
1805 - The
people of Vienna (Wien), Austria point to the term "wiener" to prove their claim
as the birthplace of the hot dog. It is said that the master sausage maker who made the
first wiener got his early training in Frankfurt, Germany. He called his sausage the
"wiener-frankfurter." But it was generally known as "wienerwurst." The
wiener comes from Wien (the German name of Vienna) and wurst means sausage in German.
1852 - The butcher's guild in Frankfurt, Germany introduced a spiced and smoked sausage
which was packed in a thin casing and they called it a "frankfurter" after their
hometown. The sausage had a slightly curved shape supposedly due to the coaxing of a
butcher who had a popular dachshund. The frankfurter was also known as a "dachshund
sausage" and this name came with it to America.
1860 - In the United States, the wienerwurst became known as a "wienie" in the
1860s and as a "wiener" by the early 1990s.
Also in doubt is who first served the first hot dog! Wieners and frankfurters don't become
hot dogs until someone puts them in a roll or a bun. There are several stories or legends
as to how this first happened. As the cuisine of Germany relies heavily upon sausages of
all shapes and sizes, it stands to reason that the German people would bring these
sausages with them to America.
German immigrants appear to have sold hot dogs, along with milk rolls and sauerkraut, from
pushcarts in New York City's Bowery during the 1860s.
1867 - Charles Feltman, a German butcher, opened up the first Coney Island hot dog stand
in Brooklyn, New York. According to the article Coney Island -Food & Dining by Jeffrey
Stanton:
In 1867 Charles Feltman owned a pie-wagon that delivered his freshly baked pies to the
inns and lager-beer saloons that lined Coney Island's beaches. His clients also wanted hot
sandwiches to serve to their customers. But his wagon was small and he knew that it would
be hard to manage making a variety of sandwiches in a confined space. He thought that
perhaps something simple like a hot sausage served on a roll might be the solution. He
presented his problem to Donovan, the wheel-wright on East New York and Howard Street in
Brooklyn, who had built his pie-wagon. The man saw no problem in building a tin-lined
chest to keep the rolls fresh and rigging a small charcoal stove inside to boil sausages.
When the wheel-wright finished the installation they fired up the stove for a test run.
Donovan thought that the sausage sandwich was a strange idea but he was willing to try it
as Feltman boiled the succulent pork sausage and placed between a roll. The wheel-wright
tasted the it and liked it. Thus the hot-dog was born.
He sold 3,684 sausages in a roll during his first year in business. He is also credited
with the idea of the warm bun. The hard-working Feltman built a mini-empire with a hotel,
beer gardens, restaurants, food stands, and various rides to amuse his customers. The
Depression in the 1930's began the decline of Feltman's business. Visitors to Coney Island
could barely afford the subway ride yet alone a sit down meal at Feltman's. At his death
in 1910, he left a business worth over one million dollars which all started with selling
hot dogs.
1880 - A German peddler, Antonoine Feuchtwanger, sold hot sausages in the streets of St.
Louis, Missouri. He would supply white gloves with each purchase so that his customers
would not burn their hands while eating the sausage. He saw his profits going down because
the customers kept taking the gloves and walking off with them. His wife suggested that he
put the sausages in a split bun instead. He reportedly asked his brother-in-law, a baker,
for help. The baker improvised long soft rolls that fit the meat, thus inventing the hot
dog bun. When he did that, the hot dog was born. He called them red hots.
1886 - H. L. Mencken (1880-1956), newspaperman, book reviewer, and political commentator
and writer, wrote:
"I devoured hot-dogs in Baltimore 'way back in 1886, and they were then very far from
newfangled....The contained precisely the same rubber, indigestible pseudo-sausages that
millions of Americans now eat, and they leaked the same flabby, puerile mustard. Their
single point of difference lay in the fact that their covers were honest German Wecke made
of wheat-flour baked to crispiness, and not the soggy rolls prevailing today, of ground
acorns, plaster-of-Paris, flecks of bath-sponge, and atmospheric air all compact."
