![]()
The event will be held on the lawn of Homewood House, 3400
N. Charles St. in Baltimore (rain location is Levering
Union's Glass Pavilion) Admission is $20 for Homewood
members and $25 for non-members. Due to the popularity of
the event, reservations are required. Parking is available
around the circle in front of the museum. Call (410)
516-5589 for information and reservations.
Andy Bienstock, WYPR-FM's program director, jazz guru
and host of "The Signal," will serve as the emcee for the
evening, which combines sophisticated historical content
with a cocktail party. Wine historian James M. Gabler,
award-winning author of Passions: The Wines and Travels
of Thomas Jefferson and inaugural Traditional Beverages
speaker in 1996, will recount tales from his most recent
book, An Evening with Benjamin Franklin and Thomas
Jefferson: Dinner, Wine, and Conversation, in which the
narrator is transported back to 18th century Paris to enjoy
a leisurely dinner with founding fathers Franklin and
Jefferson (both of whom were resident in Paris at the
time).
Franklin and Jefferson were men of cultured tastes and
connoisseurs of fine wine. As a Virginia farmer, Jefferson
had the notion that America should become a country of wine
drinkers, writing, "We could, in the United States, make as
great a variety of wines as are made in Europe, not exactly
of the same kinds, but doubtless as good." He learned
everything he could about the process to accomplish that
goal, touring the wine-producing areas of Germany, Italy
and France and buying vines to be sent back and planted at
his plantation, Monticello, marking the beginning of the
commercial wine industry in the colonies.
At the event at Homewood House, Gabler will focus on
the historical context of wine through an imagined
conversation between Jefferson and Franklin, based on their
own words. He will explore issues of both their time and
ours, including the terrorist attacks of 9/11, which he
compares to Jefferson's experience while president in
dealing with the Barbary pirate states, a constant threat
to early American shipping. Gabler will also discuss
whether Jefferson actually owned a bottle of 1787 Chƒteau
Lafite — engraved with the initials "Th. J." and sold
at auction by Christie's for $156,450 (the world's most
expensive bottle of wine) — which was rumored to be
his.
Hors d'oeuvres and wines will be served, and Gabler
will lead guests in a comparative tasting of two
Chardonnays, pitting Virginia against France. He will also
be available to sign his new book.
Homewood House Museum, located on the campus of The Johns
Hopkins University, is open 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday
through Friday, and noon to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
Tours of the Museum are offered every half hour with the
last tour beginning at 3:30 p.m. Museum admission is $6 for
adults, $3 for students and children over 6 years of age,
and $5 for seniors. Call (410) 516-5589 or visit
www.jhu.edu/historichouses for additional
information.
|
||||||