Spring 2026
New York’s Grandest Saloon
For more than 100 years, the Oyster Bar Saloon in New York City has been a quiet refuge for some of America’s greatest writers, as well as the advertising men who were the original Mad Men. Isn’t it time you bent your elbow there?
Talk of the Town
A detail of the Oyster Bar’s iconic herringbone-patterned ceiling (left), designed by Spanish immigrant architect Rafael Gustavino, and his son, Rafael Jr. The counter in the main room (right) and a New Yorker cover from 1941 (above) depicting a lunchtime crush.
Regulars, But Hardly Regular Guys
For John Cheever, John Updike, S. J. Perlman, and other titans of American letters, the saloon was a go-to spot in Manhattan.
Get The Look
How to Crush the Rush Hour
On the Half Shell
A view of the dining room (left), and the bivalves that started it all.
Where Everybody Knows Your Name
The interior of the clubby Saloon room (top) with its famous red-and-white tablecloths. Jackie Onassis (who was instrumental in saving Grand Central Terminal from the wrecking ball in the 1970s) at the Saloon (middle); one of the many vintage nautical-themed paintings that ring the room (bottom).
At some point, just about everyone who is an anyone has come down those stairs, drawn to the quiet and discrete vibes.