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Old Ebbitt Grill

Old Ebbitt Grill is a historic bar and restaurant located at 675 15th Street NW in Washington, D.C., in the United States. It is Washington's oldest bar and restaurant,[1] and is owned by Clyde's Restaurant Group. It first opened as an unnamed restaurant in the Ebbitt House Hotel. The Hotel distinguished itself as the first hotel in Washington to remain open all summer instead of closing when Congress adjourned. In 1827, the Hotel was razed and rebuilt in the same location. Ebbitt House Hotel was razed in 1925 to make way for the National Press Building, built in 1926. The restaurant was incorporated by Anders Lofstrand, Sr., as a stand-alone business. It moved into new quarters at 1427 F Street NW. After Lofstrand's death in 1955, the restaurant was purchased by Peter Bechas in 1961. The restaurant was sold at a tax sale in June 1970, and was purchased by Clyde's Restaurant Group. The 1427 F Street NW location was demolished in 1983 during redevelopment, and Old Ebbitt Grill moved into its current quarters at 675 15th Street NW.

Old Ebbitt Grill
Old Ebbitt Grill from 15th Street.
Restaurant information
Established1856
Owner(s)Clyde's Restaurant Group, subsidiary of Graham Holdings
Head chefSalvatore Ferro
Food typeAmerican
Dress codeCasual
Street address675 15th Street NW
CityWashington, D.C.
Postal/ZIP Code20005
CountryUnited States
Seating capacity398
ReservationsSuggested
Websitewww.ebbitt.com

For many years as part of Ebbitt House, the bar/restaurant had no stand-alone name or identity. It began using the name "New Ebbitt Café" in November 1910. In 1926, after the restaurant became incorporated as a stand-alone business, it was known as both "Ebbitt's Grill" and "Old Ebbitt Grill". Over time, only the "Old Ebbitt Grill" name was used. It retained that name after its ownership changes in 1961 and 1970.

Since 1970, because of its popularity Old Ebbitt Grill has been frequented by numerous politicians, some known for scandals and maneuvering. It has also been the site of parties hosted by famous actors and singers. For many years, it has been the restaurant with one of the highest amount of sales in the United States. Old Ebbitt Grill created a popular annual event known as the Oyster Riot in 1995.

Ebbitt House: 1856 to 1925 edit

First Ebbitt House edit

The building which later was owned by William E. Ebbitt was located on the southeast corner of F Street NW and 14th Street NW in the city of Washington, D.C. In June 1798, William Crawford obtained title to four parcels of land on the southeast corner of 14th and F streets.[2][3] The four parcels lay west-to-east along 14th Street. In 1800, Crawford built two four-story Federal-style houses on the two easternmost parcels of this property.[4] The garden of the houses extended west onto the two empty lots on the corner, and down the hill in the rear almost to Pennsylvania Avenue.[5] In 1833, Bushrod W. Reed relocated to the District of Columbia from Westmoreland County, Virginia, purchased the two easternmost lots from Crawford, and between 1833 and 1836 built a double-wide, four-story, Federal-style building on the corner next to the Crawford homes.[6][7] Crawford's daughter, Sarah, married Richard Forrest, one of the first eight clerks appointed in 1801 by Thomas Jefferson in the United States Department of State.[5] William Crawford installed Richard and Sarah Forrest in his houses, and they inherited them upon his death.[2] Richard Forrest died in 1828,[5] and Sarah died in 1832.[8] Although it is unclear what happened to the property after Sarah Crawford's death, some time prior to 1856 it was purchased by William J. Smith.[9] Smith joined the two houses into a single unit, and named them "Frenchman's Hotel" because he employed a French immigrant as the manager of the facility.[9][10]

 
Ebbitt House in 1865, after the Reed and Ebbitt properties were joined

In 1856, William E. Ebbitt purchased Frenchman's Hotel from Smith, turned it into a boarding house, and renamed it Ebbitt House.[4] During this time, the boarding house also took in guests from the Willard Hotel.[11][12] On September 1, 1863, Ebbitt sold the boarding house to his son-in-law, Albert H. Craney.[10][13] Exactly a year later, Craney sold the property to Caleb C. Willard, brother of Willard Hotel owner Henry A. Willard.[13] Willard converted the boarding house into a hotel.[4] The same year, Willard purchased Bushrod Reed's property as well.[2] He joined the Ebbitt and Reed properties into a single unit enclosing a 4-foot (1.2 m) wide alley between the two and built bathrooms with oval windows in the space above.[2]

A three-story house on 14th Street adjacent to Ebbitt House was occupied by the Reed family as well, although by 1864 it had been purchased by Willard, who raised the roof.[14] At that time it was not yet part of the hotel; Willard leased the building to the New York Times for use as office space.[13] Two single-story buildings south of the Reed home were also built and owned by Reed. By 1865, they were used as offices by The Philadelphia Inquirer, New York Evening Post, and other newspapers.[13] Next to the one-story buildings was Farnham House. It was originally owned and built by David Burnes, whose plantation had covered much of the downtown area that would be developed as Washington, D.C. Burnes gave Farnham House to his daughter Marcia, who in turn sold it to William H. Dorsey in 1802.[13] On May 16, 1818, Dorsey sold the house to William Blanchard.[13] Blanchard's daughter, Jane Farnham, inherited the property on June 10, 1850, after his death.[13] By 1865, it housed the D.C. offices of the New York Herald.[13] Given the numerous newspapers with offices along 14th Street between E and F Streets, the area was nicknamed "Newspaper Row," a name it would hold into the 1930s.[15] Farnham sold her house at auction to Caleb Willard on October 4, 1866, for $74,000.[14]

For many years prior to the construction of the Ebbitt House stables in 1872, a large house known as Bull's Head stood at the rear of the hotel. The house marked the northeast corner of Murder Bay. Bull's Head housed prostitutes and contained a large, lower-class gambling den.[16][17]

Second Ebbitt House edit

Willard razed Ebbitt House in 1872, doubled its size, and built a six-story, Second Empire-style hotel with a mansard roof.[4][18] The hotel had 300 rooms, canopied windows, and an elevator.[19] The dining room was two stories high, with floor to ceiling windows, white marble floor, white painted walls, and a fresco on the ceiling.[19][20] The dining room was in the rear of the hotel, on the site of what used to be Farnham House, which in photographs from the period shows as the last three windows on 14th Street.[21] The massive chandeliers led the dining room to be called "the Crystal Room."[22] The paneled bar[4] was reached by passing through the lobby and down a flight of stairs into the basement.[23]

In the late 1800s, this hotel was considered one of the most fashionable in the city; its lodgings and restaurant were patronized by politicians and high-ranking military officers. Major General Winfield Scott Hancock,[4] Commanding General of the United States Army William Tecumseh Sherman, and Rear Admiral Samuel Rhoads Franklin all lived there for a time.[24] It is well-documented that President Ulysses S. Grant and President Andrew Johnson both dined in the restaurant frequently,[25] as did abolitionist clergyman Henry Ward Beecher.[26] Future president William McKinley and his wife lived there from 1877 to 1890, during his entire congressional career.[27] He dined almost nightly with his wife in the restaurant.[28] His close friend, Representative and later President James A. Garfield, visited McKinley often in the hotel.[29] McKinley departed from the hotel for his presidential inaugural.[4] Presidents Grover Cleveland, Theodore Roosevelt, and Warren G. Harding all drank in the bar there.[27] Chief Justice of the United States Salmon P. Chase lived there while working in the capital and died there in October 1886.[30] Rear Admiral John Lee Davis also lived and died there.[31] William Howard Taft lived there from 1890 to 1892 when he was United States Solicitor General.[22]

 
Ebbitt House in 1903. The first two stories of the building in the rear constituted the restaurant.

Ebbitt House struggled to compete against the larger and more lavish Willard Hotel, and the Raleigh Hotel, built in 1893.[32] From the late 1860s until the 1910s, it was considered "Army and Navy Headquarters" because of the number of military personnel who lived there and the large number of veterans' meetings held there.[22][33] In November 1889, Caleb Willard hired Henry C. Burch and Charles E. Gibbs, both veteran hotel managers in the city, to run Ebbitt House.[34][35] Over the next two years, Burch and Gibbs completely refurnished all the rooms, adding new furniture and Belgian carpets, re-papered or added painted frescoes to the ceilings, and installed new furniture in the hallways. On the east side was the now-famous Red Parlor, a gentleman's lounge fitted with rich red and gold draperies, fabric wall coverings, and upholstered furniture. The restaurant, called "cheerful and sunny" by the Washington Post, fronted onto 14th Street NW, was lit with crystal chandeliers, and could seat up to 225 people. It was completely remodeled by Burch and Gibbs. Guests dined at tables set with tablecloths imported from Scotland, using Haviland & Co. Limoges porcelain china, silver-handled knives and forks manufactured by Reed & Barton, and Bohemian glassware. Cut-glass flower vases, finger bowls, and water bottles were used for serving. Diners sat in high-backed leather chairs. At breakfast, the waiters wore brown cutaway jackets, vests, and pants with a gold stripe, while in the evening they changed into black tuxedos. The kitchen was renovated. New steam tables and massive coffee urns manufactured by Brambull, Deane & Co. of New York City were installed. The menu — served buffet-style — included Blue Point oysters, green sea turtle, Kennebec River salmon, mutton, chicken, hominy fritters, stewed diamondback terrapin, canvasback duck, English pheasant, and a variety of vegetables, fruits, cheese, crackers, nuts, pies, and puddings. Wines, whiskeys, and brandies were served from two large storerooms.[36] Despite the success of the changes, Gibbs left Ebbitt House in 1893 after purchasing Wormley's Hotel.[37] Burch became the sole manager of the hotel.[38] He conducted extensive renovations to the exterior of the hotel in 1895. An enormous two-story mansard roof, with central and corner pavilions influenced by the French Beaux-Arts movement, was added to the top floor, replacing the original single-story, restrained mansard roof.[39]

Ebbitt House slowly declined. In 1907, John Helmus, who oversaw the serving staff and bar for 39 years, died.[40] Caleb Willard, now one of the most famous and wealthiest men in Washington, D.C., died on August 2, 1905.[41] H.C. Burch died the following year.[35] Willard's estate rented Ebbitt House to George R. Shutt, who had formerly managed the National Hotel at 6th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW.[42] Shutt said it was his intention to move all the stores occupying the 14th Street side of the building to the south side, and to add a large café in its place. He also planned to add a women-only restaurant to the lobby, at a time when many public facilities excluded women.[43] Lucy Parker Willard, widow of Caleb Willard, died on January 12, 1910.[44]

Shutt took over management of the hotel on May 16, 1910. Shutt's plans had changed somewhat in the intervening nine months. He decided to devote the whole 14th Street side to the restaurant, as well as to renovate the kitchen. A new head chef and assistant chefs had already been hired. The women's café was moved into the basement, where it occupied a portion of the old restaurant. The office space was enlarged. The restrooms were moved into the basement so they could be enlarged with lounges. An air conditioning plant was installed, elevators replaced, sleeping rooms enlarged, and bathrooms added to all sleeping rooms.[33] What was known as the "New Ebbitt Café" opened in November 1910. It was widely considered the most luxurious restaurant in the city when it opened. The floors were colorful mosaic tiles, the furnishings were expensive, and the café profusely decorated with palms and ferns.[45]

Razing of the second Ebbitt House edit

 
Ebbitt House was razed to construct the National Press Building (depicted).

