
Harry's Bar: A taste of America in Paris
Its history is far from ordinary. Founded in 1911 by former jockey Tod Sloan, the establishment rose from the ashes of a Manhattan bar owned by his friend, a certain Clancy. Prohibition had not yet been enacted in the United States, but the two companions could sense the winds about to change. Sloan convinced Clancy to sell him the business and to dismantle it piece by piece – swinging doors, mahogany bar, wooden paneling – and ship it all to Paris. The New York Bar, as it was originally called, found a new home between the Opéra and the Ritz, at 5 Rue Daunou, an address now well known to cocktail enthusiasts from around the world.
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Harry's Bar: A taste of America in Paris
The Bloody Mary was invented here in 1921. George Gershwin is said to have composed the first chords of An American in Paris at this very bar. Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Rita Hayworth and Ava Gardner were all regulars. Harry's New York Bar has been − and remains − the gathering place for Americans in Paris. The first cocktail bar in Europe, it has only about 20 tables and 15 seats at the bar, but its reputation is global, and it stands as an enduring shrine to the classics. Its history is far from ordinary. Founded in 1911 by former jockey Tod Sloan, the establishment rose from the ashes of a Manhattan bar owned by his friend, a certain Clancy. Prohibition had not yet been enacted in the United States, but the two companions could sense the winds about to change. Sloan convinced Clancy to sell him the business and to dismantle it piece by piece – swinging doors, mahogany bar, wooden paneling – and ship it all to Paris. The New York Bar, as it was originally called, found a new home between the Opéra and the Ritz, at 5 Rue Daunou, an address now well known to cocktail enthusiasts from around the world.


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