Based on copyright registration for his 1907/1908 edition of The World's Drinks And How To Mix Them, he was a resident of or had an office in Mountain View, California in 1907.
According to the introduction of the post-earthquake edition, the 1906 "Great Quake" destroyed the plates for his earlier version of The World's Drinks And How To Mix Them.
Boothby's place in the growth of the cocktail is significant; his first bar manual in 1891 contained 20 cocktail recipes among the drinks; the 1934 book under his name contains 172 pages of them.[2]
Bartender (or in his terms "presiding deity") at Hotel Rafael, San Rafael, California, in "the gay days when Baron von Schroeder was making history over there".[2]
Assemblyman in California[1] in 1895. The 1908 edition of The World's Drinks & How To Mix Them begins "To the liquor dealers of San Francisco who unanimously assisted in my election to the Legislature by an unprecedented majority."[2]
Soda drink counter supervisor, Olympic Club, during Prohibition[2]
Bibliography
Cocktail Boothby's American Bartender (1891) (as William T. Boothby) This book was described in 1934 as "a scarce item for collectors" and went through three editions (1891, 1900, 1900[5]), selling 50,000 copies[2].
The World's Drinks And How To Mix Them (1908) (as Hon. Wm. T. Boothby)[6]
Cocktail Bill Boothby's World Drinks And How To Mix Them (1930) (as Hon. Wm. T. Boothby)
Swallows (1930)
Cocktail Bill Boothby's World Drinks And How To Mix Them (1934) (as Hon. Wm. T. Boothby)
^ abcdefghi Unknown. The Recorder (San Francisco business newspaper) December 6, 1934. Quoted by Brian Rea and Bartender's School of Santa Rosa [2]
^ Jensen, Carol A. East Contra Costa County, 2007. [3]
^ Jensen, Carol A. Byron Hot Springs, 2006. Page 72.
^ Burton, John. Hon. William T. "Cocktail Bill" Boothby: Premier Mixologist[4]
^ Boothby, William "Cocktail". The World's Drinks and How to Mix Them, 1908. Contents photographed at San Francisco Public Library Historical Materials Collection [5] on December 28, 2007.