Cocktail: History Timeline — Key Dates from 1806 to the Craft Revival

Category: history-culture Updated: 2026-03-11

Cocktail first defined in print: May 13, 1806. Jerry Thomas Bartender's Guide: 1862. Prohibition: 1920–1933. Craft revival: 1987 (Dale DeGroff). IBA founded 1951. First printed Martini recipe: 1884.

Key Data Points
MeasureValueUnitNotes
First printed cocktail definition1806May 13 (The Balance, Hudson NY)Defined as 'a stimulating liquor composed of spirits, sugar, water, and bitters'
First cocktail book1862yearJerry Thomas: 'How to Mix Drinks' — 10 cocktails, 3 punches, cobblers, smashes; first Blue Blazer
Vermouth arrives in United States1850sdecadeItalian and French vermouth imports enabled Manhattan, Martinez, and later Martini
Prohibition start1920January 1718th Amendment; Volstead Act enforcement; drove 30,000+ speakeasies in NYC alone
Prohibition end1933December 5 (21st Amendment)13-year gap; significant US whiskey aging stock depleted; cocktail culture partially exported
IBA founding year1951yearInternational Bartenders Association; standardizes official cocktail list (now 77 drinks)
Craft cocktail revival1987year (approx.)Dale DeGroff at Rainbow Room, NYC; fresh juice, proper technique, pre-Prohibition recipes
Molecular gastronomy cocktail era2000sdecadeFerran Adrià, Dave Arnold, Heston Blumenthal; centrifuges, rotary evaporators, liquid nitrogen

The cocktail has a documented history of 220 years — from a one-line newspaper definition in 1806 to a globally codified craft practiced in 192 countries. The evolution was not linear: the complexity of the 1890s golden age was partially lost in Prohibition, partially recovered in the 1930s–1940s, degraded again in the convenience culture of the 1950s–1970s, and rebuilt from historical sources in the craft revival of the 1990s–2000s.

Cocktail History Timeline

YearEventSignificance
1806First printed cocktail definition (The Balance, Hudson NY)Four-ingredient model (spirit + sugar + water + bitters) established
1830sIce harvesting industry (Frederic Tudor)Reliable, affordable ice transforms drinking culture
1850sItalian/French vermouth arrives in USEnables Manhattan, Martini, Martinez family
1862Jerry Thomas publishes How to Mix DrinksFirst cocktail book; codifies pre-Civil War technique
1884First printed Martini recipe (O.H. Byron)Dry vermouth + gin format documented
1890sCocktail golden ageFixes, Rickeys, Cobblers, Collins, Tom & Jerry at peak
1900Pegu Club opens in RangoonColonial gin culture; Pegu Club cocktail classic
1919Negroni allegedly invented, FlorenceEqual-parts bitter aperitivo formula
1920Prohibition begins in US30,000+ speakeasies; American bartenders emigrate to Europe
1933Prohibition endsCraft partially recovers; tiki era begins (Don the Beachcomber)
1934Don the Beachcomber opens, HollywoodFounding of tiki culture and tropical cocktail tradition
1951IBA foundedInternational cocktail standardization begins
1987Dale DeGroff at Rainbow Room, NYCCraft revival; fresh juice, historical recipes
2000Milk & Honey opens, NYCTemplate for modern craft cocktail bar
2008Global financial crisis + cocktail boomPost-crash artisanal spirits movement; small-batch distilleries multiply
2010sJapanese whisky and gin boomSuntory/Nikka global recognition; gin renaissance
2020sLow/no-ABV movementRitual, Seedlip; aperitivo culture; spritz dominance

The Geography of Cocktail Development

The cocktail canon is primarily American in origin but was preserved and advanced in Europe during Prohibition:

  • United States (1800s–1919): Old Fashioned, Martini, Manhattan, Daiquiri (Cuba/US naval), Whiskey Sour
  • Cuba / Havana (1920s–1940s): Daiquiri refinements, Mojito, El Presidente; American expat bartenders (Sloppy Joe’s, El Floridita)
  • London / Paris (1920s–1940s): American bartenders bring pre-Prohibition technique; Sidecar, White Lady, Corpse Reviver No.2 codified
  • United States (1987–present): Craft revival reconstructs and expands; new American classics emerge
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Frequently Asked Questions

When was the word 'cocktail' first used in print?

The word 'cocktail' in its alcoholic beverage sense first appeared in print on May 13, 1806, in The Balance and Columbian Repository newspaper of Hudson, New York. Editor Harry Croswell, responding to a query from a reader, defined it as: 'a stimulating liquor, composed of spirits of any kind, sugar, water, and bitters.' This definition exactly describes the Old Fashioned. David Wondrich identified this source in the early 2000s; it predates all other known printed uses by several years. Earlier uses of the word 'cock-tail' in other senses (horse breeding, a type of horse) go back to the 1700s but have no connection to the drink.

Who was Jerry Thomas and why does he matter?

Jerry Thomas (1830–1885) was the first celebrity bartender — a showman, traveler, and codifier of cocktail technique. His 1862 book How to Mix Drinks (also published as The Bar-Tender's Guide) was the first cocktail book published in America, containing 10 cocktail recipes, 3 punch recipes, cobblers, smashes, juleps, and other mixed drinks. He is credited with inventing the Blue Blazer (flaming whiskey poured between two metal mugs in an arc). His New York saloons drew crowds. Without his codification work, most pre-Civil War cocktail knowledge would have remained entirely in oral tradition. Wondrich wrote the definitive biography in Imbibe!

What is the craft cocktail revival and when did it start?

The craft cocktail revival refers to the movement that returned pre-Prohibition cocktail techniques, fresh ingredients, and historical recipes to American bars. Most historians trace its formal beginning to 1987, when Dale DeGroff began working at the Rainbow Room in New York City under restaurateur Joe Baum, with instructions to recreate the pre-Prohibition cocktail experience using fresh juices and proper techniques. DeGroff mentored a generation of bartenders who spread throughout NYC in the 1990s. Sasha Petraske's Milk & Honey (opened 2000) became the template for the modern craft cocktail bar: reservations, house rules, seasonal menu, no flair. The movement spread globally through the 2000s–2010s.

What happened to cocktail culture during and after World War II?

WWII had a complex effect on cocktail culture. Wartime rationing limited grain spirits (whiskey, gin) in the US, driving consumption of rum (from the Caribbean, not rationed) and sustaining the tiki culture's popularity. Post-war prosperity and the rise of suburban culture created demand for simplified, approachable drinks — the vodka martini, the highball, the Bloody Mary. The 1950s–1970s saw a decline in cocktail craftsmanship as convenience products (pre-mixed sours, bottled sweeteners, maraschino cherries) replaced fresh ingredients. This 'dark ages' of American cocktail culture lasted until the 1987 revival.

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