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All About Coffee
Preface
William H.Ukers
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       _ Seventeen years ago the author of this work made his first trip abroad to gather material for a book on coffee. Subsequently he spent a year in travel among the coffee-producing countries. After the initial surveys, correspondents were appointed to make researches in the principal European libraries and museums; and this phase of the work continued until April, 1922. Simultaneous researches were conducted in American libraries and historical museums up to the time of the return of the final proofs to the printer in June, 1922.
       Ten years ago the sorting and classification of the material was begun. The actual writing of the manuscript has extended over four years.
       Among the unique features of the book are the Coffee Thesaurus; the Coffee Chronology, containing 492 dates of historical importance; the Complete Reference Table of the Principal Kinds of Coffee Grown in the World; and the Coffee Bibliography, containing 1,380 references.
       The most authoritative works on this subject have been Robinson's The Early History of Coffee Houses in England, published in London in 1893; and Jardin's Le Café, published in Paris in 1895. The author wishes to acknowledge his indebtedness to both for inspiration and guidance. Other works, Arabian, French, English, German, and Italian, dealing with particular phases of the subject, have been laid under contribution; and where this has been done, credit is given by footnote reference. In all cases where it has been possible to do so, however, statements of historical facts have been verified by independent research. Not a few items have required months of tracing to confirm or to disprove.
       There has been no serious American work on coffee since Hewitt's Coffee: Its History, Cultivation and Uses, published in 1872; and Thurber's Coffee from Plantation to Cup, published in 1881. Both of these are now out of print, as is also Walsh's Coffee: Its History, Classification and Description, published in 1893.
       The chapters on The Chemistry of Coffee and The Pharmacology of Coffee have been prepared under the author's direction by Charles W. Trigg, industrial fellow of the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research.
       The author wishes to acknowledge, with thanks, valuable assistance and numerous courtesies by the officials of the following institutions:
       British Museum, and Guildhall Museum, London; Bibliothéque Nationale, Paris; Congressional Library, Washington; New York Public Library, Metropolitan Museum of Art, and New York Historical Society, New York; Boston Public Library, and Boston Museum of Fine Arts; Smithsonian Institution, Washington; State Historical Museum, Madison, Wis.; Maine Historical Society, Portland; Chicago Historical Society; New Jersey Historical Society, Newark; Harvard University Library; Essex Institute, Salem, Mass.; Peabody Institute, Baltimore.
       Thanks and appreciation are due also to:
       Charles James Jackson, London, for permission to quote from his Illustrated History of English Plate;
       Francis Hill Bigelow, author; and The Macmillan Company, publishers, for permission to reproduce illustrations from Historic Silver of the Colonies;
       H.G. Dwight, author; and Charles Scribner's Sons, publishers, for permission to quote from Constantinople, Old and New, and from the article on "Turkish Coffee Houses" in Scribner's Magazine;
       Walter G. Peter, Washington, D.C., for permission to photograph and reproduce pictures of articles in the Peter collection at the United States National Museum;
       Mary P. Hamlin and George Arliss, authors, and George C. Tyler, producer, for permission to reproduce the Exchange coffee-house setting of the first act of Hamilton;
       Judge A.T. Clearwater, Kingston N.Y.; R.T. Haines Halsey, and Francis P. Garvan, New York, for permission to publish pictures of historic silver coffee pots in their several collections;
       The secretaries of the American Chambers of Commerce in London, Paris, and Berlin;
       Charles Cooper, London, for his splendid co-operation and for his special contribution to chapter XXXV;
       Alonzo H. De Graff, London, for his invaluable aid and unflagging zeal in directing the London researches;
       To the Coffee Trade Association, London, for assistance rendered;
       To G.J. Lethem, London, for his translations from the Arabic;
       Geoffrey Sephton, Vienna, for his nice co-operation;
       L.P. de Bussy of the Koloniaal Institute, Amsterdam, Holland, for assistance rendered;
       Burton Holmes and Blendon R. Campbell, New York, for courtesies;
       John Cotton Dana, Newark, N.J., for assistance rendered;
       Charles H. Barnes, Medford, Mass., for permission to publish the photograph of Peregrine White's Mayflower mortar and pestle;
       Andrew L. Winton, Ph.D., Wilton, Conn., for permission to quote from his The Microscopy of Vegetable Foods in the chapter on The Microscopy of Coffee and to reprint Prof. J. Moeller's and Tschirch and Oesterle's drawings;
       F. Hulton Frankel, Ph.D., Edward M. Frankel, Ph.D., and Arno Viehoever, for their assistance in preparing the chapters on The Botany of Coffee and The Microscopy of Coffee;
       A.L. Burns, New York, for his assistance in the correction and revision of chapters XXV, XXVI, XXVII, and XXXIV, and for much historical information supplied in connection with chapters XXX and XXXI;
       Edward Aborn, New York, for his help in the revision of chapter XXXVI;
       George W. Lawrence, former president, and T.S.B. Nielsen, president, of the New York Coffee and Sugar Exchange, for their assistance in the revision of chapter XXXI;
       Helio Lobo, Brazilian consul general, New York; Sebastião Sampaio, commercial attaché of the Brazilian Embassy, Washington; and Th. Langgaard de Menezes, American representative of the Sociedade Promotora da Defeza do Café;
       Felix Coste, secretary and manager, the National Coffee Roasters Association; and C.B. Stroud, superintendent, the New York Coffee and Sugar Exchange, for information supplied and assistance rendered in the revision of several chapters;
       F.T. Holmes, New York, for his help in the compilation of chronological and descriptive data on coffee-roasting machinery;
       Walter Chester, New York, for critical comments on chapter XXVIII.
