Friday, June 12, 2020

Tale of a Route 20 Eatery: From Barbecue to French Cuisine

Many of us are familiar with Chez Francois, the popular French restaurant in Vermilion known all over Northern Ohio for its fine food.

But did you know that for a time in the 1950s and 60s, there was a French restaurant out in the country on U. S. 20 west of Elyria?

I didn’t either. But leave it to longtime blog contributor Dennis Thompson to make the discovery, and share his research with me so the story can be told here.

Dennis made his discovery while researching and identifying old photographs on the Vintage Aerials website. Interestingly, the French restaurant had humble roots as a barbecue.

Here’s the photo.


“It’s a little drive in with a big history,” noted Dennis. "French born chef Albert Mazarelle constructed this in 1954, and opened as the Green Gables Bar-B-Q

"He had been chef at numerous restaurants around the world, most recently the Elyria Country Club. The original restaurant would have been just the peaked roof main building. Within two years he had added the side dining room.”

Here’s an article from the January 5th, 1956 edition of the Chronicle-Telegram announcing the completion of the new dining room. It provides a nice biography of Albert Mazarelle that includes his extensive experience as an executive chef.


And here’s a Feb. 3, 1956 newspaper ad.
Feb. 3, 1956 ad
But let’s get back to Dennis and the story.
"The Green Gables was no ordinary drive in,” Dennis noted. "In addition to the "World's Best Bar-B-Q," Albert featured French cuisine such as French onion soup and duck livers flamed in sherry. 


January 31, 1958 ad
"By the early 1960s, he had renamed it Albert's Restaurant Francais and offered full course French dinners on three days by reservation only.


Nov. 1, 1963 ad
"The tiny dining room could seat 22 people. He still had regular fare, but never offered hot dogs – and hamburgers were only for children.

Dennis wasnt kidding about Mazarelles attitude towards hamburgers and hot dogs. Check out this great article written by E. C. Witham  from the Chronicle-Telegram of July 31, 1965 in which Mazarelle is quoted as saying, “Zey say, ‘amburGER – and I say, POOF! – you wan’ a ‘amburGER, you go to truck stop!"


With an attitude like that towards humble fare, I wondered who Mazarelle's main customers would have been. But Dennis observed, "He delivered to the Oberlin area and much of his clientele was from the college, plus businessmen and executives from Lorain and Elyria.

Mazarelle passed away in 1969. 

But new businesses would continue the legacy of good food and good times at that location.

As Dennis noted, "His wife, Agnes, sold the property to Frank Bolf in 1970, who changed the name to the Polar Freeze. In 1973 he applied for a liquor license and it became a tavern by the same name.

"By the 1980s it was Mary's Tavern. I can't find how long Mary's stayed in business and cannot find any business listed after it either.

"The building is still there, with a wide front addition that shields the original buildings, at 43961 Oberlin - Elyria Rd.”

Thanks as usual to Dennis for sharing his research.

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Klatik’s Log Cabin Nite Club – North Ridgeville

I’ve had a thing for log cabins for a long time.

Maybe it’s because we had a set of Lincoln Logs to play with when I was a kid (although I never mastered roof construction). And Mom always bought Log Cabin Syrup. Or possibly because my family used to camp at Tamsin Park in Peninsula, Ohio, and there was a cool log cabin Ranger Station there.

Even as an adult, I’ve enjoyed restaurants like the Cabin Club in Westlake, and stayed in plenty of modern cabins while camping at Yogi Bear’s Jellystone Park™ Camp - Resorts all over the Midwest and Canada. I’ve even half-heartedly checked out cabins that you can buy already assembled and have trucked to a lot of your choice to live in.

Which leads me to last week, when I was poking around on Ebay and saw the ashtray above advertising Klatik’s Log Cabin Nite Club. As it says, it was located at the corner of Sugar Ridge and Route 76 (now Ohio State Route 83) in North Ridgeville, Ohio.

Since I’d never heard of it, I wondered if it was really a log cabin – and if it was still there.

A brief internet search showed that Emil Klatik had a liquor license for a business known as Sugar Ridge Log Cabin. I found a mention of the Ridgeville Sportsmen’s Club having its regular meeting there in January 1956.

