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Thread: Old Restaurants

  1. #126

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Prunepicker,
    To answer your last two posts, the Family Spaghetti House is clearly the name according to the DOK ad and that's also what I remembered very early on in this conversation. I agree with CarltonsKeeper that Jack's was near 59th. As for google maps, leavethe "1/2" off of the address, they don't do well with fractions.
    C. T.
    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    My brain hurts. It will have to come out.

    53031/2 S Pennsylvania 73159 Put this address into the link below.

    https://maps.google.com/

  2. #127

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    I remember exactly where the spaghetti restaurant was in the early '70s. It was in the SE corner of the building that is now Centro Cristiano Fe Agrada A DIOS Agrada DIOS
    5209 S. Pennsylvania Ave Oklahoma City, OK 73119 (405) 686-1889. The church now uses one address for what used to be a very small strip shopping/business center.

    As someone else has said; it was in the building just north of the Taco Bell on the west side of Penn. We ate at both restaurants often.

  3. #128

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Frisky,
    Did you see the ad in my (and Prunepicker's) posts? The address was 5303 1/2 South Penn.
    C. T.
    Quote Originally Posted by FRISKY View Post
    I remember exactly where the spaghetti restaurant was in the early '70s. It was in the SE corner of the building that is now Centro Cristiano Fe Agrada A DIOS Agrada DIOS
    5209 S. Pennsylvania Ave Oklahoma City, OK 73119 (405) 686-1889. The church now uses one address for what used to be a very small strip shopping/business center.

    As someone else has said; it was in the building just north of the Taco Bell on the west side of Penn. We ate at both restaurants often.

  4. #129

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    The Rustic Inn, 39th & Portland, has been closed for over 20 years, I think. Bummer when it closed.

  5. #130

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by ctchandler View Post
    Frisky,
    Did you see the ad in my (and Prunepicker's) posts? The address was 5303 1/2 South Penn.
    C. T.
    There were several separate businesses with different addresses at that location before the church combined them together into a single structure and made it one address.

  6. #131

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Frisky,
    But 5209-5303 spans a city block. I guess I will drive over there one of these days and "scope it out", cuz I'm confused. Haven't heard from you in a while, didn't we meet at Coit's a few years ago?
    C. T.
    Quote Originally Posted by FRISKY View Post
    There were several separate businesses with different addresses at that location before the church combined them together into a single structure and made it one address.

  7. #132

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    I drove over there this afternoon and there is no doubt that the smaller building with the side (South) entrance and now shares a parking lot with a larger building (both appear to be part of the same complex/business) was "The Family Spaghetti House". I definitely remember entering from the side, not the front and it still has the side entrance. I envisioned the entrance a little further West but it's been a long time. The size is exactly what I remember. I must be wealthy or nuts (and I'm sure it's the latter) for driving 38 miles roundtrip just to figure this out. Actually, I had other reasons to go to the South side anyway, so I killed several birds with one trip.
    C. T.

    I just went to google earth and discovered my mistake. I stand by my original statement about side entrance but the building is about 1/2 a block Further South. And it really looks the part with the glass and everything.
    Last edited by ctchandler; 04-04-2014 at 03:16 PM. Reason: I was off by one block, Garmin pointed me to the wrong building.

  8. #133

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    You're exactly right. I was thinking about House of Chan just off of NW
    39th Expressway and a block west of N. Penn.
    Remember House of Chan. It was the restaurant that we went to when out of town relatives stayed at the Habana Inn.

  9. #134

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Remember it well. I Graduated from Bishop McGuinness HS. That was when you dressed up to eat out.

  10. #135

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Remember that one also. My husband and I rented an apartment across the street when we were first married. I believe there was an old abandoned movie theater in that mall also.

  11. #136

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Ah, those were the places where the average guy took his family to a fancy restaurant once every six month, paid cash, and was treated like royalty. Glens was a gem on NW 10th street, near the fairgrounds, in a neighborhood that was never impressive. Those days are gone forever, basically for the guy and his family, who worked in the meat packing district, when there was one.

  12. #137

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Never could figure out why Der Dutchman moved out of OKC. Nice seafood restaurant.

  13. #138

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by ctchandler View Post
    I just remembered what I believe was the first Japanese restaurant in OKC (I might be wrong), Tokyo Gardens on 46th and Lincoln. I remember their shrimp tempura, it was excellent.
    C. T.
    Wow. We remember a time gone by, when Lincoln Blvd connected to Route 66. Those were the days when parents with kids would travel to OKC, to attend Springlake park and the Zoo. They came from Kansas and Arkansas and Texas, stayed on Lincoln Blvd at a reasonably priced hotel, and had their pick of Sussy's Pizza, Tokyo Gardens, Beverly's, Delores, or a great buffet at the Tradewinds hotel. Lincoln Blvd was once Bricktown, with plenty to do, centrally located for Amusement, visiting the Capitol, and downtown OKC.

  14. #139

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Biznesschic1959,
    Now to really test your memory, do you remember the Prow Lounge, it was around in the 60's, and was a bar in the same building as Sussy's. And if you remember Elmer's on Lincoln, I will really be impressed/amazed.
    C. T.
    Quote Originally Posted by biznesschic1959 View Post
    Wow. We remember a time gone by, when Lincoln Blvd connected to Route 66. Those were the days when parents with kids would travel to OKC, to attend Springlake park and the Zoo. They came from Kansas and Arkansas and Texas, stayed on Lincoln Blvd at a reasonably priced hotel, and had their pick of Sussy's Pizza, Tokyo Gardens, Beverly's, Delores, or a great buffet at the Tradewinds hotel. Lincoln Blvd was once Bricktown, with plenty to do, centrally located for Amusement, visiting the Capitol, and downtown OKC.