       The author is especially indebted to the following, who in many ways have contributed to the successful compilation of the Complete Reference Table in chapter XXIV, and of those chapters having to do with the early history and development of the green coffee and the wholesale coffee-roasting trades in the United States:
       George S. Wright, Boston; A.E. Forbes, William Fisher, Gwynne Evans, Jerome J. Schotten, and the late Julius J. Schotten, St. Louis; James H. Taylor, William Bayne, Jr., A.J. Dannemiller, B.A. Livierato, S.A. Schonbrunn, Herbert Wilde, A.C. Fitzpatrick, Charles Meehan, Clarence Creighton, Abram Wakeman, A.H. Davies, Joshua Walker, Fred P. Gordon, Alex. H. Purcell, George W. Vanderhoef, Col. William P. Roome, W. Lee Simmonds, Herman Simmonds, W.H. Aborn, B. Lahey, John C. Loudon, J.R. Westfal, Abraham Reamer, R.C. Wilhelm, C.H. Stewart, and the late August Haeussler, New York; John D. Warfield, Ezra J. Warner, S.O. Blair, and George D. McLaughlin, Chicago; W.H. Harrison, James Heekin, and Charles Lewis, Cincinnati; Albro Blodgett and A.M. Woolson, Toledo; R.V. Engelhard and Lee G. Zinsmeister, Louisville; E.A. Kahl, San Francisco; S. Jackson, New Orleans; Lewis Sherman, Milwaukee; Howard F. Boardman, Hartford; A.H. Devers, Portland, Ore.; W. James Mahood, Pittsburgh; William B. Harris, East Orange, N.J.
       New York, June 17, 1922. _
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本书目录

Preface
Foreword
A Coffee Thesaurus
Evolution Of A Cup Of Coffee
Chapter 1. Dealing With The Etymology Of Coffee
Chapter 2. History Of Coffee Propagation
Chapter 3. Early History Of Coffee Drinking
Chapter 4. Introduction Of Coffee Into Western Europe
Chapter 5. The Beginnings Of Coffee In France
Chapter 6. The Introduction Of Coffee Into England
Chapter 7. The Introduction Of Coffee Into Holland
Chapter 8. The Introduction Of Coffee Into Germany
Chapter 9. Telling How Coffee Came To Vienna
Chapter 10. The Coffee Houses Of Old London
Chapter 11. History Of The Early Parisian Coffee Houses
Chapter 12. Introduction Of Coffee Into North America
Chapter 13. History Of Coffee In Old New York
Chapter 14. Coffee Houses Of Old Philadelphia
Chapter 15. The Botany Of The Coffee Plant
Chapter 16. The Microscopy Of The Coffee Fruit
Chapter 17. The Chemistry Of The Coffee Bean
Chapter 18. Pharmacology Of The Coffee Drink
Chapter 19. The Commercial Coffees Of The World
Chapter 20. Cultivation Of The Coffee Plant
Chapter 21. Preparing Green Coffee For Market
Chapter 22. The Production And Consumption Of Coffee
Chapter 23. How Green Coffees Are Bought And Sold
Chapter 24. Green And Roasted Coffee Characteristics
Chapter 25. Factory Preparation Of Roasted Coffee
Chapter 26. Wholesale Merchandising Of Coffee
Chapter 27. Retail Merchandising Of Roasted Coffee
Chapter 28. A Short History Of Coffee Advertising
Chapter 29. The Coffee Trade In The United States
Chapter 30. Development Of The Green And Roasted Coffee Business In The United States
Chapter 31. Some Big Men And Notable Achievements
Chapter 32. A History Of Coffee In Literature
Chapter 32. A History Of Coffee In Literature (continued)
Chapter 33. Coffee In Relation To The Fine Arts
Chapter 34. The Evolution Of Coffee Apparatus
Chapter 35. World's Coffee Manners And Customs
Chapter 36. Preparation Of The Universal Beverage
A Coffee Chronology