[Ads-l] "club sandwich" antedating, 1888

Rich Lowenthal 000018596069864c-dmarc-request at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
Sun Oct 12 12:00:27 UTC 2025


I believe the roots of the Bohemian Club were regular meetings of 
journalists, so it is very possible that the sketch artist was a member 
of the club.

The Passionate Foodie includes the 1888 reference in his history of the 
Club Sandwich.

https://passionatefoodie.blogspot.com/2022/02/a-history-of-club-sandwich-part-1.html



------ Original Message ------
>From "dave at wilton.net" <dave at WILTON.NET>
To ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
Date 10/12/2025 06:36:26
Subject "club sandwich" antedating, 1888

>
>OED and Barry Popik have 1889.
>
>“Fish Destroyers.” Daily Examiner (San Francisco, California), 29 July 1888, 11/7. ProQuest Newspapers.
>
>"'Say, Mr. Ferrin, hadn’t you better point that rifle the other way?' mildly suggested the artist as he hid himself behind a Bohemian Club sandwich."
>
>This also militates against the idea that the sandwich originated at New York's Union Club. Although no description of the San Francisco version of the sandwich is given, the early descriptions of the Union Club sandwich bear little resemblance to what we usually call a "club sandwich" today (i.e., only two slices of bread, no bacon, no lettuce, no tomato, often without ham).
>
>It's possible that this is just a sandwich obtained at the Bohemian Club, rather than a type of sandwich, but the artist is a newspaper sketch artist on assignment on a fishing boat, hardly the type of person to be a member of that club.
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org

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The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org


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