Died: 1966
Profession: Bartender
At: The Savoy, London
Ada 'Coley' Coleman, described by the Daily Express as the 'most famous barmaid', was, in all probably, the best-known female bartender of all time.
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At least five newspapers covered her retirement from her role as head bartender at The Savoy's American Bar, a position in which she seems to have, briefly, overlapped with Harry Craddock.
And Ada is still remembered at The Savoy. Erik Lorincz, current head bartender of the American Bar, says, 'Ada was the first and only female head bartender at the American Bar ever since the bar opened. She is an iconic legend.'
Check mysql version on mac. 'Coley' took up bartending after her father died. He had been a steward at Rupert D'Oyly Carte's golf club, and D'Oyly Carte duly offered her a job at one of his hotels - in the bar at Claridge's, where she started work in 1899, aged around 24.
She made her first ever cocktail there, a Manhattan, under the tuition of a man named Fisher, who was the wine butler. Her talent and presence led her to move to The Savoy's American Bar as Head Bartender, after Frank Wells retired, in 1903. She would remain there until early 1926.
Ada, a fan of celebrities and theatre in general, made cocktails for some of the world's most famous people: Mark Twain, the Prince of Wales, Prince Wilhelm of Sweden and the American millionaire 'Diamond' Jim Brady.
At home, she regularly hosted parties for theatre people, full of singing, dancing, music and laughter. (The D'Oyly Carte family, to whom she remained close until her death, ran not only hotels but a musical theatre company.)
But Ada's personality made her popular with all her guests. Mac torrent parallels. She received presents from all around the world; Lucas D'Oyly Carte left her the then-substantial sum of £100 in his will; and the Earl of Lonsdale, impressed by her performance at a charity fete in June 1913, introduced her to Princess Alexandra.
Her most famous cocktail, and the only drink which Craddock attributed to her in his Savoy Cocktail Book, was undoubtedly the Hanky Panky. She created it for a comic actor named Charles Hawtrey, when he requested something 'with a bit of punch in it', because he was overworked.
Says Lorincz, 'We are still serving that drink, in two versions. One of them is Coley's way, with gin, sweet vermouth and a few dashes of Fernet Branca, although we prefer it stirred to Ada's shaken version. The second is a blend of four different gins, four sweet vermouths and two bitters, blended together and then aged in American new oak barrels.'
Ada was a genuinely jolly, sunny, kind-hearted soul. Rupert D'Oyly Carte wrote to her that 'my brother always was very pleased and grateful for your sympathy and interest'. The Earl of Lonsdale, similarly, wrote that 'the kindness and energy displayed by Miss Coleman was marvelous and she was so nice, and so kind and so full of life and energy'.
Coley lived to the ripe old age of 91 and died in 1966.
Ada Copeland (ca. 23 December 1860 – 14 April 1964) was the common-law wife of the American geologist Clarence King, who was appointed as the first director of the United States Geological Survey. Copeland was presumed born a slave on or around 23 December 1860, in Georgia. As a young woman, she moved to New York in the mid-1880s and worked as a nursemaid.[1] In about 1887,[2]she became involved with Clarence King, an upper-class white man who presented himself to her as a light-skinned black Pullman porter under the name of James Todd. (Given the long history of slavery in the United States, many African Americans had European ancestry. Some passed or identified as white, given their majority white ancestry.)

They married in September 1888,[2] with King living as Todd with her, but as Clarence King while working in the field.[3] They had five children together, four of whom survived to adulthood. Their two daughters married white men; their two sons served classified as blacks during World War I.[4] Before his death from tuberculosis in 1901, King wrote to Copeland confessing his true identity.
After King died, Copeland embarked on a thirty-year battle to gain control of the trust fund he had promised her. Her representatives included the notable lawyers Everett J. Waring, the first black lawyer to argue a case before the Supreme Court of the United States, and J. Douglas Wetmore, who contested segregation laws in Jacksonville, Florida.

Ada Coleman Bartender Biografia
Eventually, in 1933, the court determined that King had died penniless, and no money was forthcoming. John Hay, a friend of King's, provided Ada King with a monthly stipend and, after his death in 1905, Hay's daughter Helen Hay Whitney continued the support.[2] The stipend eventually stopped, though Copeland until her death continued to live in the house John Hay had bought for her. She died on 14 April 1964, one of the last of the former American slaves.[1]

Ada Coleman Historia
Bibliography[edit]
- Martha A. Sandweiss, Passing Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception across the Color Line (2009)
References[edit]

- ^ abAmerican National Biographyhttp://www.anb.org/articles/20/20-91926.html
- ^ abc'Love knows no race, creed, or colour'. Mmegi Online. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- ^Sandweiss, Martha A. (2009). Passing Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception Across the Color Line. ISBN978-1-59420-200-1.
- ^American Lives: 'The 'Strange' Tale of Clarence King', PBS, 18 August 2010, accessed 21 September 2012

Ada Coleman Hanky Panky