And a little more Googling revealed that local historian and researcher Dennis Thompson had already done my research for me! Thanks, Dennis!

As you might remember, Dennis is the King of Vintage Aerials, having researched, identified and labeled thousands of vintage aerial photos in Ohio and around the country – including the Sugar Ridge Log Cabin (shown below). That’s Sugar Ridge Road in front of the building.

Circa 1963
Dennis’ caption noted, "The northwest corner of Rt 83 and Sugar Ridge Rd, North Ridgeville. This was the Sugar Ridge Log Cabin restaurant and lounge. Advertised disco nights in the 1970s! It seems to have existed until 1980 or so and was replaced with a different building. Just an empty lot today.

Heres a Vintage Aerial side view photo from 1969. Thats Route 83 at the bottom of the photo.


Circa 1969
(Here's the link to the 1963 entry on the Vintage Aerial website, and this link will take you to the 1969 photo.)

A popular restaurant called Black Dog Pub and Eatery later called that location home for a few years before a fire damaged the building in 2013.

Courtesy Fox8
Anyway, like Dennis said, there is just an empty lot at the location today.

But if you ‘drive by’ on Google Maps going north on 83, for a few yards you briefly see a ‘ghost' image of a building there.

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Chicharo Nite Club

A piece of advertising for a popular South Lorain nightclub of the 1940s and 50s recently made an appearance on Ebay. 

Historian and longtime contributor Rick Kurish made the find. "I ran across this postcard on eBay today," he noted. "A bit of Lorain’s ethnic history.”

It was a postcard for Chicharo Nite Club at 1808 East 28th Street in Lorain.



So what was the story behind the nightclub?

"I found an ad in the Chronicle-Telegram for the Restaurant/ Nite Club, said Rick. "It was advertised as “Lorain County's Only” American-Mexican Nite Club & Restaurant. 


"It was operated by Fernando A. DiazIt appeared to be a popular venue for the Mexican population of South Lorain in the 1940-1960 time frame." 

Rick did some digging to find out more about the owners of the restaurant, Fernando and Basilisa Diaz. 


He was able to piece together a timeline of the restaurant from newspaper articles about the couple at the time of their 50th wedding anniversary in March 1971. 

"The Amherst News-Times article indicated they opened their restaurant in 1938, and were from Spain, not Mexico, as you might surmise, observed Rick.

The couple retired in 1959, and both passed away in Tucson in 1979. 

And, it turns out there was a family connection between Chicaro and a well-known Lorain County restaurant: Tudy’s.

One of Fernando and Basilisa’s children is Arthur (Tudy) Diaz.

As Rick noted, "According to the Lorain City Directories for 1957, 1958 and 1959, Arthur (Tudy) Diaz was involved in the last couple years of operation of the Chicharo club. The directories for 1957 and 1958 list Fernando Diaz as owner of Chicharo, and Arthur as the manager of the club. 

"By the 1959 directory, Chicharo had disappeared from the directory, and the Mexican - American Citizens Club was listed at the 1808 East 28th St. address. The 1959 directory listed Arthur A. Diaz as the owner of Tudy’s Spot Drive In, at 1742 North Ridge Road.”

(Tudy’s has long been a regular topic on this blog.)

"It’s a good bet that Arthur learned a lot about restaurant operation from his father at Chicharo, observed Rick.


1808 E. 28th Street today
Thanks as always to Rick for sharing his research.

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Crystal Rock Beer – Part 2

Here's Part 2 of my 2010 article about Crystal Rock Beer that appeared in the Black Swamp Trader and Firelands Gazette. As I noted yesterday, the text has not been updated, but I have included a few color photos taken for the original article that did not make it into the paper due to space. (You also might remember that the heritage tourism newspaper was printed in brown ink, so it's nice to see the photos here presented in full color.)

****
Crystal Rock Memories of Caves and Beer – Part 2
By Dan Brady

Vintage Crystal Rock bottle and labels
(Courtesy Jim Winkel)
Around 1944, during an anniversary celebration of the Cleveland-Sandusky Brewing Company, Crystal Rock Beer was proudly advertised as Ohio’s oldest beer, as it had first appeared in the early 1890’s. The beer was later repositioned as the company’s low-cost brand, before being discontinued for a time at the end of the 1940’s.

