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![]() (or Bumbo, Bombo, Bumboo) Spirits, customarily rum, with water, sugar and a sweet spice such as nutmeg or cinnamon. The traditional drink of English merchantmen, in contrast to the simple 'grog' of the Royal Navy. Known at least since a reference in Tobias Smollett's 'The adventures of Roderick Random' of 1748; "He and his messmates were making merry round a table well stored with bumbo and wine." Bell's 'Notes and queries' of 1849 quotes a Nothumberland song as having the verse; The pitmen and the keelmen trim, It was also popular in the American Colonies - "honest" George Washington is known to have purchased 160 gallons of rum to make bumpo to help "encourage" voters to elect him to the Virginia House of Burgesses in 1758. ![]() British Soldier George Washington (Colonel of the Virginia Regiment of His Majesty's Colony and later a President of the United States of America) Portrait by Charles Willson Peale ![]() |
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