green papaya
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,261
- Location
- California, usa
in cities like San Francisco:
Bargain eating shops filled the interstices of the South of Market. Near cheap lodging houses workers always found the most reasonably priced food.
A few large lodging houses had inexpensive eateries in them and offered American plan rates to their residents. Most lodging house tenants at the turn of the century, however, relied on saloon fare and the cheapest 5-cent to 15-cent lunchrooms available.
For breakfast, San Francisco's Bolz Coffee Parlor promised "three of the largest doughnuts ever fried and the biggest cup of coffee in the world" for 10 cents. Coffee Dan's advertised "one thousand beans with bread, butter, and coffee" for 15 cents.
On a crash economy program, a man or a woman could eat three meager meals a day for as little as 30 cents in the mid-1920s. One elderly man gave this minimum-price daily menu:
Breakfast: "coffee and," 5 cents; sometimes with mush, 5 cents extra
Noon: hash, soup, bread, and coffee, 10 cents
Supper: stew, bread, and coffee, 15 cents
http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft6j49p0wf;chunk.id=d0e4165;doc.view=print
look at these old Harbor Hotel rates in San Francisco, wonder how old those prices are? what era?
ROOMS
$2.00 per week and Up
35 cents per night and Up
STEAM HEAT in EVERY ROOM
ALL MODERN CONVENIENCES
Bargain eating shops filled the interstices of the South of Market. Near cheap lodging houses workers always found the most reasonably priced food.
A few large lodging houses had inexpensive eateries in them and offered American plan rates to their residents. Most lodging house tenants at the turn of the century, however, relied on saloon fare and the cheapest 5-cent to 15-cent lunchrooms available.
For breakfast, San Francisco's Bolz Coffee Parlor promised "three of the largest doughnuts ever fried and the biggest cup of coffee in the world" for 10 cents. Coffee Dan's advertised "one thousand beans with bread, butter, and coffee" for 15 cents.
On a crash economy program, a man or a woman could eat three meager meals a day for as little as 30 cents in the mid-1920s. One elderly man gave this minimum-price daily menu:
Breakfast: "coffee and," 5 cents; sometimes with mush, 5 cents extra
Noon: hash, soup, bread, and coffee, 10 cents
Supper: stew, bread, and coffee, 15 cents
http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft6j49p0wf;chunk.id=d0e4165;doc.view=print
look at these old Harbor Hotel rates in San Francisco, wonder how old those prices are? what era?
ROOMS
$2.00 per week and Up
35 cents per night and Up
STEAM HEAT in EVERY ROOM
ALL MODERN CONVENIENCES
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