The hotel continued to decline. A fire broke out in the kitchen on August 12, 1913, doing extensive damage. Two fire companies had to respond to the blaze, which did $5,000 worth of damage.[46] Three months later, city officials accused Shutt of selling liquor in the bar to underage children. A jury could not reach agreement on the charges in December 1913,[47] but the charges were not dismissed until September 1914.[48]

The renovations were not enough. Shutt died in 1919, and his widow attempted to run the hotel. Mrs. Shutt eventually turned the hotel over to Augustus Gumpert.[22] Prohibition began in the District of Columbia on November 1, 1917. The night before, Ebbitt Grill ran out of liquor by 10:45 P.M. While Prohibition lasted, Ebbitt Grill was known as part of "Rum Row"—former bars in an area bounded by 13th and 14th streets NW and E and F streets NW which continued to sell alcohol furtively.[49] In 1923, the Willard estate, which had retained ownership since Lucy Willard's death in 1910, decided to sell the hotel. The new owners refused to renew Gumpert's lease on a yearly basis. They insisted on a month-to-month lease, but Gumpert could not come to agreement with his vendors, who required a yearly lease to ensure a steady stream of income. Gumpert and the new owners both agreed the hotel should close.[22]

Ebbitt House and its restaurant were razed in 1926 to make way for the National Press Club building.[50] Ebbitt House closed to the public at noon on Friday, May 1, 1925, and the furnishings were auctioned off on Tuesday, May 5.[51] By this time, the hotel was so run down that the furnishings often went for a fraction of their replacement value, most going for less than a dollar.[52]

It was not clear if a new Ebbitt House hotel would be built. In July 1925, The Washington Post reported that Gumpert was constructing a new 10-story, 125-room Ebbitt House hotel at 10th and H Streets NW. The old hotel continued to stand, and rumors said the building would be turned into a department store or a movie theater.[53] However, in November 1925, the owners announced that the building would be razed to make way for the National Press Club Building.[54] Demolition of the building began at 1:00 P.M. on January 6, 1926, as National Press Club President Henry L. Sweinhart ceremoniously removed a brick from the existing building.[55]

Old Ebbitt Grill: 1926 to 1983 edit

 
Looking south through the main bar of the Old Ebbitt Grill at 1427 F Street NW in 1967. Note the image hanging on the wall on the right, depicting the original 1856 Ebbitt House.

The history of the restaurant between its establishment in 1926 and the 1980s is not well documented. The media reported on Old Ebbitt Grill only a few times. For example, after the repeal of Prohibition in the United States, Ebbitt Grill sought a liquor license in May 1934.[56]

Lofstrand years edit

The Ebbitt House bar, its paneling, and decorations were removed before the hotel's demolition and installed at a new location at 1427 F Street NW.[50] The media reported the restaurant's name as "Ebbitt's Grill"[57] and "Old Ebbitt Grill".[58] Anders R. Lofstrand, Sr. was the proprietor.[59] Lofstrand was a veteran bar and club entrepreneur in the city and in southern Maryland. He helped incorporate the Calvert Club, a private gentleman's drinking establishment dedicated to the memory of Leonard Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore in 1914.[60] He and his wife, Elizabeth, later purchased Southlawn Farm, which is now a part of the city of Rockville, Maryland, in 1944, and in 1946 built a factory on it.[61] His son, Anders R. Lofstrand, Jr., invented a machine to wash drinking glasses at Old Ebbitt Grill.[62]

Bechas years edit

Anders Lofstrand, Sr. died in 1955, and in April 1961 Old Ebbitt Grill was sold to Peter Bechas,[63] the former head waiter at the Willard Hotel from 1955 to 1958.[64] Bechas' ownership of the restaurant was marred by repeated tax problems. Between April 1961 and April 1970, the restaurant paid its sales tax in only six of 105 months. Bechas was successfully prosecuted for failure to pay sales taxes in 1963 and 1966, and was prosecuted again in 1970. The business also failed to deposit withholding taxes on employee wages with the city.[63]

The restaurant had little reputation by 1969, and was primarily known for its pork chops, seafood, and steaks, and as one of the few D.C. restaurants to serve dinner until 12:30 A.M.[65] In July 1969, Old Ebbitt Grill was one of 171 firms in the city cited for non-payment of taxes.[66] A tax claim was also filed by the federal government, and the business was unable to satisfy the claim. On June 5, 1970, Old Ebbitt Grill was closed by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for failure to pay $10,995.15 in taxes going back to 1965.[67]

Purchase by Clyde's Restaurant Group edit

Old Ebbitt Grill was purchased on June 16, 1970, at a tax sale by Stuart C. Davidson and John Laytham, co-owners of the restaurant Clyde's of Georgetown.[68] Clyde's was founded in 1963 by Davidson, then an investment banker, after new legislation made it legal to serve liquor to patrons standing at bars. Since 1917, the liquor law had required that alcohol only be consumed while sitting at tables.[69] Davidson and Laytham bid in the tax sale hoping to buy beer steins and the mahogany bar, but ended up with the entire restaurant.[70] The IRS offered the entire restaurant for sale after an auction of individual items failed to raise more than $6,639. The sale price was $11,250.[71] Among the items they purchased were a 200-year-old clock which used carved wooden gears for its mechanism, a carved wooden grizzly bear once owned by Alexander Hamilton, crystal decanters dating to 1575, and stuffed boar's head, swordfish, alligator, and walrus head.[67][71][72]

The new Old Ebbitt Grill improved its menu. It reopened at the same location on October 13, 1970. The mahogany bar was slightly lowered, new HVAC installed, and a general $130,000 refurbishment completed.[72][73] Clyde's and Old Ebbitt Grill shared the same menus, which lowered costs and led to improved training for kitchen staff.[74] In June 1974, a Washington Post food review declared Old Ebbitt's fare to be "American, plain, and not bad".[75] By 1977, Washington Post food critic Donald Dresden was praising the restaurants bacon cheeseburgers and innovative menu items: "Imitators are still trying to top Clyde's and the Ebbitt's bacon cheeseburgers and the disc-shaped deep-fried potatoes that come with—but they'll have to keep trying still."[74] The new owners retained Old Ebbitt's dark paneling, shelves of beer steins, mounted game trophies, and spittoons, which it had long showcased. The decor was made more whimsical, however, leading Washington Post architectural critic Wolf Von Eckardt to declare in 1978 that the Grill was "one of the most charming rendezvous on the Eastern Seaboard".[76] The restaurant featured bare, unpolished wood flooring throughout, with a fern bar on the second floor. Washington Post reporter Pamela Kessler said in 1981, "The restaurant feels like old Philadelphia, rather than a slicker, parvenu Washington".[77]

Old Ebbitt Grill gained notoriety in 1977 as the location where a Soviet spy ring operated. In 1976, Vladimir I. Alekseyev, a reporter for the Soviet Union's news agency, TASS, contacted United States Information Agency employee Ronald L. Humphrey—who was already acting as a spy for the North Vietnamese government.[78] Humphreys had already been identified by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and was facing prosecution for his actions. Humphrey and his attorney told the FBI about the contact immediately, and Humphrey agreed to act as a double agent. Alekseyev and Humphrey met at Old Ebbitt Grill in December 1976. The United States expelled Alekseyev on February 6, 1977.[79]

The restaurant continued to improve through the late 1970s and into the early 1980s. In 1978, it was one of the few establishments in Washington, D.C., to serve Guinness Stout on tap.[80] In 1979, Washington Post restaurant reviewer Lon Tuck noted that Old Ebbitt's Omelet Room was one of the most famous locations in the city.[81] Its trademark omelets were the "Old Ebbitt", made with sharp cheddar cheese and Bermuda onions, and another made with chili and served with a garden salad with Roquefort blue cheese dressing.[77] Washington Post reporter Pamela Kessler observed in 1981 that its signature dishes included chili, blue cheese and Welsh rarebit hamburgers, quiche Lorraine, a Reuben sandwich, and steaks.[77] Its crab cakes were poorly reviewed as too bland and heavy with bread.[82] It was one of the few dining places in the city to stay open until 1:00 A.M.[77]

Demolition of 1427 F Street edit

Old Ebbitt Grill was demolished in 1983 during redevelopment of the site.

The restaurant was first threatened with demolition in 1962. Around the corner from the restaurant on 15th Street NW and across the street from the U.S. Treasury Building stood the nearly block-long Keith-Albee Building designed by noted architect Jules Henri de Sibour and Rhodes' Tavern, the first polling place in the city, the first city town hall, and the place where citizens of the District of Columbia first petitioned Congress for the right to vote.[83] Developer Morris Cafritz, who purchased the Keith-Albee Building and Rhodes' Tavern in 1956, wanted to tear down the entire half-block to construct a new office building.[84]

He did not proceed at the time, but the threat of demolition was a catalyst to a committee of citizens known as the "Landmarks Committee" recommending in 1970 that the city enact legislation protecting the two structures and Old Ebbitt Grill.[85] No legislation was enacted, however.

In 1977, developer Oliver T. Carr proposed tearing down the entire block between F and G streets NW and 14th and 15th streets NW and constructing a 12-story hotel and office building complex to be called Metropolitan Square. Demolition would include Old Ebbitt Grill and Rhodes' Tavern. Carr had already negotiated to move the Old Ebbitt Grill to a new location within the new structure.[86] There was little opposition to the demolition of most of the block, which included the Old Ebbitt Grill site. A series of lawsuits, petitions, and intervention by city and federal officials occurred. As demolition proceeded, Old Ebbitt Grill hosted a large party which won notice in The Washington Post. Attendance was so large, the party spilled out into the street. Music was provided by Federal Jazz Commission, a traditional "classic" jazz band which made music indoors and out.[73] In February 1980, Carr agreed to preserve the facades of the Keith-Albee and National Metropolitan Bank buildings as part of the Metropolitan Square development.[87] In August 1980, Carr announced that Old Ebbitt Grill would reopen in a corner location near to its old 1427 F Street NW spot. The restaurant said it would lease 13,492 square feet (1,253.4 m2) of space on two levels, with the bar, main restaurant, and oyster bar on the main level. Old Ebbitt intended to close its doors in April 1983 and reopen a few weeks later in the new location in May.[88]

The time frame for closure proved optimistic. Old Ebbitt Grill did not close its doors at 1427 F Street until September 12, 1983.[89] 1427 F Street NW was demolished in early December 1983.[90]

Old Ebbitt Grill: 1984 to present edit

1980s edit

 
Northwest corner of Metropolitan Square, showing the Keith-Albee facade and the new structure built behind it. The blue awnings shade the windows of Old Ebbitt Grill.

Old Ebbitt Grill reopened at 675 15th Street NW in early October 1983. Clyde's Restaurant Group spent $4.4 million constructing and outfitting the interior.[91] The architectural firm of Andrews & Chatelain designed the interior.[92] The interior decoration was designed to mimic the bar at 1427 F Street, and included the game trophies, some of which were originals, not recreations, and rumored to have been shot by President Theodore Roosevelt.[93] Old Ebbitt's famous mahogany bar was not installed in the new location. A replica was crafted instead.[89] The walls were paneled in mahogany and the ceilings decorated with murals and stencils. The restaurant had seating for 200 at tables and in booths. The booths had green leather seats and velvet-covered walls, and were separated from one another by etched glass dividers. The long bar still sported mounted game animal trophies overhead, the fixtures were of marble or brass, and the curtains of lace. An oyster bar was added to the rear of the restaurant on the main floor. The kitchen featured a special charcoal-burning grill, and the wine cellar featured a Cruvinet wine dispensing system.[94][95] Gas lamps were used in the main bar and booth area.[96] A year after the Grill opened, The Washington Post said it had the best dining ambience of any restaurant in the city.[97]

The restaurant also instituted a "back waiter" system. Back waiters were trained to balance plates of food on their arms, so they could get them to tables faster without the need to load and unload trays. Back waiters were required to have excellent physical strength and good balance. The back waiter system was created so that waiters continued to wait on tables rather than spending time in the kitchen waiting for orders to be filled.[98]

The Omelet Room did not make the transition to the new location. National health campaigns against high cholesterol had reduced demand for foods heavy in eggs.[99] Instead, the basement contained a large private dining room.

The new restaurant was immediately popular.[100] Washington Post food critic Phyllis Richman declared the restaurant's signature hamburger its best entree. She found the appetizers and salads excellent, but considered the pasta dishes hit-or-miss and disparaged the main entrees.[94] Within a year, the restaurant was mostly being patronized by yuppies, lawyers, and tourists.[101][102] A 1986 food review in The Washington Post concluded that Old Ebbitt Grill had the worst omelets and pancakes in the city,[97] but the best appetizers. Its main claim to fame was its hefty portions and moderate prices.[102]

Old Ebbitt Grill was the site of a discussion among administration officials hoping to protect President Reagan from fallout related to the Iran–Contra affair of 1986. Beginning in 1984, officials in the Reagan administration sought to sell conventional weapons to Iran via Israel in exchange for Iran using its influence to win the release of American hostages being held by Hezbollah and other terrorist groups in Lebanon, which was then in the throes of a civil war. In December 1985, Oliver North, a Lieutenant Colonel in the Marine Corps who was serving as a military aide to the National Security Council, proposed selling the weapons directly to Iran at a $15 million mark-up. He would use the excess funds to supply arms and supplies to the Contras. The Contras were guerrilla fighters opposed to the communist government of Nicaragua led by Daniel Ortega. The United States was barred by the Boland Amendment from supporting the Contras.

