Showing posts with label Dining in Public. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dining in Public. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 10, 2019

Cafeteria Manners

1930’s Self-Serve, “Automat Cafeteria” in Manhattan Berenice Abbott, New York Public Library, Public domain












THE cafeteria may promote good food at fair prices, but it also promotes bad manners. A prominent educator fears that the self-serve lunch counters in the schools and business districts will finally destroy such vestiges of table manners as hurried America has thus far preserved.

“All the emphasis of the cafeteria,” said the teacher, “is for selfishness. It’s a case of grab what you want, without a thought for the other fellow. You don’t have to show the slightest consideration for anybody else. You sit down alone to eat. You engage in no table amenities. Nobody asks you to pass the salt and you do not ask anybody to pass the sugar. There is no such thing as cafeteria manners. I despair of the of good manners in this country if the foreign born form their ideas of American customs in the cafeterias.” 

Perhaps the teacher is a little over-anxious, yet there is a good deal in what she says. The self-serve lunch counter does tend to promote selfishness and carelessness. But it need not, if every self-server will only watch his behavior as carefully as he does his tray. It will help, too, if the etiquette of the home table is observed all the more carefully, in order partly to offset the influence of the sketchy cafeteria meal. - San Pedro News, 1923


Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia 


Saturday, September 22, 2018

Cafeteria Code of Etiquette

Five Rules in the “Kid Written” Cafeteria Code of Etiquette
#2. Take up as little space at the table as possible.


Leave it to the Kids!

It takes the children to keep up with the times. What is probably the first code of etiquette expressly compiled for cafeteria patrons appeared in a recent issue of a school paper:
  • Don’t push in the lunch line. 
  • Take up as little space at the table as possible.
  • Talk quietly.
  • Use your handkerchief if you have to cough or sneeze.
  • Eat slowly. 
This, according to the youthful editors, is the whole duty of those who patronize the self-serve. The points are timely and well taken. They deserve consideration by adults crowding into cafeterias the country over. Judging by their actions, many of the elders have failed to realize with the children, that good manners are more essential to comfort and good sense in these bread lines, than they are in the most formal dining room. – Press Democrat, 1922


Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia