An Elegant Thanksgiving Dinner at the Windsor Hotel — 1877
by Paula Bosse
by Paula Bosse
Behold, a feast of yesteryear (and this is just the game and fish dishes):
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AN ELEGANT DINNER
The champion dinner of the season will be served at the Windsor to-day. Colonel Whitla is anticipating Thanksgiving day in this dinner, but he tells us that he will not forget the occasion, which will be remembered in a suitable manner at his hotel. The bill of fare to-day is the most elaborate one yet presented to the patrons of the Windsor.
The manager took time by the forelock and made his orders by telegraph for the particular edibles for the occasion. Last night we were shown a bill of fare for the dinner, by Mr L. J. Faessler, chief cook of the hotel. We have neither time nor space to mention the same entire, but can say that among the game and fish appears green sea turtle, black and red groupper and the sheep’s head, venison, antelope, quail, wild turkey, jack rabbit, opossum, oysters on shell, deviled crabs, and red-headed and canvas-backed ducks, etc.
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Hava a Happy (Possom-Free) Thanksgiving!
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Sources & Notes
Top ad for the Grand-Windsor Hotel from the 1878 Dallas directory. Originally two hotels (the Le Grande Hotel and the Windsor Hotel), they were joined by a little “sky-bridge” over Austin Street when they merged. See the Grand-Windsor on the 1885 Sanborn map here. (The room rates of $2-$3 back then would be the equivalent of about $60-$90, if you trust inflation calculators.)
Article is from the Nov. 25, 1877 edition of the Dallas Daily Herald, via the Portal to Texas History.
More Flashback Dallas posts on Thanksgiving can be found here;

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Copyright © 2023 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.



For those unaware, sheepshead is a type of fish.
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Gross!!!
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B’lieve I’ll pass on the jack rabbit too.
I wonder how fresh that seafood was by the time it got from Galveston to Dallas by rail in pre-refrigeration days.
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Your question prompted me to do a little looking. Apparently ice machines were developed in Texas about 10 years before this ad. Check out a blog called the Alcohol professor for more info.
I wonder if they sent someone out to snare the jack rabbit as close to preparation as possible.
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