sanctuarys customers come in for the live music (jazz, roots), one-third for the food (great pizza) and one-third for the beer and conversation. Few ask why there isnt a television. "Having a TV is a good way to kill conversation," he said. His business was up in the weeks after the attacks. "I think people wanted to get away from it, seeing it all the time on TV," he said. "Especially people who live alone." Affordable LuxuryWoodson, who in 27 years has seen more economic ups and downs than most of todays brewpub and brewery owners, also doesnt think that the economic downturn the attacks seem sure to worsen will seriously hurt a neighborhood taverns business. "You are still going to go out for an reasonably priced meal, a decent evening, a few beers," he said. "It is a luxury you can afford." Pam Brittingham, a bartender at The Globe in Athens, GA, saw a similar attitude in the weeks after September 11. The Globe opens at 4:00 p.m., so she and other employees listened to National Public Radio (the Globe has no television, and didnt even offer one during the 1996 Olympics, some of which took place in town). They kept the radio on in the first hours after the pub opened, but then changed to music at a low volume. "We wanted to give them some relief from what they had been listening to all day," she said three weeks after the attacks. "By the weekend, people were needing to get out and do something normal, they didnt even want to talk about it. Its still probably what people talk about the most, but every three or four days somebody will say, I cant talk about this any more." As important as neighborhood taverns were to so many people September 11, like too many other third places, they will probably continue to disappear at an alarming rate. But they really were "great good places" to be, and also to work, that day. "There were definitely people coming in looking for each other," Brittingham said. "Its still going on. Everybody is extremely friendly and appreciative of each other." And perhaps of having a good public place to gather. The most recent book by Daria Labinsky and Stan Hieronymus, Frank Applegate of Santa Fe: Artist and Preservationist, is available at many online bookstores.
*** SIDEBAR 179 words About the Beer Since the Beer Travelers charter is to help readers find interesting places to drink interesting beer, heres a bit more about the bars in this column: Rich Os3312 Plaza Drive, New Albany, IN 812-949-2804 A particularly well-chosen 23 beers on taps, covering a spectrum of styles. Also about 160 to 170 beers by the bottle. The Sanctuary 405 S. Gilbert St., Iowa City, IA 319-351-5692 A dozen beers on tap and about 100 on the bottle, with the selection as wide as distributors will provide. The best-sellers are Sierra Nevada Pale Ale and Rogue Dead Guy Ale. OBriens Microbrew Pub 4646 Convoy St., San Diego, CA 858-715-1745 Twenty beers on tap, mostly harder-to-find micros, with domestic products by the bottle. The best-selling beer is Sierra Nevada Harvest Ale. The Globe 199 N. Lumpkin St., Athens, GA 706-353-4721 A solid selection of 10 beers on tap and an adventurous 100 beers by the bottle. Also well known for its selection of single malts (more than 50). The Country Inn 1380 County Route 3, Krumville, NY 914-657-8956 Ten beers on tap, but the bottle menu with 500 choices is legendary. "I guess I have a reputation for searching out new beers," owner Larry Erenburg says. |