Crystal Rock Beer made a comeback of sorts in the late 1950’s as a low-budget beer sold only in supermarkets. Eventually, however, the Cleveland-Sandusky Brewing Company shut down brewery operations in 1962 and only distributed Crystal Rock Beer, which was produced for the company by International Breweries. When International Breweries closed in 1966, two other breweries acquired the rights to Crystal Rock Beer and produced it for a few more years. Finally, the brand was discontinued around 1969.

Today, collectors treasure vintage Crystal Rock Beer memorabilia, particularly advertising items and labels from the brand’s earliest days, when it promoted using the water from the Crystal Rock Spring.

But what became of the Crystal Rock Spring?

The property containing the Crystal Rock Spring and caves eventually became Crystal Rock Park. Information is sketchy, but by the 1920’s, owner Edward J. Martin operated it as a summer resort with picnic facilities and a dance hall. The nearby community of Crystal Rock on Sandusky Bay (“Since 1923”) was developed around the same time and exists to this day.

The Limestone Caves and Caverns of Ohio explains that there are two main caves on the Crystal Rock property: Crystal Rock Cave and Brewery Cave. In the 1920’s, the Crystal Rock Cave was the only one being shown regularly to visitors. 


Undated photo of the entrance to Crystal Rock Cave
(Photo courtesy of the Charles E. Frohman Collection, Hayes Presidential Center)
The Brewery Cave was named because it was the water from this cave that was used originally for Crystal Rock Beer.

The book’s 1926 description of the Brewery Cave stated that “A brick-walled excavation, 21 feet in depth, and 14 by 10 feet, served as an entrance to the cave, and to house the pump and engines used to force the water to Sandusky. From the entrance an eight-inch pipe leads to the water, popularly called an underground lake. The pipe remains but the pumps and engines have been removed. At the bottom of the entrance a passageway about two feet high leads into the main cave, which is divided into two parts by a large block of stone which dropped from the roof. The cave is nowhere more than four feet in height and tapers at the sides.”
Local resident Jim Winkel is well acquainted with the Crystal Rock Caves. Jim’s father, Ted Winkel, purchased the property in the late 1960’s and operated it as the Crystal Caves Park complex for years. Ted Winkel also built the Crystal Rock Campground around 1969, which is still in business today, located on Crystal Rock Road across from the caves. The campground still uses the distinctive Crystal Rock lettering from the beer advertising as its logo.

Existing advertising from this era enticed tourists to “SEE the underground river in the BEAUTIFUL CRYSTAL CAVES.” Visitors were also lured by the park’s other amenities, which besides the campground (originally part of the KOA system) included nature trails, a picnic area, and furnished cabins on Sandusky Bay.

According to Jim Winkel, the cave tour business closed down around the end of the 1970’s due to a variety of reasons, including government regulations regarding handicap access. But Jim’s involvement with the caves wasn’t over yet.

Since October 2005, Jim and his wife Dian have lived in a fabulous showplace home they built atop the Brewery Cave. The building formerly used as a starting point for cave tours was thoughtfully incorporated into the home’s design. The cave’s entrance is behind a door in his basement, and its exit door opens to a beautiful sunken garden adjacent to his home. 


The Brewery Cave exit door
The wooden stairs that once led cave visitors back up to ground level now lead to a beautiful circular patio and wall surrounding the sunken garden. 


Brewery Cave visitors would climb these stairs to return to ground level
A fountain on the patio attracts a variety of birds, and a huge picture window overlooking the garden provides a year-round spectacular view. It’s obvious that this is one of Jim and Dian’s favorite parts of their house.

I asked Jim why he decided to build his house above the Brewery Cave.

“It was too unique to allow it to disappear,” he stated solemnly. “The sunken garden view is worth everything to the history of the Crystal Rock Caves.”

I was fortunate to be given a personal tour through the Brewery Cave. 


The electrical mood lighting was still intact, and I was impressed with the cave’s simple beauty. 


Jim pointed out the section of pipe that was used to pump the water out of the cave for use in Crystal Rock Beer. 


The famous Crystal Rock Spring water is now used as a heat exchange for the Winkels’ heating and cooling system. Thus the cave and spring that were so much a part of Jim’s life have become an integral part of his home.