  15. #140
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by ctchandler View Post
    Biznesschic1959,
    Now to really test your memory, do you remember the Prow Lounge, it was
    around in the 60's, and was a bar in the same building as Sussy's. And if you
    remember Elmer's on Lincoln, I will really be impressed/amazed.
    C. T.
    Do you mean Sussy's when it was on NW 23rd? Jake Samara was the owner
    and before it became Sussy's, it was the Tempo club. Jake told me that one
    morning he was in the office and heard things being moved around in the
    dining room. It was Jack Sussy. He asked Jack what he was doing and Jack
    said, "I'm getting things ready for lunch". Jake asked if he had any restaurant
    experience and Jack said, "I worked in a deli in New Orleans once." Jake
    liked his attitude and Sussy became his front man. Jake had the personality of
    a snake. He had the sign changed because Sussy's covered Tempo. Jake also
    owned the restaurant on NE 36th. I believe the only restaurant that Sussy
    owned was on NE 50th, but I'm not sure if he really owned it or not.

  16. #141

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by biznesschic1959 View Post
    Wow. We remember a time gone by, when Lincoln Blvd connected to Route 66. Those were the days when parents with kids would travel to OKC, to attend Springlake park and the Zoo. They came from Kansas and Arkansas and Texas, stayed on Lincoln Blvd at a reasonably priced hotel, and had their pick of Sussy's Pizza, Tokyo Gardens, Beverly's, Delores, or a great buffet at the Tradewinds hotel. Lincoln Blvd was once Bricktown, with plenty to do, centrally located for Amusement, visiting the Capitol, and downtown OKC.
    Howard Johnson's near the US-66 / Lincoln junction.

  17. #142
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by biznesschic1959 View Post
    ... and had their pick of Sussy's Pizza, Tokyo Gardens, Beverly's, Delores, or
    a great buffet at the Tradewinds hotel. Lincoln Blvd was once Bricktown,
    with plenty to do, centrally located for Amusement, visiting the Capitol, and
    downtown OKC.
    I remember the Tradewinds! Dad would take me there as a kid and talk to
    the Senators. I don't remember Tokyo Gardens. Where was it? Delores'
    was on NW 23 just west of Broadway. Right? Didn't it close around 1971?

  18. #143
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Does anyone remember Darrell's Drive In? It was located where Big Truck
    Tacos is. Good burgers!

  19. #144
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by FRISKY View Post
    There were several separate businesses with different addresses at that
    location before the church combined them together into a single structure
    and made it one address.
    Hey! Is that you? Where have you been?

  20. #145
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by boscorama View Post
    The Rustic Inn, 39th & Portland, has been closed for over 20 years, I think.
    Bummer when it closed.
    You are correctomundo! It was one of the few 24 hour restaurants in town.
    A place where any respectable drunk could sober up before driving home?

    I remember it every time I drive by that location. Now it's a mail box place.

  21. #146
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by biznesschic1959 View Post
    Never could figure out why Der Dutchman moved out of OKC. Nice seafood
    restaurant.
    I thought their hush puppies alone would keep them in business. C'mon,
    everyone ate there for the hush puppies and butter and butter and more
    butter. Duh! We'd all order an entree only to provide an excuse to eat 2 or
    3 pounds of hush puppies and butter and butter and more butter.

  22. #147
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by biznesschic1959 View Post
    ...Glens was a gem on NW 10th street, near the fairgrounds...
    Did Glen's own the meat packing place on the corner of NW 10th and N May?
    I always thought they did but not sure.

    The building had a heifer's head protruding from the front of the store.

  23. #148
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by FRISKY View Post
    I remember exactly where the spaghetti restaurant was in the early '70s. It
    was in the SE corner of the building that is now Centro Cristiano Fe Agrada
    A DIOS Agrada DIOS
    I'm having a hard time remembering where Jack's Steakhouse was. If it
    existed then you know where it was.

  24. #149
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by ctchandler View Post
    Prunepicker,
    To answer your last two posts, the Family Spaghetti House is clearly the
    name according to the DOK ad and that's also what I remembered very early
    on in this conversation. I agree with CarltonsKeeper that Jack's was near 59th.
    As for google maps, leavethe "1/2" off of the address, they don't do well with
    fractions.
    C. T.
    I believe you 100%. I'm sure that's where the Family spaghetti House was.
    Hey I can see the sign.

    However, a little bit farther south, I can see Jack's sign. Unless I'm completely
    out of my mind, it was the last place in the southern most part of a strip mall.
    I'm thinking it was immediately north of Hillcrest Hospital.

    Somebody confirm or provide the location of Jack's.

  25. #150
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Old Restaurants

    Quote Originally Posted by biznesschic1959 View Post
    Remember House of Chan. It was the restaurant that we went to when out of
    town relatives stayed at the Habana Inn.
    I can still taste that warm rye bread. OKC put the House of Chan out of
    business when it decided to "improve" the access to 66. What a shame. A
    true OKC icon destroyed under the guise of progress.

    Puke.

    Barf.

    Gut wrenching hurl.

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