Townhouse Bar and Speakeasy
From pre-war whiskey cocktails to prohibition-era speakeasy secrecy, this bar has seen it allA Part of Venice history since 1915, the Townhouse is one of the oldest bars in Los Angeles, and boasts that its use as a local watering hole was never once interrupted by war, temperance, or those pesky prohibition laws.
Originally called Menotti's, the resourceful owners of the Townhouse ran a successful speakeasy called Del Monte's in the basement, keeping the locals in clandestine liquor throughout the entire prohibition era.
Small ships carrying illegal shipments of rum and whiskey from Vancouver would sail right underneath the former Abbott Kinney pier en route to their destiny as the saviors of thirsty Los Angeleno souls. From there, the hootch would be smuggled through catacombs and underground tunnels and funneled into the city, with it's first stop right off of the pier being the Del Monte.
Today, the Townhouse has kept much of its historical charm, and recently, after much hoopla with grandfathered liquor laws, managed to reopen the speakeasy portion of the bar. While the Del Monte is only open on select nights of the week, not unlike the hush-hush nature of a real, live speakeasy, the Townhouse portion of the building keeps typical bar hours.
The bar is proud to honor the “golden age of drinking,” with mixologists using classic bartending techniques and recipes combined with a modern flair. The nightly conjuring of classic Whiskey Sours and, of course, delightful Old Fashioneds hearkens back to a time when drinking was a serious and risky business, but never one without style.
Read more about Townhouse Bar and Speakeasy on Atlas Obscura...
Category: Commercial Curiosities, Bizarre Restaurants and Bars
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Edited by: Rachel, RogueTowel, Mark_Casey