| Created October 12, 2002 |
© The
Chicago Bar Project |

2060 N. Cleveland Ave. (2000N, 600W)
Chicago
(773) 935-2060
"Prime Steak & Seafood"
While some
may erroneously think that the Four Farthings Tavern & Grill is a
sports bar or an Irish pub, it is not. Rather, the tavern differentiates itself
from other nearby saloons like
Gamekeepers, Stanley's Kitchen & Tap,
Glascott's Groggery, and
Sedgwick's by offering an English
pub-style atmosphere complete with wooden paneling, old photographs and a
restaurant featuring an impressive array of steaks and seafood. On the other
hand, the Four Farthings is as much a meat market in the evenings as anywhere
else in Lincoln Park even though it caters to a slightly older crowd.
The Four Farthings,
not to be confused with the Four Moon Tavern
or the Four Treys, takes its name from the four provinces that make up the
Shire in J.R.R. Tolkien's fantasy classics, The Hobbit and Lord of the
Rings. These Shire provinces were named after the four points of the
compass: Northfarthing, Southfarthing, Eastfarthing, and Westfarthing. In
Hobbitspeak, when you're at the "Four Farthings" you are in the center of the
world where all Farthings meet. While they haven't yet, perhaps the owners of
the Four Farthings should rename the four parts of their bar after towns in
these provinces. Perhaps: Hobbiton (main bar), Bywater (restaurant), Tookborough
(back room), and Buckland (sidewalk café –
yes, even though Buckland is technically located just outside the Shire). For those of you
unimpressed by Tolkien's tales, you may instead be interested to know that a
farthing was actually one-quarter of a penny in Olde England. Therefore, the
Four Farthings could also be known as The Penny for short.
Back here in
Chicago, the Four Farthings is located at the base of a quaint,
three-story, redbrick building with forest green-painted wooden trim at the
six-corner intersection of Lincoln, Cleveland and Belden. Though not
recommended, if you're coming via car, free parking is available in the
Grant Hospital parking garage,
which is one block south on Lincoln Avenue.
Valet parking is also available from Wednesday through Saturday. A modest
wooden sign hangs on the corner, advertising the tavern and two of the regulars
you might find inside. Step under the
Schoolyard Tavern-like red, green
and blue awnings and make your way into the bar through the old wooden door.
Inside, you'll find a classic barroom with cherubs painted gold holding up flowers on either side of
a mirror just inside
the front door, worn wooden floors, a green-painted tin ceiling, old-fashioned
chandeliers with bulb lights, ceiling fans, wooden paneling, framed pictures of
ships hanging on beige-painted walls, and plants that line the back of the bar
(including poinsettias around Christmas).
A few obligatory televisions and beer signs can also be found but are far from
the focus of patrons' attention. If possible, grab a seat at one of the square,
green padded wooden barstools or at the lone cocktail table mounted
upon the wall. If Providence smiles upon you, grab one of the tables located in
either nook on both sides of the front door. Here, you will not incur the wrath
of pushy waitresses as you'll be buffered from the throng. The backroom,
separated from the main bar area by glass and wood, lies beyond the bathrooms
encased in a wooden vault, an old-fashioned wooden phone booth and a tasteful
yet neon Budweiser sign. Here in the back you'll find a Golden Tee machine, smallish pool table,
an ATM, and additional
cocktail tables. This area, however, is often rented out for private parties
leaving the main barroom even more packed.
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It was in the main bar area where I once spent an evening with a Canadian guy that was fond of "licking hoop" (if you don't know
what this is, just think about it for a little while...) and his English friend
whom we called Nigel even though that was not his real name. The evening stands
out in my mind because the Canadian donned an English accent and was able to woo
a drunk blonde at the bar with it to such a degree that she let him stick his
hand up her shirt (and possibly elsewhere). Meanwhile, the authentically
English Nigel was up to his own antics involving "Average Bird." The so-designated girl in her thirties was told "average" when asked
how Nigel would describe her looks. Even though she stormed off, Nigel was able
to get to her friends and, somehow, was able to turn his insult into a date and
a shag a few days later. Such things are par for the course at the Four
Farthings where the place gets rowdy with girls in their thirties looking for action and guys of
all ages looking to score and box out their rivals, in a manner similar to
Tavern 33 only more raucous.