The Iran-Contra affair was exposed by the press on November 3, 1986, and on November 13, President Reagan publicly admitted that an arms-for-hostages deal existed. However, the diversion of funds to the Contras was not yet exposed. On November 22, Assistant Attorney General William Bradford Reynolds discovered an April 1986 draft memo from North to National Security Advisor John Poindexter, who was at the time also serving as a Vice Admiral in the United States Navy, which suggested that $12 million in Iranian weapons sales be used to help the Contras. Reynolds discovered the document in North's files during a meeting with North in his White House office. Reynolds smuggled the document out of North's office and took it to a luncheon meeting at Old Ebbitt with Attorney General Edwin Meese. When shown the document, Meese allegedly said, "Oh, darn." Assistant Attorney General Charles J. Cooper, a young appointee in the Office of Legal Counsel, also at the lunch, said the memo was a "bomb."[103]

In the late 1980s, Old Ebbitt Grill became a popular hangout for actors and crew from the nearby National Theatre and Warner Theatre. Choreographer and director Bob Fosse was preparing to host a party at Old Ebbitt Grill when he collapsed outside the restaurant and died of a heart attack on September 23, 1987. His revival of Sweet Charity, which he choreographed, had just debuted at the National Theatre.[104] Old Ebbitt began hanging posters in the lobby of current theatrical performances.[105]

President George H. W. Bush and First Lady Barbara Bush met the singer and actor Sting at Old Ebbitt Grill in September 1989 after his Washington debut in the title role in Three Penny Opera.[106] The Rolling Stones dined at the restaurant a few weeks later after a concert in the city.[107] In 1991, playwright Neil Simon, director Gene Saks and the cast of the play Lost in Yonkers held the opening night after-party on January 17 at Old Ebbitt Grill. Just minutes before the curtain rose on the Washington debut of the play, the cast learned that the United States had declared war on Iraq and begun the Gulf War.[108] After the world premier of the motion picture The River Wild in August 1994 in Washington, D.C., a reception for the stars was held at Old Ebbitt.[109]

1990s edit

 
The famous mahogany bar at Old Ebbitt Grill

In the early 1990s, Old Ebbitt Grill was financially one of the best-performing restaurants in the city. In July 1992, the Washington Business Journal said the 390-seat Old Ebbitt Grill grossed more money than any other restaurant in the D.C. metropolitan area.[110] It spent $17,000 a month on table linens.[111] The Washington Post's Phyllis Richman claimed the combination of superb hamburgers with seasonal foods such as fresh Alaskan halibut, corn on the cob in the summer, and locally grown vegetables and berries, was what drew customers.[112] In May 1994, Old Ebbitt Grill added a take-out service, Ebbitt Express, in the atrium section of its restaurant.[113]

In 1995, business dropped after Pennsylvania Avenue NW was closed to street traffic and curbside parking was eliminated in front of the restaurant on 15th Street NW for security reasons following the bombing by an American domestic terrorist of the Oklahoma Federal Building.[114] Some of the business was made up by Ebbitt Express, which by December 1997 was serving 600 meals a day—twice as many as projected.[115]

Old Ebbitt Grill's oyster bar closed in 1992 after diners fell ill from eating raw oysters infected with the deadly Vibrio vulnificus bacteria. The restaurant established a procedure for an independent laboratory to test its oysters for the bacteria prior to consumption. In November 1994, Old Ebbitt Grill reopened its oyster bar to much press attention.[116] Washington Post food critic Eve Zibart, writing in August 1995, said that its highly polished woodwork, counter facing the ice bed and shuckers, and excellent selection of oysters made it a "first-class raw bar".[117] Shortly after the oyster bar reopened, Old Ebbitt Grill lost its long-time chef, Juan Bosio. The restaurant hired Robert McGowan, formerly a chef at Sardi's in New York City.[118]

2000s edit

Security changes in Washington, D.C., after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks significantly affected Old Ebbitt Grill for a while. The restaurant was forced to close for two days when streets near the White House were closed.[119] Over the next two weeks, the restaurant lost half its business, which normally ran 2,000 customers a day, most of them politicians and businesspeople.[120] After First Lady Laura Bush began patronizing the restaurant,[121] business soon returned to normal.

The Beltway sniper attacks of fall 2002 did not affect business, which continued to hold steady through February 2003, a time of high alert and anxiety.[122]

Due to security restrictions in 2004, Old Ebbitt Grill was nearly prevented from its traditional practice of selling coffee and hot chocolate to spectators watching the inaugural parade, in this case for the landmark election of Barack Obama as President of the United States. That year the Democratic Leadership Council rented the entire restaurant for a private party on Inauguration Day.[123]

In 2003, Old Ebbitt Grill was busiest on weekends in the spring, when high school student tourist business was at its highest in the city.[124] The restaurant was praised by The Washington Post for being able to accommodate large groups, offering a variety of plain and upscale food, providing friendly service, and having the best raw bar in the city.[125] The restaurant was also criticized by the newspaper for being too noisy for conversation,[126] and providing bland hamburgers, salads, and breakfast.[125]

By 2008, however, Old Ebbitt Grill's reviews had improved. Post food critic Tom Sietsema continued to laud the friendly service. He also praised the Breakfast Club, a deep-fried ham, French toast, and bacon breakfast sandwich. He appreciated small touches such as coat hooks near booths and pepper mills on tables and found the staff's honesty about menu choices refreshing.[127]

In 2009, Old Ebbitt Grill had the fourth or fifth-highest volume of restaurant customers in the United States.[99] Due to its proximity to the White House, it was a favorite of United States Secret Service personnel as well as tourists.[128] In 2010, after the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear, comedian Stephen Colbert hosted a Comedy Central after-party at Old Ebbitt Grill. In attendance were Wyatt Cenac, Rosario Dawson, Mick Foley, Tim Meadows, John Oliver, then a Colbert show regular, and Jamie Hyneman and Adam Savage, the hosts of the MythBusters television series.[129]

2010s edit

In January 2012, Clyde's Restaurant Group chief executive officer John Laytham claimed that Old Ebbitt Grill was the third or fourth highest grossing restaurant in the country. Laytham said the restaurant turned away 800 to 900 customers a day and did $26 million in sales in 2011.[91] In April 2012, sales were still 1 percent ahead of 2011.[130] After a slow summer, business at the restaurant had slowed so much that sales were steady compared to 2011.[131]

In 2011, The Washington Post listed Old Ebbitt Grill as one of the top three raw bars in the city.[132] Post food reviewer Tom Sietsema, however, had little good to say about the entrees (nearly all of which he found disappointing) and the service (which he found to be tardy and focused more on getting customers to buy more food). The busy atmosphere, he argued, was not conducive to a positive dining experience.[133]

Old Ebbitt Grill said in December 2012 that it was already booked for a private event for the second inauguration of Barack Obama.[134]

Restaurant Business Magazine reported in October 2014 that Old Ebbitt Grill ranked third in the nation in revenue for 2013. The industry trade publication of record said the restaurant had $26.7 million in revenues in 2013, serving 600,000 meals. Only Tao Asian Bistro in Las Vegas with $64.6 million in revenues and Joe's Stone Crab in Miami, with $35.3 million in revenues, ranked higher.[135]

In July 2019, Clyde's Restaurant Group was acquired by Graham Holdings.[136]

About the restaurant edit

 
A view of Grant's Bar at Old Ebbitt Grill, featuring a 1900 oil painting by Jean-Paul Gervais.

Old Ebbitt Grill has four bars: the Old Bar, which is part of the Main Dining Room and features the mounted game trophies, the Oyster Bar to the right of the entry foyer, Grant's Bar toward the rear of the restaurant adjacent to the Atrium Dining Room, and the Corner Bar up the short steps and to the left of the entry foyer along G Street NW. The etched glass panels separating the Old Bar from the Main Dining Room were created by Charles Shefts. Grant's Bar, named for American Civil War General Ulysses S. Grant, features a ceiling mural by Carol Loeb. An oil painting by Peter Egeli replicates one of Mathew Brady's famous Civil War photographs of Grant.

The Main Dining Room contains booth seating and limited table seating. The Atrium Dining Room in the rear offers table seating, although fixed, long benches provide some seating. The Atrium Dining Room contains a large marble fountain, and is open to the atrium in the center of Metropolitan Square. Ebbitt Express is located in the Atrium Dining Room.

Downstairs from the entry foyer is the Cabinet Room, a dining room available for private events.

The foyer and Main Dining Room feature paintings by Kamil Kubik, and in the Oyster Bar hang oil paintings by Peter Egeli and watercolors by J. Robert Burnell. The large Howard Chandler Christy painting, "Three Bathers", hangs near the rear of the Main Dining Room. The Corner Bar is decorated with paintings by Claiborne D. Gregory, Jr., and carved waterfowl decoys by numerous artists. Sculptures by John Dreyfuss adorn the Atrium Dining Room. Impressionist works by James Harrington hang throughout the restaurant. Paintings of game birds by Robin Hill hang in the Cabinet Room.

Awards edit

The Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington gave Old Ebbitt Grill its Visitors' Choice Award in 2011.[137]

Oyster Riot edit

Oyster Riot is an annual oyster eating event held at Old Ebbitt Grill each November on the weekend before Thanksgiving. Although originally a four-hour, all-you-can eat and drink event held on one day, by 2011 Oyster Riot had expanded to a three-day event held on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.[138]

The first Oyster Riot was held in October 1995 to promote Old Ebbitt Grill's oyster bar. The oyster bar served 15 to 20 different varieties of oyster, and matched them with seven to 10 different types of wine.[139] Oyster Riot proved wildly popular. In 2007, the event sold every ticket in 38 minutes.[140]

In 2010, Old Ebbitt Grill joined the Shell Recycling Alliance, a project of the Oyster Recovery Partnership, a nonprofit helping to restore oyster populations in the Chesapeake Bay. Old Ebbitt Grill donates its used oyster shells to the alliance, which plants baby oysters, known as "spat", on the shells and deposits them in the bay. The restaurant donated about 14,000 oysters a week to the alliance in 2010.[141] Old Ebbitt has long composted its food waste,[142] but oyster shells are not compostable and before 2010 were thrown out as garbage.[143] To help the Shell Recycling Alliance, Old Ebbitt Grill introduced a new element to its Oyster Riot, a Saturday afternoon event known as "Matinee Riot." Held at noon, a portion of the proceeds are donated to the Oyster Recovery Partnership.

Popular culture edit

Old Ebbitt Grill was featured in the 1993 film In the Line of Fire. An exterior scene was shown and then Clint Eastwood and John Mahoney were shown sitting at Grant's Bar inside. A plaque referencing this film is on the wall in Grant's Bar.[144]

Old Ebbitt Grill is mentioned by fictional White House staffer Sam Seaborn in Season 3, Episode 19 of the television show The West Wing[145][circular reference]. Sam suggests the restaurant for a lunch meeting location, but is rebuffed and has the meeting at the fictional Patrick's instead.

Alex Kapranos, lead singer for the Scottish rock band Franz Ferdinand, included an entry on Old Ebbitt Grill in his 2006 book, Sound Bites: Eating on Tour With Franz Ferdinand.[146]

Old Ebbitt Grill is mentioned in the novels Path of the Assassin by Brad Thor,[147] The Outlaws by W.E.B. Griffin and William E. Butterworth IV,[148] The Pravda Messenger by Robert Cornuke,[149] The Athena Factor by W. Michael Gear,[150] House Justice by Mike Lawson,[151] The Green Trap by Ben Bova,[152] The Widening Gyre by Robert B. Parker,[153] and Winter of the World by Ken Follett.[154]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Determining which establishment is the oldest bar in Washington, D.C., is complex. Old Ebbitt Grill is the oldest continuously operating bar in the city. However, it has changed owners and locations several times, which may invite the claim that it is not "continuously operated". The bar and restaurant in the Willard InterContinental Washington also lays claim to being the oldest bar and restaurant in the city. However, the original building was torn down and a new one erected on the same lot in 1901, and the hotel was closed from 1968 to 1986. As of 2010, the oldest bar in the city without an ownership change or interruption in service due to location change was Billy Martin's Tavern, which opened in 1933. See: Kelly, John. "D.C.'s Oldest Bar, Oldest Hotel? That's a Tricky Question," The Washington Post, June 20, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d Larner, p. 101.
  3. ^ At the time, the District of Columbia was not divided into quadrants, and the streets had yet to be described as northwest, southeast, etc.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Goode, p. 210.
  5. ^ a b c Henry, p. 90.
  6. ^ Larner, p. 100.
  7. ^ Brown, George Rothwell. "Ebbitt Hotel, Gone, Had Its Beginning in Boarding House." The Washington Post. April 8, 1926.
  8. ^ Barnes, p. 89.
  9. ^ a b Larner, p. 101-102.
  10. ^ a b Eskew, p. 156.
  11. ^ Eskew, p. 170.
  12. ^ There was a family connection between Ebbitt House and the Willard Hotel. Richard Forrest's eldest son, Julius, married Sophia Ogle, daughter of Benjamin Ogle. Benjamin Ogle was the maternal grandfather of Benjamin Ogle Tayloe, the man who owned the Willard Hotel. See: Watson, p. 1; Barnes, p. 89.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Larner, p. 102.
  14. ^ a b Larner, p. 102-103.
  15. ^ Peck, p. 25-26; Evelyn, Dickson, and Ackerman, p. 74.
  16. ^ "Story of Murder Bay." The Washington Post. July 8, 1888.
  17. ^ Savage, p. 100-101; Gutheim and Lee, p. 73; Lowry, p. 61-65; Evelyn, Dickson, and Ackerman, p. 63-64.
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  19. ^ a b Townsend, p. 576.
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  21. ^ Larner, p. 103.
  22. ^ a b c d e Whitehead, Frank Insco. "Landmark Passes As Ebbitt House Doors Are Closed." The Washington Post. May 10, 1925.
  23. ^ Otero, p. 289.
  24. ^ Franklin, p. 292-293.
  25. ^ Zon, p. 5.
  26. ^ Barrows, p. 454.
  27. ^ a b Hodgson, p. 279.
  28. ^ Corning, p. 138.
  29. ^ Phillips, p. 26.
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  35. ^ a b "H.C. Burch Dead." New York Times. November 26, 1906.
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  66. ^ "City Lists 171 Accused." The Washington Post. July 20, 1969.
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  69. ^ Martin, Douglas. "Stuart C. Davidson, 78, Owner of Legendary Washington Bar." New York Times. August 8, 2001. Accessed 2012-12-29.
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  72. ^ a b Zito, Tort. "Reopening Day: New Shine for the Old Ebbitt." The Washington Post. October 14, 1970.
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  74. ^ a b Dresden, Donald. "Cruisin' for Burgers." The Washington Post. July 3, 1977.
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  78. ^ "2 Sentenced to Jail Term As Viet Spies." Associated Press. July 8, 1978.
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  81. ^ Tuck, Lon. "'WWR' and Ford: Celebrating a Union." The Washington Post. June 8, 1979.
  82. ^ Davis, Melissa. "Let Them Eat Crab Cakes." The Washington Post. September 9, 1979.
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  92. ^ Horwitz, Sari. "Zephyr Hopes to Exploit Mystique of Luxury Train Travel." The Washington Post. September 24, 1984. Architect John Richards Andrews did most of the design work. See: "John Andrews Dies at 66; Longtime Area Architect." The Washington Post. July 8, 1995.
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  95. ^ Cruvinet is the name of a company which invented a system for dispensing wine similar to the way beer is dispensed on tap. Cruvinet systems, which can be mobile or installed and can accommodate anywhere from two to 120 bottles, immediately recork a bottle of wine. Nitrogen gas is pumped through a valve in the replacement cork to prevent oxidation. This allows a bottle of wine to remain open for up to two weeks without spoiling. The system was invented in 1978, although many different companies make "wine bar systems" today. See: Chamberlain, Chris. "Cruvinet: It's Like Wine on Tap." Nashville Scene. December 21, 2010. Accessed 2012-12-31.
  96. ^ "Readers' Guide." The Washington Post. September 23, 1984.
  97. ^ a b "Superlatives to Eat By." The Washington Post. March 24, 1985.
  98. ^ "Stepping Up to the Plates." The Washington Post. September 3, 2003.
  99. ^ a b Kelly, John. "At Clyde's, Treat Yourself to a Good Lunch and Cause." The Washington Post. June 3, 2009.
  100. ^ Pyatt, Jr., Rudolph A. "Can Rhodes Tavern Be Resolved?" The Washington Post. December 23, 1983.
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  102. ^ a b Richman, Phyllis. "Old Ebbitt Grill." The Washington Post. September 22, 1985.
  103. ^ Pincus, Walter and Morgan, Dan. "High-Level Iran Cover-Up Shown in Testimony, Documents." The Washington Post. June 26, 1987.
  104. ^ Hall, Charles W. "Bob Fosse Dies After Collapsing On D.C. Street." The Washington Post. September 24, 1987.
  105. ^ Brown, Joe. "Dramatic Discoveries." The Washington Post. May 7, 1989.
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  107. ^ Conconi, Chuck. "Personalities." The Washington Post. September 26, 1989.
  108. ^ Conconi, Chuck. "Personalities." The Washington Post. January 18, 1991.
  109. ^ "Fall Frolics." The Washington Post. August 28, 1994.
  110. ^ McKeon, Nancy. "Lite." The Washington Post. August 23, 1992.
  111. ^ Singletary, Michelle. "Failures Eat Into Restaurant Community." The Washington Post. March 11, 1992.
  112. ^ Richman, Phyllis. "Potomac Fever." The Washington Post. September 19, 1993.
  113. ^ Richman, Phyllis C. "Star Service Up on the Roof." The Washington Post. May 13, 1994.
  114. ^ Fehr, Stephen C. and Haggerty, Maryann. "Barricades a Blow to Business." The Washington Post. May 28, 1995.
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  118. ^ "On The Fridge." The Washington Post. December 13, 1995.
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  120. ^ Sugarman, Carole. "Food & Drink: Changing Needs?" The Washington Post. September 26, 2001; Timberg, Craig. "Fined, Mayor Revives Fundraising." The Washington Post. August 22, 2002.
  121. ^ Reel, Monte. "The President Who Lives Apart." The Washington Post. January 26, 2003.
  122. ^ Irwin, Neil and Hedgpeth, Dana. "High Alert, High Anxiety." The Washington Post. February 17, 2003.
  123. ^ Nakamura, David and Boschma, Janie. "Comfortable Perches Along Pennsylvania Avenue Are Much in Demand." The Washington Post. January 16, 2009.
  124. ^ Schulte, Brigid. "To Tan, a Place in the Sun Not Needed." The Washington Post. June 1, 2003.
  125. ^ a b Sietsema, Tom. "Seeing Stars." The Washington Post. October 19, 2003.
  126. ^ "Visitors to the Mall Have Plenty of Dining Options While Sightseeing." The Washington Post. May 22, 2003.
  127. ^ Sietsema, Tom. "The Bacon-and-Eggs Brigade." The Washington Post. November 30, 2008.
  128. ^ Roig-Franzia, Manuel. "Lunch at the 'Power Section'." The Washington Post. September 20, 2009.
  129. ^ Argetsinger, Amy and Roberts, Roxanne. "Thinking About Drapes In Case It's Curtains For Madam Speaker." The Washington Post. November 2, 2010.
  130. ^ "Reality Check: US Restaurateurs Say Cons Sent Mostly Static." The Main Wire. April 17, 2012.
  131. ^ "Reality Check: US Restaurateurs Say Consumer Sent Still Stuck." The Main Wire. September 21, 2012.
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  133. ^ Sietsema, Tom. "Worth Taking a Second Look." The Washington Post. May 20, 2011.
  134. ^ Chen, Aimee and Mendelson, Will. "No Rush Yet on Inaugural Tickets and Hotel Rooms." Asbury Park Daily Herald. December 3, 2012.
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  137. ^ "Rammys: Todd Gray Top Chef." The Washington Post. June 29, 2011.
  138. ^ Stroup, Sheila. "Small Space, Big Vision." New Orleans Times-Picayune. June 23, 2012.
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  140. ^ "Basic Black and Bivalves." The Washington Post. September 19, 2007.
  141. ^ Goodman, Christy. "A Shell Game for a Cause." The Washington Post. December 23, 2010.
  142. ^ "@WasteRecycNews." Waste & Recycling News. August 20, 2012.
  143. ^ Fears, Darryl. "Scientists Use a Warm Bath to Get Oysters in the Mood." The Washington Post. May 10, 2011.
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  145. ^ The West Wing.
  146. ^ du Lac, J. Freedom. "A Keen Taste for Touring." The Washington Post. January 24, 2007.
  147. ^ Thor, p. 499.
  148. ^ Griffin and Butterworth, chapter 3.
  149. ^ Cornuke, chapter 10.
  150. ^ Gear, p. 25-26.
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External links edit

  • Old Ebbitt Grill official website
  • Three Stories About Old Ebbitt Grill - Ghosts of DC history blog

