History Of The Hot Dog
Sausage
is one of the oldest forms of processed food, having been mentioned in Homer's
Odyssey as far back as the 9th Century B.C.
Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany, is traditionally credited with
originating the frankfurter. However, this claim is disputed by those who
assert that the popular sausage - known as a "dachshund" or
"little-dog" sausage - was created in the late 1600's by Johann Georghehner, a butcher, living in Coburg, Germany. According to this report, Georghehner later traveled to Frankfurt to promote his new product.
In 1987, the
city of Frankfurt celebrated the 500th birthday of the hot dog in that city.
It's said that the frankfurter was developed there in 1487, five years before
Christopher Columbus set sail for the new world. The people of Vienna (Wien), Austria, point to the term
"wiener" to prove their claim as the birthplace of the hot dog.
As it turns out,
it is likely that the North American hot dog comes from a widespread common
European sausage brought here by butchers of several nationalities. Also in
doubt is who first served the dachshund sausage with a roll. One report says a
German immigrant sold them, along with milk rolls and sauerkraut, from a push
cart in New York City's Bowery during the 1860's. In 1871, Charles Feltman, a German butcher opened up the first Coney Island
hot dog stand selling 3,684 dachshund sausages in a milk roll during his first
year in business.
The year, 1893,
was an important date in hot dog history. In Chicago that year, the Colombian Exposition
brought hordes of visitors who consumed large quantities of sausages sold by
vendors. People liked this food that was easy to eat, convenient and
inexpensive. Hot dog historian Bruce Kraig, Ph.D.,
retired professor emeritus at Roosevelt University, says the Germans always ate the
dachshund sausages with bread. Since the sausage culture is German, it is
likely that Germans introduced the practice of eating the dachshund sausages,
which we today know as the hot dog, nestled in a bun.
Also in 1893,
sausages became the standard fare at baseball parks. This tradition is believed
to have been started by a St. Louis bar owner, Chris Von de Ahe, a German immigrant who also owned the St. Louis Browns
major league baseball team.
Many hot dog
historians chafe at the suggestion that today's hot dog on a bun was introduced
during the St. Louis "Louisiana Purchase Exposition" in 1904 by
Bavarian concessionaire, Anton Feuchtwanger. As the story goes, he loaned white gloves to his patrons to hold
his piping hot sausages and as most of the gloves were not returned, the supply
began running low. He reportedly asked his brother-in-law, a baker, for
help. The baker improvised long soft rolls that fit the meat - thus inventing
the hot dog bun. Kraig says everyone wants to claim
the hot dog bun as their own invention, but the most likely scenario is the
practice was handed down by German immigrants and gradually became widespread
in American culture.
Another story
that riles serious hot dog historians is how term "hot dog" came
about. Some say the word was coined in 1901 at the New York Polo Grounds on a
cold April day. Vendors were hawking hot dogs from portable hot water tanks
shouting "They're red hot! Get your dachshund sausages while they're red
hot!" A New York Journal sports cartoonist, Tad Dorgan, observed the scene
and hastily drew a cartoon of barking dachshund sausages nestled warmly in
rolls. Not sure how to spell "dachshund" he simply wrote "hot
dog!" The cartoon is said to have been a sensation, thus coining the term
"hot dog." However, historians have been unable to find this cartoon,
despite Dorgan's enormous body of work and his popularity.
Kraig, and other culinary historians, point to college
magazines where the word "hot dog" began appearing in the 1890s. The
term was current at Yale in the fall of 1894,when
"dog wagons" sold hot dogs at the dorms. The name was a sarcastic
comment on the provenance of the meat. References to dachshund sausages and
ultimately hot dogs can be traced to German immigrants in the 1800s. These
immigrants brought not only sausages to America, but dachshund dogs. The name most
likely began as a joke about the Germans' small, long, thin dogs. In fact, even
Germans called the frankfurter a "little-dog" or "dachshund"
sausage, thus linking the word "dog" to their popular concoction.
Courtesy of the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council