1893 - The 1893 Chicago World's Fair, also called the Columbian Exposition, brought
thousands of visitors who consumed large quantities of sausage sold by vendors. People
liked this food that was easy to eat, convenient, and inexpensive.
In the same year, sausages became the standard fare at baseball parks. This tradition was
begun by a German immigrant, Chris von de Ahe (1851-1913), who owned a St. Louis Bar and
the St. Louis Browns major league baseball team, now known as the St. Louis Cardinals.
Chris von de Ahe was "quite a showman" and introduced sausages to go with his
already popular beer. Chris von der Ahe was a colorful character himself. A large man who
wore loud, checkered clothing, Chris sat in a special box behind third base with a whistle
and binoculars. He used the whistle to get the attention of players, for someone to get
him a beer, or for special cops he employed for personal use and to keep tabs on his
players. He bought the Browns in order to put himself in the limelight and to advertise
his saloon business.
1895 - Sausage vendors would sell their wares outside the student dorms at major eastern
universities, and their carts became known as "dog wagons." The name was a
sarcastic comment on the source and quality of the meat. The October 5, 1895 edition of
the Yale Record included a poem about "The Kennel Club," a popular campus lunch
wagon which sold sausages in buns:
ECHOES FROM THE LUNCH WAGON
"'Tis dogs' delight to bark and bite,"
Thus does the adage run.
But I delight to bite the dog
When placed inside a bun.
Two weeks later, the Yale Record printed a fanciful bit of fiction about the lunch wagon's
being stolen, along with its owner, who awoke to find himself and his cart amidst a bunch
of chapel attendees. The owner turned the circumstances to his advantage, doing a bustling
business with those who "contentedly munched hot dogs during the whole service."
1901 - Visitors to the 1901 Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York could buy
"Coney Island Hot Dogs" at the Indian Congress Restaurant.
1902 - Another story is that the term "hog dog" was coined in 1902 during a
Giants baseball game at the New York Polo grounds. On a cold April day, concessionaire
Harry Mozley Stevens (1855-1934) was losing money trying to sell ice cream and ice-cold
sodas. He sent his salesmen out to buy up all the dachshund sausages they could find, and
an equal number of rolls. In less than an hour, his vendors were hawking hot dogs from
portable hot water tanks while yelling, "They're red hot! Get your dachshund sausages
while they're red hot!"
In the press box, sports cartoonist, T.A. "Tad" Dorgan (1877-?), a newspaper
cartoonist for the New York Evening Journal, was nearing his deadline and desperate for an
idea. Hearing the vendors, he hastily drew a cartoon of a frankfurter with a tail, legs,
and a head, so that it looked like a dachshund. Not sure how to spell the word
"dachshund" he simply wrote "hot dog!" The cartoon was a sensation and
the term hot dog was born. According to the 1996 Maine Antique Digest:
Famous cartoon artists' original drawings, many dedicated to the founding father Harry M.
Stevens or made especially for him, sold out. Leland's chairman Joshua Evans spent $1100
for a "frankfurter" courtroom scene cartoon by the famed cartoonist
"Tad" Dorgan. Tad coined the immortal phrase "hot dog" when Stevens
put the first ball game frank into a roll and rolled out a new tradition. The Stevens
family kept the original Tad hot dog cartoon among a small group of memorabilia they hope
will be part of their museum effort.
Dorgan is best remembered for the many expression he invented, such as the superlatives
the cat's meow and the cat's pajamas and the exclamation For
crying out loud! He also created several slang terms to the American lexicon,
including hot dog, hard-boiled (a tough guy), and
cheaters (eyeglasses).