ebbitt, grill, historic, restaurant, located, 15th, street, washington, united, states, washington, oldest, restaurant, owned, clyde, restaurant, group, first, opened, unnamed, restaurant, ebbitt, house, hotel, hotel, distinguished, itself, first, hotel, washi. Old Ebbitt Grill is a historic bar and restaurant located at 675 15th Street NW in Washington D C in the United States It is Washington s oldest bar and restaurant 1 and is owned by Clyde s Restaurant Group It first opened as an unnamed restaurant in the Ebbitt House Hotel The Hotel distinguished itself as the first hotel in Washington to remain open all summer instead of closing when Congress adjourned In 1827 the Hotel was razed and rebuilt in the same location Ebbitt House Hotel was razed in 1925 to make way for the National Press Building built in 1926 The restaurant was incorporated by Anders Lofstrand Sr as a stand alone business It moved into new quarters at 1427 F Street NW After Lofstrand s death in 1955 the restaurant was purchased by Peter Bechas in 1961 The restaurant was sold at a tax sale in June 1970 and was purchased by Clyde s Restaurant Group The 1427 F Street NW location was demolished in 1983 during redevelopment and Old Ebbitt Grill moved into its current quarters at 675 15th Street NW Old Ebbitt GrillOld Ebbitt Grill from 15th Street Restaurant informationEstablished1856Owner s Clyde s Restaurant Group subsidiary of Graham HoldingsHead chefSalvatore FerroFood typeAmericanDress codeCasualStreet address675 15th Street NWCityWashington D C Postal ZIP Code20005CountryUnited StatesSeating capacity398ReservationsSuggestedWebsitewww ebbitt comFor many years as part of Ebbitt House the bar restaurant had no stand alone name or identity It began using the name New Ebbitt Cafe in November 1910 In 1926 after the restaurant became incorporated as a stand alone business it was known as both Ebbitt s Grill and Old Ebbitt Grill Over time only the Old Ebbitt Grill name was used It retained that name after its ownership changes in 1961 and 1970 Since 1970 because of its popularity Old Ebbitt Grill has been frequented by numerous politicians some known for scandals and maneuvering It has also been the site of parties hosted by famous actors and singers For many years it has been the restaurant with one of the highest amount of sales in the United States Old Ebbitt Grill created a popular annual event known as the Oyster Riot in 1995 Contents 1 Ebbitt House 1856 to 1925 1 1 First Ebbitt House 1 2 Second Ebbitt House 1 3 Razing of the second Ebbitt House 2 Old Ebbitt Grill 1926 to 1983 2 1 Lofstrand years 2 2 Bechas years 2 3 Purchase by Clyde s Restaurant Group 2 4 Demolition of 1427 F Street 3 Old Ebbitt Grill 1984 to present 3 1 1980s 3 2 1990s 3 3 2000s 3 4 2010s 4 About the restaurant 5 Awards 6 Oyster Riot 7 Popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEbbitt House 1856 to 1925 editFirst Ebbitt House edit The building which later was owned by William E Ebbitt was located on the southeast corner of F Street NW and 14th Street NW in the city of Washington D C In June 1798 William Crawford obtained title to four parcels of land on the southeast corner of 14th and F streets 2 3 The four parcels lay west to east along 14th Street In 1800 Crawford built two four story Federal style houses on the two easternmost parcels of this property 4 The garden of the houses extended west onto the two empty lots on the corner and down the hill in the rear almost to Pennsylvania Avenue 5 In 1833 Bushrod W Reed relocated to the District of Columbia from Westmoreland County Virginia purchased the two easternmost lots from Crawford and between 1833 and 1836 built a double wide four story Federal style building on the corner next to the Crawford homes 6 7 Crawford s daughter Sarah married Richard Forrest one of the first eight clerks appointed in 1801 by Thomas Jefferson in the United States Department of State 5 William Crawford installed Richard and Sarah Forrest in his houses and they inherited them upon his death 2 Richard Forrest died in 1828 5 and Sarah died in 1832 8 Although it is unclear what happened to the property after Sarah Crawford s death some time prior to 1856 it was purchased by William J Smith 9 Smith joined the two houses into a single unit and named them Frenchman s Hotel because he employed a French immigrant as the manager of the facility 9 10 nbsp Ebbitt House in 1865 after the Reed and Ebbitt properties were joinedIn 1856 William E Ebbitt purchased Frenchman s Hotel from Smith turned it into a boarding house and renamed it Ebbitt House 4 During this time the boarding house also took in guests from the Willard Hotel 11 12 On September 1 1863 Ebbitt sold the boarding house to his son in law Albert H Craney 10 13 Exactly a year later Craney sold the property to Caleb C Willard brother of Willard Hotel owner Henry A Willard 13 Willard converted the boarding house into a hotel 4 The same year Willard purchased Bushrod Reed s property as well 2 He joined the Ebbitt and Reed properties into a single unit enclosing a 4 foot 1 2 m wide alley between the two and built bathrooms with oval windows in the space above 2 A three story house on 14th Street adjacent to Ebbitt House was occupied by the Reed family as well although by 1864 it had been purchased by Willard who raised the roof 14 At that time it was not yet part of the hotel Willard leased the building to the New York Times for use as office space 13 Two single story buildings south of the Reed home were also built and owned by Reed By 1865 they were used as offices by The Philadelphia Inquirer New York Evening Post and other newspapers 13 Next to the one story buildings was Farnham House It was originally owned and built by David Burnes whose plantation had covered much of the downtown area that would be developed as Washington D C Burnes gave Farnham House to his daughter Marcia who in turn sold it to William H Dorsey in 1802 13 On May 16 1818 Dorsey sold the house to William Blanchard 13 Blanchard s daughter Jane Farnham inherited the property on June 10 1850 after his death 13 By 1865 it housed the D C offices of the New York Herald 13 Given the numerous newspapers with offices along 14th Street between E and F Streets the area was nicknamed Newspaper Row a name it would hold into the 1930s 15 Farnham sold her house at auction to Caleb Willard on October 4 1866 for 74 000 14 For many years prior to the construction of the Ebbitt House stables in 1872 a large house known as Bull s Head stood at the rear of the hotel The house marked the northeast corner of Murder Bay Bull s Head housed prostitutes and contained a large lower class gambling den 16 17 Second Ebbitt House edit Willard razed Ebbitt House in 1872 doubled its size and built a six story Second Empire style hotel with a mansard roof 4 18 The hotel had 300 rooms canopied windows and an elevator 19 The dining room was two stories high with floor to ceiling windows white marble floor white painted walls and a fresco on the ceiling 19 20 The dining room was in the rear of the hotel on the site of what used to be Farnham House which in photographs from the period shows as the last three windows on 14th Street 21 The massive chandeliers led the dining room to be called the Crystal Room 22 The paneled bar 4 was reached by passing through the lobby and down a flight of stairs into the basement 23 In the late 1800s this hotel was considered one of the most fashionable in the city its lodgings and restaurant were patronized by politicians and high ranking military officers Major General Winfield Scott Hancock 4 Commanding General of the United States Army William Tecumseh Sherman and Rear Admiral Samuel Rhoads Franklin all lived there for a time 24 It is well documented that President Ulysses S Grant and President Andrew Johnson both dined in the restaurant frequently 25 as did abolitionist clergyman Henry Ward Beecher 26 Future president William McKinley and his wife lived there from 1877 to 1890 during his entire congressional career 27 He dined almost nightly with his wife in the restaurant 28 His close friend Representative and later President James A Garfield visited McKinley often in the hotel 29 McKinley departed from the hotel for his presidential inaugural 4 Presidents Grover Cleveland Theodore Roosevelt and Warren G Harding all drank in the bar there 27 Chief Justice of the United States Salmon P Chase lived there while working in the capital and died there in October 1886 30 Rear Admiral John Lee Davis also lived and died there 31 William Howard Taft lived there from 1890 to 1892 when he was United States Solicitor General 22 nbsp Ebbitt House in 1903 The first two stories of the building in the rear constituted the restaurant Ebbitt House struggled to compete against the larger and more lavish Willard Hotel and the Raleigh Hotel built in 1893 32 From the late 1860s until the 1910s it was considered Army and Navy Headquarters because of the number of military personnel who lived there and the large number of veterans meetings held there 22 33 In November 1889 Caleb Willard hired Henry C Burch and Charles E Gibbs both veteran hotel managers in the city to run Ebbitt House 34 35 Over the next two years Burch and Gibbs completely refurnished all the rooms adding new furniture and Belgian carpets re papered or added painted frescoes to the ceilings and installed new furniture in the hallways On the east side was the now famous Red Parlor a gentleman s lounge fitted with rich red and gold draperies fabric wall coverings and upholstered furniture The restaurant called cheerful and sunny by the Washington Post fronted onto 14th Street NW was lit with crystal chandeliers and could seat up to 225 people It was completely remodeled by Burch and Gibbs Guests dined at tables set with tablecloths imported from Scotland using Haviland amp Co Limoges porcelain china silver handled knives and forks manufactured by Reed amp Barton and Bohemian glassware Cut glass flower vases finger bowls and water bottles were used for serving Diners sat in high backed leather chairs At breakfast the waiters wore brown cutaway jackets vests and pants with a gold stripe while in the evening they changed into black tuxedos The kitchen was renovated New steam tables and massive coffee urns manufactured by Brambull Deane amp Co of New York City were installed The menu served buffet style included Blue Point oysters green sea turtle Kennebec River salmon mutton chicken hominy fritters stewed diamondback terrapin canvasback duck English pheasant and a variety of vegetables fruits cheese crackers nuts pies and puddings Wines whiskeys and brandies were served from two large storerooms 36 Despite the success of the changes Gibbs left Ebbitt House in 1893 after purchasing Wormley s Hotel 37 Burch became the sole manager of the hotel 38 He conducted extensive renovations to the exterior of the hotel in 1895 An enormous two story mansard roof with central and corner pavilions influenced by the French Beaux Arts movement was added to the top floor replacing the original single story restrained mansard roof 39 Ebbitt House slowly declined In 1907 John Helmus who oversaw the serving staff and bar for 39 years died 40 Caleb Willard now one of the most famous and wealthiest men in Washington D C died on August 2 1905 41 H C Burch died the following year 35 Willard s estate rented Ebbitt House to George R Shutt who had formerly managed the National Hotel at 6th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW 42 Shutt said it was his intention to move all the stores occupying the 14th Street side of the building to the south side and to add a large cafe in its place He also planned to add a women only restaurant to the lobby at a time when many public facilities excluded women 43 Lucy Parker Willard widow of Caleb Willard died on January 12 1910 44 Shutt took over management of the hotel on May 16 1910 Shutt s plans had changed somewhat in the intervening nine months He decided to devote the whole 14th Street side to the restaurant as well as to renovate the kitchen A new head chef and assistant chefs had already been hired The women s cafe was moved into the basement where it occupied a portion of the old restaurant The office space was enlarged The restrooms were moved into the basement so they could be enlarged with lounges An air conditioning plant was installed elevators replaced sleeping rooms enlarged and bathrooms added to all sleeping rooms 33 What was known as the New Ebbitt Cafe opened in November 1910 It was widely considered the most luxurious restaurant in the city when it opened The floors were colorful mosaic tiles the furnishings were expensive and the cafe profusely decorated with palms and ferns 45 Razing of the second Ebbitt House edit nbsp Ebbitt House was razed to construct the National Press Building depicted The hotel continued to decline A fire broke out in the kitchen on August 12 1913 doing extensive damage Two fire companies had to respond to the blaze which did 5 000 worth of damage 46 Three months later city officials accused Shutt of selling liquor in the bar to underage children A jury could not reach agreement on the charges in December 1913 47 but the charges were not dismissed until September 1914 48 The renovations were not enough Shutt died in 1919 and his widow attempted to run the hotel Mrs Shutt eventually turned the hotel over to Augustus Gumpert 22 Prohibition began in the District of Columbia on November 1 1917 The night before Ebbitt Grill ran out of liquor by 10 45 P M While Prohibition lasted Ebbitt Grill was known as part of Rum Row former bars in an area bounded by 13th and 14th streets NW and E and F streets NW which continued to sell alcohol furtively 49 In 1923 the Willard estate which had retained ownership since Lucy Willard s death in 1910 decided to sell the hotel The new owners refused to renew Gumpert s lease on a yearly basis They insisted on a month to month lease but Gumpert could not come to agreement with his vendors who required a yearly lease