I enjoyed my tour of the Brewery Cave. It was a throwback to a simpler time when a guided tour through a cave and a picnic afterwards was all a family needed for a day of summertime fun.

Although the Crystal Rock Cave tours are over, and Crystal Rock Beer is no more, time has not dimmed the happy memories of them for many people. So, if you happen to see signs for the mythical Crystal Rock Bottling Company at Cedar Point this summer, remember that for more than a century, the ‘Crystal Rock’ name has been synonymous with good times in the Sandusky area.

Special thanks to Jim and Dian Winkel, Jim Norrocky and Nan Card, Curator of Manuscripts at the R. B. Hayes Presidential Center for their help with this article.


****
In preparation for this post, I drove over to Crystal Rock to see what things looked like these days. The campground was open and doing a nice business.

And the nearby community of Crystal Rock had erected a colorful new sign since my last visit in 2010.

Monday, June 8, 2020

Crystal Rock Beer – Part 1

I think I'll keep the beer flowing here on the blog for a couple more days.

Above is a handsome ad for Crystal Rock Beer that ran in the Lorain Journal on July 2, 1947. Although the beer is but a memory now, its name lives on in Northern Ohio as a campground, as well as a nearby community on Lake Erie.

But how did the beer get its name in the first place?

Youll find the answer in this article (below) that I wrote for the Black Swamp Trader and Firelands Gazette back in August 2010. 

Some things have changed since I wrote it ten years ago; the ‘new’ Cedar Point ride referenced in the article has already been dismantled! But the history of Crystal Rock hasn't changed.

So here's the article as it originally appeared, courtesy of the Black Swamp Trader and Firelands Gazette. In a few instances, I replaced a black and white image with a color version I had; I also included a few photos taken at that time that did not make it into the original article due to space.


****
Crystal Rock Memories of Caves and Beer – Part 1
By Dan Brady

This summer, when Cedar Point guests embark on the new Shoot the Rapids water ride, they’ll board their boats inside the Crystal Rock Bottling Company of West Virginia, part of the ride’s moonshine and feuding theme. What many of the out-of-town guests won’t realize is that ‘Crystal Rock’ is not an ad man’s whimsical creation. It’s a name with a lot of Sandusky area history attached to it. It refers not only to a group of caves and an underground spring dating back to the late 1800’s, but a popular beer brewed with the spring water. The name lives on in other ways as well. Why is the name ‘Crystal Rock’ so memorable and enduring? To find out, let’s tap into some memories of Crystal Rock Beer and get the lowdown on the Crystal Rock Caves as well.

The Crystal Rock name begins with the caves and underground spring, located eight miles west of Sandusky near Castalia. According to the book The Limestone Caves and Caverns of Ohio by George W. White, the limestone Crystal Rock Caves contain Monroe dolomite, which is made up of tiny crystals, thus giving the caves and spring their memorable names.

At a time when Sandusky’s water supply was not yet filtered, the Crystal Rock Spring water flowing through the caves attracted the attention of some Sandusky businessmen. In 1892, Charles L. Wagner, Vice President of the Stang Brewery, and Albert E. Merrill, a probate judge and banker, formed the Crystal Rock Water Company and leased 125 acres of the cave property. They proposed selling the clear, pure water from the underground Crystal Rock Spring to the city of Sandusky for its water supply. They planned to use the water at the brewery as well. (The Stang Brewery had just been rebuilt, after a disastrous fire had destroyed the entire complex in July 1891.)

According to an article in the Sandusky Register on April 13, 1893, plans were made to construct a six and one-fourth inch pipe running five miles in length from the cave springs to the Stang Brewery, which would have exclusive rights to the water for brewing. The city would connect up with the end of the pipeline at the brewery.

Many meetings were held between city officials and the Crystal Rock Water Company to work out an arrangement. Although the plan ultimately fell through, the Crystal Rock Spring water was indeed used (for a time) by the brewery for its flagship product, Crystal Rock Beer.

Many local history books state that around 1904, it was determined that the Crystal Rock Spring water was not of uniform quality and that the pipeline to Sandusky from the spring was dug up and removed. But at least one local resident believes that the pipeline was never built.

