Two of today’s 1933 menus feature Canadian Pacific hotels and look to be part of a series that included one for the York Hotel shown here two days ago. All three menus are printed on nearly white paper with the … Continue reading
Tag Archives: Menu
The Pacific empresses were a little slower, a little smaller, and had more water to cross between ports where they could restock supplies. This could have had an influence on the menus Canadian Pacific offered to passengers, but apparently it … Continue reading
Here are a number of tourist-class menus from a single trans-Atlantic trip aboard the Empress of Australia in 1931. There are fewer selections on these menus than on first-class menus, but no tourist-class passenger would go hungry on one of … Continue reading
In 1923, Canadian Pacific publicist John Murray Gibbon organized a fishing trip for Country Life magazine editor Reginald Townsend; Rand McNally president Harry Beach Clow; Chicago artist Reinhold Palanske; and their wives. The group was joined by Banff photographer Byron … Continue reading
After spending the last several weeks scrutinizing Canadian Pacific’s ocean cruises, I plan to spend the next several weeks looking at Canadian Pacific menus, including a few dining car menus but mostly menus used aboard ships in ocean liner (as … Continue reading
Most of the cruise menus presented here in the last few weeks have been for holidays ranging from Christmas to St. Patrick’s Day. The Chung collection has some ordinary menus from the 1936 and 1937 West Indies cruises aboard the … Continue reading
St. Patrick’s Day, which is observed by the Catholic, Anglican, Lutheran, and Eastern Orthodox churches, was as good a reason as any for a party on a lengthy ocean cruise. In 1932, when this menu was used, the Empress of … Continue reading
For 1937, Canadian Pacific cut the length of the cruise from 130 to 125 days. It deleted stops in Hilo, Hawaii, and Havana, Cuba, and reduced the length of the stay in Los Angeles from one-and-a-half days to just one … Continue reading
This menu advertising Canadian Pacific cruises was used at the Banff Springs Hotel on September 7, 1930, less than three months before the world cruise would depart New York City. The back of the menu also mentioned the 73-day Mediterranean … Continue reading
For 1927-28, Canadian Pacific elected to use the Empress of Australia for its world cruise. This may be because the Empress of Scotland was getting old; it was eight years older than the Australia and would be scrapped in 1931, … Continue reading