to ensure a steady stream of income Gumpert and the new owners both agreed the hotel should close 22 Ebbitt House and its restaurant were razed in 1926 to make way for the National Press Club building 50 Ebbitt House closed to the public at noon on Friday May 1 1925 and the furnishings were auctioned off on Tuesday May 5 51 By this time the hotel was so run down that the furnishings often went for a fraction of their replacement value most going for less than a dollar 52 It was not clear if a new Ebbitt House hotel would be built In July 1925 The Washington Post reported that Gumpert was constructing a new 10 story 125 room Ebbitt House hotel at 10th and H Streets NW The old hotel continued to stand and rumors said the building would be turned into a department store or a movie theater 53 However in November 1925 the owners announced that the building would be razed to make way for the National Press Club Building 54 Demolition of the building began at 1 00 P M on January 6 1926 as National Press Club President Henry L Sweinhart ceremoniously removed a brick from the existing building 55 Old Ebbitt Grill 1926 to 1983 edit nbsp Looking south through the main bar of the Old Ebbitt Grill at 1427 F Street NW in 1967 Note the image hanging on the wall on the right depicting the original 1856 Ebbitt House The history of the restaurant between its establishment in 1926 and the 1980s is not well documented The media reported on Old Ebbitt Grill only a few times For example after the repeal of Prohibition in the United States Ebbitt Grill sought a liquor license in May 1934 56 Lofstrand years edit The Ebbitt House bar its paneling and decorations were removed before the hotel s demolition and installed at a new location at 1427 F Street NW 50 The media reported the restaurant s name as Ebbitt s Grill 57 and Old Ebbitt Grill 58 Anders R Lofstrand Sr was the proprietor 59 Lofstrand was a veteran bar and club entrepreneur in the city and in southern Maryland He helped incorporate the Calvert Club a private gentleman s drinking establishment dedicated to the memory of Leonard Calvert 2nd Baron Baltimore in 1914 60 He and his wife Elizabeth later purchased Southlawn Farm which is now a part of the city of Rockville Maryland in 1944 and in 1946 built a factory on it 61 His son Anders R Lofstrand Jr invented a machine to wash drinking glasses at Old Ebbitt Grill 62 Bechas years edit Anders Lofstrand Sr died in 1955 and in April 1961 Old Ebbitt Grill was sold to Peter Bechas 63 the former head waiter at the Willard Hotel from 1955 to 1958 64 Bechas ownership of the restaurant was marred by repeated tax problems Between April 1961 and April 1970 the restaurant paid its sales tax in only six of 105 months Bechas was successfully prosecuted for failure to pay sales taxes in 1963 and 1966 and was prosecuted again in 1970 The business also failed to deposit withholding taxes on employee wages with the city 63 The restaurant had little reputation by 1969 and was primarily known for its pork chops seafood and steaks and as one of the few D C restaurants to serve dinner until 12 30 A M 65 In July 1969 Old Ebbitt Grill was one of 171 firms in the city cited for non payment of taxes 66 A tax claim was also filed by the federal government and the business was unable to satisfy the claim On June 5 1970 Old Ebbitt Grill was closed by the Internal Revenue Service IRS for failure to pay 10 995 15 in taxes going back to 1965 67 Purchase by Clyde s Restaurant Group edit Old Ebbitt Grill was purchased on June 16 1970 at a tax sale by Stuart C Davidson and John Laytham co owners of the restaurant Clyde s of Georgetown 68 Clyde s was founded in 1963 by Davidson then an investment banker after new legislation made it legal to serve liquor to patrons standing at bars Since 1917 the liquor law had required that alcohol only be consumed while sitting at tables 69 Davidson and Laytham bid in the tax sale hoping to buy beer steins and the mahogany bar but ended up with the entire restaurant 70 The IRS offered the entire restaurant for sale after an auction of individual items failed to raise more than 6 639 The sale price was 11 250 71 Among the items they purchased were a 200 year old clock which used carved wooden gears for its mechanism a carved wooden grizzly bear once owned by Alexander Hamilton crystal decanters dating to 1575 and stuffed boar s head swordfish alligator and walrus head 67 71 72 The new Old Ebbitt Grill improved its menu It reopened at the same location on October 13 1970 The mahogany bar was slightly lowered new HVAC installed and a general 130 000 refurbishment completed 72 73 Clyde s and Old Ebbitt Grill shared the same menus which lowered costs and led to improved training for kitchen staff 74 In June 1974 a Washington Post food review declared Old Ebbitt s fare to be American plain and not bad 75 By 1977 Washington Post food critic Donald Dresden was praising the restaurants bacon cheeseburgers and innovative menu items Imitators are still trying to top Clyde s and the Ebbitt s bacon cheeseburgers and the disc shaped deep fried potatoes that come with but they ll have to keep trying still 74 The new owners retained Old Ebbitt s dark paneling shelves of beer steins mounted game trophies and spittoons which it had long showcased The decor was made more whimsical however leading Washington Post architectural critic Wolf Von Eckardt to declare in 1978 that the Grill was one of the most charming rendezvous on the Eastern Seaboard 76 The restaurant featured bare unpolished wood flooring throughout with a fern bar on the second floor Washington Post reporter Pamela Kessler said in 1981 The restaurant feels like old Philadelphia rather than a slicker parvenu Washington 77 Old Ebbitt Grill gained notoriety in 1977 as the location where a Soviet spy ring operated In 1976 Vladimir I Alekseyev a reporter for the Soviet Union s news agency TASS contacted United States Information Agency employee Ronald L Humphrey who was already acting as a spy for the North Vietnamese government 78 Humphreys had already been identified by the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI and was facing prosecution for his actions Humphrey and his attorney told the FBI about the contact immediately and Humphrey agreed to act as a double agent Alekseyev and Humphrey met at Old Ebbitt Grill in December 1976 The United States expelled Alekseyev on February 6 1977 79 The restaurant continued to improve through the late 1970s and into the early 1980s In 1978 it was one of the few establishments in Washington D C to serve Guinness Stout on tap 80 In 1979 Washington Post restaurant reviewer Lon Tuck noted that Old Ebbitt s Omelet Room was one of the most famous locations in the city 81 Its trademark omelets were the Old Ebbitt made with sharp cheddar cheese and Bermuda onions and another made with chili and served with a garden salad with Roquefort blue cheese dressing 77 Washington Post reporter Pamela Kessler observed in 1981 that its signature dishes included chili blue cheese and Welsh rarebit hamburgers quiche Lorraine a Reuben sandwich and steaks 77 Its crab cakes were poorly reviewed as too bland and heavy with bread 82 It was one of the few dining places in the city to stay open until 1 00 A M 77 Demolition of 1427 F Street edit Old Ebbitt Grill was demolished in 1983 during redevelopment of the site The restaurant was first threatened with demolition in 1962 Around the corner from the restaurant on 15th Street NW and across the street from the U S Treasury Building stood the nearly block long Keith Albee Building designed by noted architect Jules Henri de Sibour and Rhodes Tavern the first polling place in the city the first city town hall and the place where citizens of the District of Columbia first petitioned Congress for the right to vote 83 Developer Morris Cafritz who purchased the Keith Albee Building and Rhodes Tavern in 1956 wanted to tear down the entire half block to construct a new office building 84 He did not proceed at the time but the threat of demolition was a catalyst to a committee of citizens known as the Landmarks Committee recommending in 1970 that the city enact legislation protecting the two structures and Old Ebbitt Grill 85 No legislation was enacted however In 1977 developer Oliver T Carr proposed tearing down the entire block between F and G streets NW and 14th and 15th streets NW and constructing a 12 story hotel and office building complex to be called Metropolitan Square Demolition would include Old Ebbitt Grill and Rhodes Tavern Carr had already negotiated to move the Old Ebbitt Grill to a new location within the new structure 86 There was little opposition to the demolition of most of the block which included the Old Ebbitt Grill site A series of lawsuits petitions and intervention by city and federal officials occurred As demolition proceeded Old Ebbitt Grill hosted a large party which won notice in The Washington Post Attendance was so large the party spilled out into the street Music was provided by Federal Jazz Commission a traditional classic jazz band which made music indoors and out 73 In February 1980 Carr agreed to preserve the facades of the Keith Albee and National Metropolitan Bank buildings as part of the Metropolitan Square development 87 In August 1980 Carr announced that Old Ebbitt Grill would reopen in a corner location near to its old 1427 F Street NW spot The restaurant said it would lease 13 492 square feet 1 253 4 m2 of space on two levels with the bar main restaurant and oyster bar on the main level Old Ebbitt intended to close its doors in April 1983 and reopen a few weeks later in the new location in May 88 The time frame for closure proved optimistic Old Ebbitt Grill did not close its doors at 1427 F Street until September 12 1983 89 1427 F Street NW was demolished in early December 1983 90 Old Ebbitt Grill 1984 to present edit1980s edit nbsp Northwest corner of Metropolitan Square showing the Keith Albee facade and the new structure built behind it The blue awnings shade the windows of Old Ebbitt Grill Old Ebbitt Grill reopened at 675 15th Street NW in early October 1983 Clyde s Restaurant Group spent 4 4 million constructing and outfitting the interior 91 The architectural firm of Andrews amp Chatelain designed the interior 92 The interior decoration was designed to mimic the bar at 1427 F Street and included the game trophies some of which were originals not recreations and rumored to have been shot by President Theodore Roosevelt 93 Old Ebbitt s famous mahogany bar was not installed in the new location A replica was crafted instead 89 The walls were paneled in mahogany and the ceilings decorated with murals and stencils The restaurant had seating for 200 at tables and in booths The booths had green leather seats and velvet covered walls and were separated from one another by etched glass dividers The long bar still sported mounted game animal trophies overhead the fixtures were of marble or brass and the curtains of lace An oyster bar was added to the rear of the restaurant on the main floor The kitchen featured a special charcoal burning grill and the wine cellar featured a Cruvinet wine dispensing system 94 95 Gas lamps were used in the main bar and booth area 96 A year after the Grill opened The Washington Post said it had the best dining ambience of any restaurant in the city 97 The restaurant also instituted a back waiter system Back waiters were trained to balance plates of food on their arms so they could get them to tables faster without the need to load and unload trays Back waiters were required to have excellent physical strength and good balance The back waiter system was created so that waiters continued to wait on tables rather than spending time in the kitchen waiting for orders to be filled 98 The Omelet Room did not make the transition to the new location National health campaigns against high cholesterol had reduced demand for foods heavy in eggs 99 Instead the basement contained a large private dining room The new restaurant was immediately popular 100 Washington Post food critic Phyllis Richman declared the restaurant s signature hamburger its best entree She found the appetizers and salads excellent but considered the pasta dishes hit or miss and disparaged the main entrees 94 Within a year the restaurant was mostly being patronized by yuppies lawyers and tourists 101 102 A 1986 food review in The Washington Post concluded that Old Ebbitt Grill had the worst omelets and pancakes in the city 97 but the best appetizers Its main claim to fame was its hefty portions and moderate prices 102 Old Ebbitt Grill was the site of a discussion among administration officials hoping to protect President Reagan from fallout related to the Iran Contra affair of 1986 Beginning in 1984 officials in the Reagan administration sought to sell conventional weapons to Iran via Israel in exchange for Iran using its influence to win the release of American hostages being held by Hezbollah and other terrorist groups in Lebanon which was then in the throes of a civil war In December 1985 Oliver North a Lieutenant Colonel in the Marine Corps who was serving as a military aide to the National Security Council proposed selling the weapons directly to Iran at a 15 million mark up He would use the excess funds to supply arms and supplies to the Contras The Contras were guerrilla fighters opposed to the communist government of Nicaragua led by Daniel Ortega The United States was barred by the Boland Amendment from supporting the Contras The Iran Contra affair was exposed by the press on November 3 1986 and on November 13 President Reagan publicly admitted that an arms for hostages deal existed However the diversion of funds to the Contras was not yet exposed On November 22 Assistant Attorney General William Bradford Reynolds discovered an April 1986 draft memo from North to National Security Advisor John Poindexter who was at the time also serving as a Vice Admiral in the United States Navy which suggested that 12 million in Iranian