The secret to a good bar has
nothing to do with what beers are on tap or what its décor looks like. The only
valid measure of a bar is its character, it supersedes all other measures. I’ve
been in bars that reeked of piss and fruit flies that were a thousand times
better than the cleanest, sleekest pre-fabricated gastropub.
Dive bars are often the best bars
to visit. One of the finest pubs in the recent history of New York was the Village Idiot, which closed its
doors in 2004 and had the most eclectic crowd ever. My first visit there a
6-foot-plus transvestite played pool with some tipsy yuppies while construction
workers drank at the bar. Mars Bar had bathrooms that were even filthier than
CBGB’s bathrooms, which were legendary for their filth. But it didn’t matter.
Mars Bar and Village Idiot brought some of the most interesting varieties of
people to drink together.
Of course there’s a certain hip cache
to the dive bar now, but you can tell which bars are faking it and which bars
aren’t. I like to think I’ve visited enough bars to be able to tell the
difference without too much effort, but I’ve been out of the drinking game for
more than five years now and my visits to bars are few and far between.
And New York City has lost some of
its best dive bars. There are a few though that are keeping things alive. NancyWhiskey, Rudy’s and The
Patriot are all the real thing: good dive bars with real character.
But great New York bars are not
restricted to the five boroughs, and one of the finest bars ever recently
hosted its last hurrah.
The Alumni Club just outside the
city limits in New Hyde Park, New York is a place I discovered through my wife,
who was a long-time regular and used to tend bar there. It sat among a row of
storefronts and its location was generally unremarkable. You needed a car to
get there though theoretically you could take a Nassau County bus.
The Alumni Club was a bar that was
both eclectic in its clientele and without pretension. While it had its
population of longtime regulars, no strangers were ever made to feel unwelcome.
I don’t even drink and I was welcome there. I would even bring in large
beverages from the 7-Eleven across the street and no one would mind. I’d always
ask the bartender if he or she wanted anything. I’m convinced the bar lost no
money on my account; my wife could drink enough for both of us.
There was almost always some
offering of free food and the owner or bartender encouraged visitors to eat.
Once I went there to catch the end of the Georgia Bulldogs game and found
they were in the midst of a “casino night” themed evening. The bar had some
system worked out where they weren’t technically gambling there but I wasn’t
sure how it worked and I figured the less I knew the better.
But the best part about the Alumni
Club was the character and good atmosphere. It was not in a trendy part of the
city and had nothing to prove. People who went there were working people who
wanted to drink, not people who wanted to be seen drinking.
Needless to say a bar of this
caliber of excellence tends to have many loyal patrons and when the bar
announced it was going to be shutting its doors, employees and patrons alike
began planning the farewell party.
The last Saturday this May was the
Alumni Club’s big blowout party that included a lot of food and copious amounts
of alcohol. T-shirts made for the event read, “We drank it dry.” Patrons lived
up to the boast: when bartenders showed up for work the next day they found
that the place had run out of beer.
This week Alumni Club will close
its doors for good. Guests and employees will remember their alma mater with
pride.
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