While not known for having an extensive beer selection necessarily, as most bars in Chicago feature at least two dozen beers, it is interesting to note that the Four Farthings was one of the first Chicago bars to expand their beer selection. The old lineup consisted of Old Style, Budweiser and Guinness on tap with Miller Lite, Heineken, Special Export, and Beck's in bottles. In the mid-80's, the Four Farthings experimented with offering Eau Claire All-Malt, Christian Moerlin, and imports like Tsingtao (China), OB (Japan), Coopers (Australia), Samuel Smith's (England), Orange Boom (Holland), and Raichbier (Germany). Today, the bar offers a decent selection of 32 beers, both on tap and in bottles.
The dining room is accessible through a doorway in the south end of the main
bar, and is filled with square wooden tables with white tablecloths and
green-padded wooden chairs. Preferred seating can be found in front of the long,
paned-glass windows looking out onto Cleveland Avenue or at one of the
green-leather upholstered booths located along the north end of the room. A
chalkboard hangs from the ceiling near the windows, amongst old-fashioned
lights. Wait staff, decked out in white dress shirts and ties, deliver
orders from the kitchen portal located in the northwest corner of the room. Up
to 85 patrons can comfortably enjoy a meal here, although mirrors on both sides
make the dining room look even larger. For lunch and dinner, the Four Farthings
menu offers filet mignon, New York Strip Steak, ribeye, skirt steak, lamb chops, babyback ribs, pork chops, chicken vesuvio, chicken tampico, duck, salmon, crab
cakes, mahi mahi, steamed clams, mussels, scallops, trout,
amberjack, ahi tuna, tilapia, and softshell crab. Specials include lobster
tail, stone crab claws and Alaskan king crab legs and the wine list features 50
wines by the bottle and 12 by the glass. Additionally, the
Four Farthings offers a free hot dog and chili bar on Saturdays and taco bar on Sundays, after 3 p.m. Wednesdays
feature all-you-can-eat spaghetti and appetizers are half-price everyday between
5-7:30 p.m. Anyone for brunch? If so, you can choose amongst blueberry pancakes,
French toast, huevos rancheros, steak & eggs, and a variety of benedicts (eggs,
andouille sausage, salmon, portobello & spinach, sausage, and crab) and
omelettes from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Wash it all down with 16-ounce Bloody
Marys. A selection of soups, salads and sandwiches are also available. In the
2002 edition of Zagat's Chicago restaurant
survey, Four Farthings Tavern & Grill was rated as having good food, decor and
service, with an average meal costing you about $23. Zagat's went on to note
that Four Farthings offers, "...a 'surprisingly good' surf 'n' turf menu served
in the midst of an 'upbeat' bar scene."
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In
the summer months, you can enjoy a pleasant afternoon or evening in the sidewalk café
that runs along both Cleveland and Dickens. The patio is filled with white plastic tables and chairs
between a few trees. Flower boxes can
be found on the white fence, at the base of the picture windows with "Four
Farthings" stenciled in gold lettering, and up above where second floor windows
have been boarded over and painted with small murals.
With its English pub-like feel, the Four Farthings has been a great place to for a meal with a date or for those in their 30's looking for "good conversation" with strangers (wink wink, nudge nudge). Before the Nordhem family took over the saloon in 1981, the Four Farthings was a pub by the same name that dated back to the late 1960's when it was frequented by beatniks and hippies and the current restaurant portion of the bar was a bookstore. Today, older yupsters and Lincoln Park Trixies flock to the Four Farthings. Because of this, as well as the success of its similar yet bigger cousin John Barleycorn's Memorial Pub (Lincoln), the Alumni Club on Lincoln Avenue has undergone a complete renovation so that it also has dark wood paneling and prime rib on the menu. While highly popular as a tavern, the Four Farthings could be known as a top notch restaurant if not for all the lechery. Regardless, the place is a Chicago classic and even earned a mention by characters in the film Guilty as Sin (supposedly based in Chicago but actually filmed in Toronto). For more information, check out the Four Farthings Tavern & Grill website. And, if you happen to be in the New Buffalo area in Michigan (!), make sure to visit the Four Farthings' sister location known as Casey's Bar & Grill. See you there, Nigel.
"Four Farthings is a family owned and operated Lincoln Park tradition since 1981"
~ Have a good story relating to this bar? E-mail it to me. ~
[back to the Chicago Bar Project]
written by Sean Parnell
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