Since I live in Vermilion, it’s only a short jaunt over to the neighboring city of Huron. Every once in a while I head over there (usually to go to Berardi’s) and I pass the Angry Bull Steak House each time. Its location at the intersection of U. S. Route 6 and State Route 61 is kind of remote, and I sometimes think about the various businesses that preceded it at that location.
I’ve written about a few of them before, but let’s take a trip back in time and revisit a few of them.
Comer’s Oasis is one of the earliest businesses that was situated there. It’s not hard to imagine how it got its name, since it’s situated seemingly in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by cornfields.
The business seems to date at least to the late 1930s. (An announcement in the August 19, 1959 edition of the
Sandusky Register of the 50th anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Comer noted that they had been at their present location, Comer’s Oasis, for the past 20 years. )
Here’s an ad for Comer’s Oasis that ran in the
Sandusky Register on Sept. 11, 1946, advertising music provided by the South Shore Four every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.
Comer’s Oasis truly was an oasis. An October 6, 1947 news article in the
Sandusky Register about an employee who was swindled referred to Comer’s Oasis as a “combination grocery and bus station.”
This ad from the
Register of Sept. 16, 1948 advertised dancing to the music of
Stardusters featuring
Elaine Meyers.
The business changed hands in March 1949. Joe and Bela Hering, who had previously owned and operated
Hering’s Bohemian Tavern in Lorain, were the new owners.
Here’s an ad from the March 17, 1949
Amherst News-Times announcing the new name of the business:
Hering’s Tavern.
And here are a few ads and articles from the pages of the Sandusky Register. We even get a view of the building.
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Sandusky Register – April 28, 1959 |
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Sandusky Register – April 28, 1959 |
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Sandusky Register – June 23, 1959 |
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Sandusky Register – June 23, 1959 |
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Sandusky Register – Sept. 8, 1959 |
In 1961, the business changed hands again and became the now well-remembered Philbo House. The name ‘Philbo’ was a combination of the names of the two new owners, Phil Provenzano and Bob Arheit.
Here are some
Sandusky Register clippings from the early days of the Philbo House.
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Sandusky Register – July 25, 1961 |
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Sandusky Register – August 15, 1961 |
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Sandusky Register – Sept. 19, 1961 |
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Sandusky Register – October 10, 1961 |
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Sandusky Register – October 24, 1961 |
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Sandusky Register – March 13, 1962 |
In December 1964, the Philbo House suffered a fire. Here is some of the news coverage.
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Sandusky Register – December 10, 1964 |
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Lancaster Eagle Gazette – December 11, 1964 |
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Sandusky Register – December 11, 1964 |
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Sandusky Register – May 22, 1965 |
On September 8, 1969 – 50 years ago this month – fire once again struck the Philbo House. Compare the photo below with the photo of the building when it first became Hering’s Tavern.
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Lorain Journal – September 8, 1969 |
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Elyria Chronicle - Telegram – September 8, 1969 |
The business eventually reopened.
Lastly, here’s a 1970s era photo of the Philbo House, courtesy of the Huron Historical Society’s Digital Collection at OhioMemory.org
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I first wrote about the Philbo House and the Angry Bull back
here in 2009. I did another post incorporating longtime blog contributor Rick Kurish’s research
here in 2015.
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