weapons sales be used to help the Contras Reynolds discovered the document in North s files during a meeting with North in his White House office Reynolds smuggled the document out of North s office and took it to a luncheon meeting at Old Ebbitt with Attorney General Edwin Meese When shown the document Meese allegedly said Oh darn Assistant Attorney General Charles J Cooper a young appointee in the Office of Legal Counsel also at the lunch said the memo was a bomb 103 In the late 1980s Old Ebbitt Grill became a popular hangout for actors and crew from the nearby National Theatre and Warner Theatre Choreographer and director Bob Fosse was preparing to host a party at Old Ebbitt Grill when he collapsed outside the restaurant and died of a heart attack on September 23 1987 His revival of Sweet Charity which he choreographed had just debuted at the National Theatre 104 Old Ebbitt began hanging posters in the lobby of current theatrical performances 105 President George H W Bush and First Lady Barbara Bush met the singer and actor Sting at Old Ebbitt Grill in September 1989 after his Washington debut in the title role in Three Penny Opera 106 The Rolling Stones dined at the restaurant a few weeks later after a concert in the city 107 In 1991 playwright Neil Simon director Gene Saks and the cast of the play Lost in Yonkers held the opening night after party on January 17 at Old Ebbitt Grill Just minutes before the curtain rose on the Washington debut of the play the cast learned that the United States had declared war on Iraq and begun the Gulf War 108 After the world premier of the motion picture The River Wild in August 1994 in Washington D C a reception for the stars was held at Old Ebbitt 109 1990s edit nbsp The famous mahogany bar at Old Ebbitt GrillIn the early 1990s Old Ebbitt Grill was financially one of the best performing restaurants in the city In July 1992 the Washington Business Journal said the 390 seat Old Ebbitt Grill grossed more money than any other restaurant in the D C metropolitan area 110 It spent 17 000 a month on table linens 111 The Washington Post s Phyllis Richman claimed the combination of superb hamburgers with seasonal foods such as fresh Alaskan halibut corn on the cob in the summer and locally grown vegetables and berries was what drew customers 112 In May 1994 Old Ebbitt Grill added a take out service Ebbitt Express in the atrium section of its restaurant 113 In 1995 business dropped after Pennsylvania Avenue NW was closed to street traffic and curbside parking was eliminated in front of the restaurant on 15th Street NW for security reasons following the bombing by an American domestic terrorist of the Oklahoma Federal Building 114 Some of the business was made up by Ebbitt Express which by December 1997 was serving 600 meals a day twice as many as projected 115 Old Ebbitt Grill s oyster bar closed in 1992 after diners fell ill from eating raw oysters infected with the deadly Vibrio vulnificus bacteria The restaurant established a procedure for an independent laboratory to test its oysters for the bacteria prior to consumption In November 1994 Old Ebbitt Grill reopened its oyster bar to much press attention 116 Washington Post food critic Eve Zibart writing in August 1995 said that its highly polished woodwork counter facing the ice bed and shuckers and excellent selection of oysters made it a first class raw bar 117 Shortly after the oyster bar reopened Old Ebbitt Grill lost its long time chef Juan Bosio The restaurant hired Robert McGowan formerly a chef at Sardi s in New York City 118 2000s edit Security changes in Washington D C after the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks significantly affected Old Ebbitt Grill for a while The restaurant was forced to close for two days when streets near the White House were closed 119 Over the next two weeks the restaurant lost half its business which normally ran 2 000 customers a day most of them politicians and businesspeople 120 After First Lady Laura Bush began patronizing the restaurant 121 business soon returned to normal The Beltway sniper attacks of fall 2002 did not affect business which continued to hold steady through February 2003 a time of high alert and anxiety 122 Due to security restrictions in 2004 Old Ebbitt Grill was nearly prevented from its traditional practice of selling coffee and hot chocolate to spectators watching the inaugural parade in this case for the landmark election of Barack Obama as President of the United States That year the Democratic Leadership Council rented the entire restaurant for a private party on Inauguration Day 123 In 2003 Old Ebbitt Grill was busiest on weekends in the spring when high school student tourist business was at its highest in the city 124 The restaurant was praised by The Washington Post for being able to accommodate large groups offering a variety of plain and upscale food providing friendly service and having the best raw bar in the city 125 The restaurant was also criticized by the newspaper for being too noisy for conversation 126 and providing bland hamburgers salads and breakfast 125 By 2008 however Old Ebbitt Grill s reviews had improved Post food critic Tom Sietsema continued to laud the friendly service He also praised the Breakfast Club a deep fried ham French toast and bacon breakfast sandwich He appreciated small touches such as coat hooks near booths and pepper mills on tables and found the staff s honesty about menu choices refreshing 127 In 2009 Old Ebbitt Grill had the fourth or fifth highest volume of restaurant customers in the United States 99 Due to its proximity to the White House it was a favorite of United States Secret Service personnel as well as tourists 128 In 2010 after the Rally to Restore Sanity and or Fear comedian Stephen Colbert hosted a Comedy Central after party at Old Ebbitt Grill In attendance were Wyatt Cenac Rosario Dawson Mick Foley Tim Meadows John Oliver then a Colbert show regular and Jamie Hyneman and Adam Savage the hosts of the MythBusters television series 129 2010s edit In January 2012 Clyde s Restaurant Group chief executive officer John Laytham claimed that Old Ebbitt Grill was the third or fourth highest grossing restaurant in the country Laytham said the restaurant turned away 800 to 900 customers a day and did 26 million in sales in 2011 91 In April 2012 sales were still 1 percent ahead of 2011 130 After a slow summer business at the restaurant had slowed so much that sales were steady compared to 2011 131 In 2011 The Washington Post listed Old Ebbitt Grill as one of the top three raw bars in the city 132 Post food reviewer Tom Sietsema however had little good to say about the entrees nearly all of which he found disappointing and the service which he found to be tardy and focused more on getting customers to buy more food The busy atmosphere he argued was not conducive to a positive dining experience 133 Old Ebbitt Grill said in December 2012 that it was already booked for a private event for the second inauguration of Barack Obama 134 Restaurant Business Magazine reported in October 2014 that Old Ebbitt Grill ranked third in the nation in revenue for 2013 The industry trade publication of record said the restaurant had 26 7 million in revenues in 2013 serving 600 000 meals Only Tao Asian Bistro in Las Vegas with 64 6 million in revenues and Joe s Stone Crab in Miami with 35 3 million in revenues ranked higher 135 In July 2019 Clyde s Restaurant Group was acquired by Graham Holdings 136 About the restaurant edit nbsp A view of Grant s Bar at Old Ebbitt Grill featuring a 1900 oil painting by Jean Paul Gervais Old Ebbitt Grill has four bars the Old Bar which is part of the Main Dining Room and features the mounted game trophies the Oyster Bar to the right of the entry foyer Grant s Bar toward the rear of the restaurant adjacent to the Atrium Dining Room and the Corner Bar up the short steps and to the left of the entry foyer along G Street NW The etched glass panels separating the Old Bar from the Main Dining Room were created by Charles Shefts Grant s Bar named for American Civil War General Ulysses S Grant features a ceiling mural by Carol Loeb An oil painting by Peter Egeli replicates one of Mathew Brady s famous Civil War photographs of Grant The Main Dining Room contains booth seating and limited table seating The Atrium Dining Room in the rear offers table seating although fixed long benches provide some seating The Atrium Dining Room contains a large marble fountain and is open to the atrium in the center of Metropolitan Square Ebbitt Express is located in the Atrium Dining Room Downstairs from the entry foyer is the Cabinet Room a dining room available for private events The foyer and Main Dining Room feature paintings by Kamil Kubik and in the Oyster Bar hang oil paintings by Peter Egeli and watercolors by J Robert Burnell The large Howard Chandler Christy painting Three Bathers hangs near the rear of the Main Dining Room The Corner Bar is decorated with paintings by Claiborne D Gregory Jr and carved waterfowl decoys by numerous artists Sculptures by John Dreyfuss adorn the Atrium Dining Room Impressionist works by James Harrington hang throughout the restaurant Paintings of game birds by Robin Hill hang in the Cabinet Room Awards editThe Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington gave Old Ebbitt Grill its Visitors Choice Award in 2011 137 Oyster Riot editOyster Riot is an annual oyster eating event held at Old Ebbitt Grill each November on the weekend before Thanksgiving Although originally a four hour all you can eat and drink event held on one day by 2011 Oyster Riot had expanded to a three day event held on Friday Saturday and Sunday 138 The first Oyster Riot was held in October 1995 to promote Old Ebbitt Grill s oyster bar The oyster bar served 15 to 20 different varieties of oyster and matched them with seven to 10 different types of wine 139 Oyster Riot proved wildly popular In 2007 the event sold every ticket in 38 minutes 140 In 2010 Old Ebbitt Grill joined the Shell Recycling Alliance a project of the Oyster Recovery Partnership a nonprofit helping to restore oyster populations in the Chesapeake Bay Old Ebbitt Grill donates its used oyster shells to the alliance which plants baby oysters known as spat on the shells and deposits them in the bay The restaurant donated about 14 000 oysters a week to the alliance in 2010 141 Old Ebbitt has long composted its food waste 142 but oyster shells are not compostable and before 2010 were thrown out as garbage 143 To help the Shell Recycling Alliance Old Ebbitt Grill introduced a new element to its Oyster Riot a Saturday afternoon event known as Matinee Riot Held at noon a portion of the proceeds are donated to the Oyster Recovery Partnership Popular culture editOld Ebbitt Grill was featured in the 1993 film In the Line of Fire An exterior scene was shown and then Clint Eastwood and John Mahoney were shown sitting at Grant s Bar inside A plaque referencing this film is on the wall in Grant s Bar 144 Old Ebbitt Grill is mentioned by fictional White House staffer Sam Seaborn in Season 3 Episode 19 of the television show The West Wing 145 circular reference Sam suggests the restaurant for a lunch meeting location but is rebuffed and has the meeting at the fictional Patrick s instead Alex Kapranos lead singer for the Scottish rock band Franz Ferdinand included an entry on Old Ebbitt Grill in his 2006 book Sound Bites Eating on Tour With Franz Ferdinand 146 Old Ebbitt Grill is mentioned in the novels Path of the Assassin by Brad Thor 147 The Outlaws by W E B Griffin and William E Butterworth IV 148 The Pravda Messenger by Robert Cornuke 149 The Athena Factor by W Michael Gear 150 House Justice by Mike Lawson 151 The Green Trap by Ben Bova 152 The Widening Gyre by Robert B Parker 153 and Winter of the World by Ken Follett 154 See also edit nbsp Food portalList of the oldest restaurants in the United States List of oyster barsReferences edit Determining which establishment is the oldest bar in Washington D C is complex Old Ebbitt Grill is the oldest continuously operating bar in the city However it has changed owners and locations several times which may invite the claim that it is not continuously operated The bar and restaurant in the Willard InterContinental Washington also lays claim to being the oldest bar and restaurant in the city However the original building was torn down and a new one erected on the same lot in 1901 and the hotel was closed from 1968 to 1986 As of 2010 the oldest bar in the city without an ownership change or interruption in service due to location change was Billy Martin s Tavern which opened in 1933 See Kelly John D C s Oldest Bar Oldest Hotel That s a Tricky Question The Washington Post June 20 2010 a b c d Larner p 101 At the time the District of Columbia was not divided into quadrants and the streets had yet to be described as northwest southeast etc a b c d e f g Goode p 210 a b c Henry p 90 Larner p 100 Brown George Rothwell Ebbitt Hotel Gone Had Its Beginning in Boarding House The Washington Post April 8 1926 Barnes p 89 a b Larner p 101 102 a b Eskew p 156 Eskew p 170 There was a family connection between Ebbitt House and the Willard Hotel Richard Forrest s eldest son Julius married Sophia Ogle daughter of Benjamin Ogle Benjamin Ogle was the maternal grandfather of Benjamin Ogle Tayloe the man who owned the Willard Hotel See Watson p 1 Barnes p 89 a b c d e f g h Larner p 102 a b Larner p 102 103 Peck p 25 26 Evelyn Dickson and Ackerman p 74 Story of Murder Bay The Washington Post July 8 1888 Savage p 100 101 Gutheim and Lee p 73 Lowry p 61 65 Evelyn Dickson and Ackerman p 63 64 Keeping Hotel To Day The Washington Post March 6 1892 a b Townsend p 576 Porteus p 41 Larner p 103 a b c d e Whitehead Frank Insco Landmark Passes As Ebbitt House Doors Are Closed The Washington Post May 10 1925 Otero p 289 Franklin p 292 293 Zon p 5 Barrows p 454 a b Hodgson p 279 Corning p 138 Phillips p 26 The Removal of Chief Justice Chase s Body The Washington Post