1903 - It is also said that on June 3, 1903, Adolf Gehring was selling food at a ball game
in St. Louis, Missouri. On this particular day, Adolf had a good day and sold out all his
food and drinks. He went to a baker to buy some bread, but they had nothing left but some
long dinner rolls which he bought. He then went to a butcher shop and bought all the
sausages and wieners that the butcher had. With a portable wood stove, he cooked up the
pork sausages and wieners and placed them in the rolls he had split. He started walking
through the crowd offering his meat sandwiches as he called them. One man hollered at him,
"Give me one of those damn hot dogs." The phrase caught on and everyone in the
crowd was soon hollering for hot dogs."
1916 - An employee of Charles Feltman, Nathan Handwerker (1892-1974), broke away from
Feltman in 1916 and, with his wife Ida, started Nathan's Famous, Inc., which now calls
itself the world's greatest hot dog purveyor. He opened his stand in Coney Island near the
corner of Surf and Stillwell Avenues and called it Nathan's. Handwerker sold his hot dogs
for five cents each. He used two spice suppliers to keep his hot dog recipe secret. To
counteract the rumors of his cut-price hot dogs being less than palatable, he offered free
hot dogs to the doctors and nurses at Coney Island Hospital. When questioned in later
years about his love for his own food (hot dogs), Nathan bragged, "I'll gladly
wrassle anyone who's been living on caviar and champagne for thirty-nine years."
It is said that a local singing waiter, Eddie Cantor (1892-1964), comic actor and singer,
and his prominent piano accompanist, Jimmy Durante (1805-1980), comedian, piano player,
and singer, resented the fact that the prospering Charles Feltman had raised the price on
his "franks" to a dime. They suggested to Nathan Handwerker that instead of
working for Feltman, that he go into competition with him, selling franks for half the
price. Some historians suggest that Nathan Handwerker borrowed $320 from entertainers
Eddie Cantor and Jimmy Durante to start the business.
To assist in serving his customers, Nathan hired a redheaded teenager, Clara Bowtiinelli
(1905-1965), who later was discovered while working there and became the famous actress
Clara Bow, the "It Girl" of the 1920's silent films.
The annual Nathan's Famous Fourth of July Hot Dog Eating Contest on Coney Island has been
held at the original Coney Island hot dog stand every Independence Day since 1916.
1939 - Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945), thirty-second President of the United States,
and his wife, Eleanor (1884-1962), wanting to introduce something truly American to the
visiting King George VI (1895-1952) of England and his queen, served the royal guests
Nathan's hot dogs at a picnic at their estate in Hyde Park, New York on June 11, 1939. The
press made a great deal about the hotdogs, and the picnic menu made the front page of the
New York Times:
MENU FOR PICNIC AT HYDE PARK
Sunday, June 11, 1939
Virginia Ham
Hot Dogs (if weather permits)
Smoked Turkey
Cranberry Jelly
Green Salad
Rolls
Strawberry Shortcake
Coffee, Beer, Soft Drinks
The King was so pleased with "this delightful hot-dog sandwich" that he asked
Mrs. Roosevelt for another one.
Much fuss had been made in advance of this picnic. Almost a month before the King and
Queen of England ate their first hot dogs, Eleanor Roosevelt expressed concern about the
upcoming event in her newspaper column called "My Day," dated May 25, 1939 (a
syndicated newspaper column published from 1935 to 1962):
Oh dear, oh dear, so many people are worried that the 'dignity of our country will be
imperiled by inviting Royalty to a picnic, particularly a hot dog picnic! My mother-in-law
has sent me a letter which begs that she control me in some way. In order to spare my
feelings, she has written on the back a little message: "Only one of many such."
She did not know, poor darling, that I have "many such" right here in
Washington. Let me assure you, dear readers, that if it is hot there will be no hot dogs,
and even if it is cool there will be plenty of other food, and the elder members of the
family and the more important guests will be served with due formality.
1942 - Corn dogs, hot dogs in a fried cornmeal batter, were introduced at the Texas State
Fair, created by Texan Neil Fletcher. |