October 13 1886 Admiral Davis Dead The Washington Post March 13 1889 Goode p 210 218 a b New Manager for Ebbitt The Washington Post May 17 1910 The Ebbitt in New Hands The Washington Post November 17 1889 a b H C Burch Dead New York Times November 26 1906 Ebbitt House Changes The Washington Post November 26 1891 Ingham and Feldman p 710 Sole Manager of the Ebbitt The Washington Post October 8 1893 Goode p 211 Hotel Loses Old Employee The Washington Post October 22 1907 Caleb Willard Dead The Washington Post August 3 1905 Goode p 202 203 Rents Ebbitt House The Washington Post August 25 1909 To Remodel Ebbitt House The Washington Post September 5 1909 Mrs Willard Is Dead The Washington Post January 13 1910 Ebbitt Cafe Is Ready The Washington Post November 24 1910 Blaze in Ebbitt House The Washington Post August 13 1913 Jury In Ebbitt House Case Fails to Agree The Washington Post December 13 1913 Ebbitt House Case Dropped The Washington Post September 26 1914 Zak Dan Three Bars With Ties to D C s Prohibition Past The Washington Post December 7 2008 a b Reed p 100 Ebbitt to Close Friday The Washington Post April 30 1925 Ebbitt House Auction Draws Curious Crowd The Washington Post May 6 1925 New Ebbitt Hotel Under Construction The Washington Post July 26 1925 Passing of the Ebbitt The Washington Post November 24 1925 Press Club to Start Ebbitt House Razing The Washington Post January 6 1926 Special Notices The Washington Post Mar 20 1934 Restaurant Office Looted The Washington Post July 5 1934 Christmas Greetings The Washington Post December 25 1934 Special Notices The Washington Post March 20 1934 Few in Calvert Club The Washington Post March 29 1914 City of Rockville Historic District Commission Staff Report 610 Lofstrand Lane Application HDC2010 00507 April 23 2010 p 7 Accessed 2012 04 15 Anders R Lofstrand Ex State Senator 42 The Washington Post March 10 1955 The junior Lofstrand later invented and patented the forearm crutch in 1945 He and his father founded the Lofstrand Co a diversified manufacturer which was a major defense contractor in the 1940s and 1950s Anders Lofstrand Jr was also a Maryland state senator He died months after losing re election in 1954 a b Curry William N Tax Evasion in the District Is Punishable By a Wristslap The Washington Post April 12 1970 Peter G Bechas Area Restaurant Owner The Washington Post October 13 1988 Kramer Joan Joining the Night Owls for Dinner The Washington Post November 30 1969 City Lists 171 Accused The Washington Post July 20 1969 a b Ward Alex U S Order Shuts Old Ebbitt Grill Claims Owner Owes 11 000 in Tax The Washington Post June 6 1970 Dempsey Mike The NRN 50 All American Icons Old Ebbitt Grill Nation s Restaurant News January 25 2010 Martin Douglas Stuart C Davidson 78 Owner of Legendary Washington Bar New York Times August 8 2001 Accessed 2012 12 29 Kelly John At Clyde s Treat Yourself to a Good Lunch and Cause The Washington Post June 3 2009 Accessed 2012 12 29 a b Kernan Michael Old Ebbitt Auction The Washington Post June 17 1970 a b Zito Tort Reopening Day New Shine for the Old Ebbitt The Washington Post October 14 1970 a b Romano Carlin and Mastrangelo Joseph A Bash to Call Its Own The Washington Post July 11 1979 a b Dresden Donald Cruisin for Burgers The Washington Post July 3 1977 Old Ebbitt Grill The Washington Post June 2 1974 Von Eckardt Wolf Big Stakes In a New City Game The Washington Post March 4 1978 a b c d Kessler Pamela Out to Dinner and a Show The Washington Post November 27 1981 2 Sentenced to Jail Term As Viet Spies Associated Press July 8 1978 Dickey Christopher Court Told Humphrey Reported Soviet Spy Offer The Washington Post March 22 1978 Eateries The Washington Post October 20 1978 Tuck Lon WWR and Ford Celebrating a Union The Washington Post June 8 1979 Davis Melissa Let Them Eat Crab Cakes The Washington Post September 9 1979 Goode p 196 197 Von Eckardt Wolf Treasury s Losing Regal Old Friend The Washington Post July 22 1962 Eisen Jack Panel Asks Buildings Be Preserved The Washington Post November 9 1970 McCombs Phil and Oman Anne H 40 Million Mall Is Planned The Washington Post November 12 1977 Wheeler Linda City Allows Demolition of Historic Tavern The Washington Post February 12 1980 Whether the city gave the Oliver T Carr Co any financial incentives for saving the facade is in dispute Joseph N Grano Jr campaign coordinator for the Save Historic Rhodes Tavern Initiative Committee asserted it did Robert O Carr executive vice president of the Oliver T Carr Co asserts it did not See Grano Jr Joseph N Rhodes Tavern Should Be Saved The Washington Post November 3 1983 Carr Robert O Metropolitan Square Should Be Completed The Washington Post November 3 1983 Bucklin Randolph E Old Ebbitt to Be Moved Next Door The Washington Post August 18 1982 a b Weil Martin Staff Patrons Toast Old Ebbitt s Demise As They Await Its Rebirth on 15th Street The Washington Post September 12 1983 Eisen Jack Old Ebbitt Grill Razed The Washington Post December 8 1983 a b Joynt Carol Ross A Q amp A With John Laytham CEO of Clyde s Restaurant Group Washingtonian January 5 2012 Horwitz Sari Zephyr Hopes to Exploit Mystique of Luxury Train Travel The Washington Post September 24 1984 Architect John Richards Andrews did most of the design work See John Andrews Dies at 66 Longtime Area Architect The Washington Post July 8 1995 Then amp Again The Washington Post October 21 2007 a b Richman Phyllis Old Ebbitt Grill The Washington Post February 5 1984 Cruvinet is the name of a company which invented a system for dispensing wine similar to the way beer is dispensed on tap Cruvinet systems which can be mobile or installed and can accommodate anywhere from two to 120 bottles immediately recork a bottle of wine Nitrogen gas is pumped through a valve in the replacement cork to prevent oxidation This allows a bottle of wine to remain open for up to two weeks without spoiling The system was invented in 1978 although many different companies make wine bar systems today See Chamberlain Chris Cruvinet It s Like Wine on Tap Nashville Scene December 21 2010 Accessed 2012 12 31 Readers Guide The Washington Post September 23 1984 a b Superlatives to Eat By The Washington Post March 24 1985 Stepping Up to the Plates The Washington Post September 3 2003 a b Kelly John At Clyde s Treat Yourself to a Good Lunch and Cause The Washington Post June 3 2009 Pyatt Jr Rudolph A Can Rhodes Tavern Be Resolved The Washington Post December 23 1983 Apres Show More Food For Thought The Washington Post January 25 1985 Sommers Pamela Hot Spots for the Eat of the Night The Washington Post October 4 1985 a b Richman Phyllis Old Ebbitt Grill The Washington Post September 22 1985 Pincus Walter and Morgan Dan High Level Iran Cover Up Shown in Testimony Documents The Washington Post June 26 1987 Hall Charles W Bob Fosse Dies After Collapsing On D C Street The Washington Post September 24 1987 Brown Joe Dramatic Discoveries The Washington Post May 7 1989 Conroy Sarah Booth September 15 1989 At the Sting Along The Washington Post Retrieved May 3 2019 Conconi Chuck Personalities The Washington Post September 26 1989 Conconi Chuck Personalities The Washington Post January 18 1991 Fall Frolics The Washington Post August 28 1994 McKeon Nancy Lite The Washington Post August 23 1992 Singletary Michelle Failures Eat Into Restaurant Community The Washington Post March 11 1992 Richman Phyllis Potomac Fever The Washington Post September 19 1993 Richman Phyllis C Star Service Up on the Roof The Washington Post May 13 1994 Fehr Stephen C and Haggerty Maryann Barricades a Blow to Business The Washington Post May 28 1995 Salmon Jacqueline The New Workplace Motto Let s Not Do Lunch The Washington Post December 3 1997 Zibart Eve O Chestnut Tree The Washington Post November 11 1994 Zibart Eve The Raw Truth About Shellfish The Washington Post August 11 1995 On The Fridge The Washington Post December 13 1995 Sietsema Tom On the Fridge The Washington Post September 19 2001 Sugarman Carole Food amp Drink Changing Needs The Washington Post September 26 2001 Timberg Craig Fined Mayor Revives Fundraising The Washington Post August 22 2002 Reel Monte The President Who Lives Apart The Washington Post January 26 2003 Irwin Neil and Hedgpeth Dana High Alert High Anxiety The Washington Post February 17 2003 Nakamura David and Boschma Janie Comfortable Perches Along Pennsylvania Avenue Are Much in Demand The Washington Post January 16 2009 Schulte Brigid To Tan a Place in the Sun Not Needed The Washington Post June 1 2003 a b Sietsema Tom Seeing Stars The Washington Post October 19 2003 Visitors to the Mall Have Plenty of Dining Options While Sightseeing The Washington Post May 22 2003 Sietsema Tom The Bacon and Eggs Brigade The Washington Post November 30 2008 Roig Franzia Manuel Lunch at the Power Section The Washington Post September 20 2009 Argetsinger Amy and Roberts Roxanne Thinking About Drapes In Case It s Curtains For Madam Speaker The Washington Post November 2 2010 Reality Check US Restaurateurs Say Cons Sent Mostly Static The Main Wire April 17 2012 Reality Check US Restaurateurs Say Consumer Sent Still Stuck The Main Wire September 21 2012 Where to Shell Out For Oysters in D C The Washington Post February 19 2011 Sietsema Tom Worth Taking a Second Look The Washington Post May 20 2011 Chen Aimee and Mendelson Will No Rush Yet on Inaugural Tickets and Hotel Rooms Asbury Park Daily Herald December 3 2012 Clabaugh Jeff October 14 2014 Old Ebbitt Grill Among Top Grossing Independent Restaurants Washington Business Journal Retrieved October 15 2014 Maynard Michelle August 1 2019 From News To Nightcaps Washington s Graham Family Buys The Clyde s Group Forbes Rammys Todd Gray Top Chef The Washington Post June 29 2011 Stroup Sheila Small Space Big Vision New Orleans Times Picayune June 23 2012 Where the Oyster Is Your World The Washington Post October 10 1999 Basic Black and Bivalves The Washington Post September 19 2007 Goodman Christy A Shell Game for a Cause The Washington Post December 23 2010 WasteRecycNews Waste amp Recycling News August 20 2012 Fears Darryl Scientists Use a Warm Bath to Get Oysters in the Mood The Washington Post May 10 2011 Slovick Mike Movies Filmed in Washington In the Line of Fire WashingtonPost com 2001 Accessed 2012 12 31 The West Wing du Lac J Freedom A Keen Taste for Touring The Washington Post January 24 2007 Thor p 499 Griffin and Butterworth chapter 3 Cornuke chapter 10 Gear p 25 26 Lawson p 31 32 Bova p 190 Parker p 113 Follett p 289 Bibliography editBarnes Robert William Colonial Families of Maryland Bound and Determined to Succeed Baltimore Md Genealogical Pub Co 2007 Barrows John Henry Henry Ward Beecher the Shakespeare of the Pulpit New York Funk amp Wagnalls 1893 Bova Ben The Green Trap New York Macmillan 2007 Corning Amos Elwood William McKinley A Biographical Study New York Broadway Printing Co 1907 Cornuke Robert The Pravda Messenger New York Simon and Schuster 2009 Eskew Garnett Laidlaw Willard s of Washington the Epic of a Capital Caravansary New York Coward McCann 1954 Evelyn Douglas E Dickson Paul and Ackerman S J On This Spot Pinpointing the Past in Washington D C Sterling Va Capital Books 2008 Franklin Samuel Rhoades Memories of a Rear Admiral Who Has Served for More Than Half a Century in the Navy of the United States New York Harper amp Brothers 1898 Gear W Michael The Athena Factor New York Macmillan 2006 Goode James M Capital Losses A Cultural History of Washington s Destroyed Buildings 2d ed Washington D C Smithsonian Books 2003 Griffin W E B and Butterworth IV William E The Outlaws New york Putnam Adult 2010 Gutheim Frederick Albert and Lee Antoinette Josephine Worthy of the Nation Washington DC From L Enfant to the National Capital Planning Commission 2d ed Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2006 Henry Kate Kearney Richard Forrest and His Times 1795 1830 Records of the Columbia Historical Society 1902 Hodgson Godfrey Woodrow Wilson s Right Hand The Life of Colonel Edward M House New Haven Conn Yale University Press 2006 Ingham John N and Feldman Lynne B African American Business Leaders A Biographical Dictionary Westport Conn Greenwood Press 1994 Larner John B Remarks of John B Larner Before the Society March 10 1902 in Exhibiting An Old Photograph of the South East Corner of 14th and F Streets Records of the Columbia Historical Society 1903 Lawson Mike House Justice New York Atlantic Monthly Press 2010 Lowry Thomas Power The Story the Soldiers Wouldn t Tell Sex in the Civil War Mechanicsburg Pa Stackpole Books 1994 Otero Miguel Antonio My Life on the Frontier Santa Fe N M Sunstone Press 2007 Peck Garrett Prohibition in Washington D C How Dry We Weren t Charleston S C History Press 2011 Phillips Kevin William McKinley New York Times Books 2003 Porteus Archibald A Scamper Through Some Cities of America Being a Record of a Three Months Tour in the United States and Canada Glasgow Scotland D Bryce amp Son 1890 Reed Robert Old Washington D C in Early Photographs 1846 1932 New York Dover Publications 1980 Savage Kirk Monument Wars Washington D C the National Mall and the Transformation of the Memorial Landscape Berkeley Calif University of California Press 2009 Thor Brad Path of the Assassin New York Simon and Schuster 2007 Townsend George Alfred Washington Outside and Inside A Picture and a Narrative of the Origin Growth Excellencies Abuses Beauties and Personages of Our Governing City Chicago J Betts amp Co 1874 Watson Winslow Marston In Memoriam Benjamin Ogle Tayloe Philadelphia Sherman amp Co 1872 Zon Calvin Goddard The Good Fight That Didn t End Henry P Goddard s Accounts of Civil War and Peace Columbia S C University of South Carolina Press 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Old Ebbitt Grill Old Ebbitt Grill official website Three Stories About Old Ebbitt Grill Ghosts of DC history blog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Old Ebbitt Grill amp oldid 1174682489, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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