Vintage beer tray
Jim Norrocky, who now owns part of the former Crystal Rock Cave property, has extensively researched the matter and makes a strong case that there is no evidence that the pipeline ever existed. “There were no deeds or leases that I could find, to property for a pipe which would have been needed to get to Sandusky across country which is the direct route,” he explained in a letter. He has determined that there is no physical evidence of a pipeline either, just a record of the brewery's intention to build it. Norrocky also believes that the water used at the brewery, along with any that was sold to the city, was transported from the cave by horse and wagon.

No matter how the Crystal Rock Spring water was ultimately transported to the brewery, it was important not only for the taste of the popular beer, but also for the marketing angle. A rare Crystal Rock Beer tray from the early days depicts a tranquil spring in a beautiful forest setting and states, “Our Famous Crystal Rock Beer is Brewed From the Waters of this Spring.”

In 1896, the Stang Brewery merged with the Kuebeler Brewing and Malting Company to become Kuebeler-Stang. 
Two years later, the company joined with several other breweries in Cleveland to form the Cleveland & Sandusky Brewing Company.

According to the book Brewing Beer in the Buckeye State, Vol. 1 by Robert A. Musson, M.D., Crystal Rock Beer in its early days “dominated the entire beer market between Cleveland and Toledo.” Crystal Rock Beer was so popular that for its fans, the brewery constructed the Crystal Rock Castle at the Cedar Point amusement park and resort in Sandusky in 1904. This popular beer garden was located near the lagoons to attract arriving park guests. Many postcards exist of this impressive structure, which lasted until the 1960’s.


Vintage postcard of the Crystal Rock Castle, postmarked 1905
With Prohibition in 1919, Crystal Rock Beer became a near beer called Crystal Rock Cereal Beverage, produced by the renamed brewery, now known as Crystal Rock Products Company. Since it could no longer serve beer, the Crystal Rock Castle at Cedar Point was converted into the Ye Olde Castle Grill. But within a year after the repeal of Prohibition in 1933, Crystal Rock Beer was back in production.

Next: Into the Cave

Friday, June 5, 2020

A Hamm-Fisted Beer Drinker

Although I’m not much of a drinker in my dotage, beer has been a favorite topic on this blog since the beginning. There have been many (some of you might think too many) posts devoted to a few favorites, including Old Dutch, and Carling’s Black Label. I’ve also written about P.O.C. and Barbarossa.

But I still like a beer once in a while. And right now, Hamm’s is the retro beer of choice in my fridge. (I still have a few cans of Black Label in there too).

Hamm’s, as many of you probably remember, is the beer from the Land of Sky Blue Waters and was originally brewed in St. Paul, Minnesota. Especially essential to the beer’s appeal was its popular advertising mascot, the Hamm’s Beer bear. He has been featured in TV commercials and ads since the 1950s, cavorting with other forest creatures in a Northern woods setting.

Here’s a great, almost full-page ad for a contest sponsored by Hamm’s Beer that ran in the Star Tribune, the largest newspaper in Minnesota, back on May 10, 1959.

Here’s a closeup of one of the great bear illustrations from the ad.
And here are some advertising clip sheets of the Hamm’s bear that I found online.
Vintage Hamm’s Beer advertising items (such as signs, ashtrays, banks, calendars, clocks, etc.) are highly collectible, especially anything with the bear on it. There’s even a club devoted to collecting only Hamm’s items. (Visit its website here.)

Thursday, June 4, 2020

939 Broadway’s Broadcast Past

Broadway Mary’s (which opened back in February, according to this Morning Journal article) is the newest business to call 939 Broadway home. There have been many others over the past many decades.

So who were some of the other tenants of the distinctive building?

A 1975 ad from the
Amherst News-Times
Well, for me the building will always be the home of radio station WLRO 1380 AM, since it was located there throughout the 1970s and until the station was sold in 1984. I always thought it was cool to drive by the building when WLRO was in there, knowing what was going on inside.

Who doesn’t remember listening to Jim Allen and his sports report about local teams, recognizing the names of fellow classmates?

(By the way, amazingly, Jim Allen still covers local sports on Kool Kat Oldies 1380, the successor station to WLRO. I even ran into him at the Apples grocery store in Lorain a few weeks ago.)

Anyway, I wrote about the many other companies that were located at 939 Broadway (including a printing company, a computer repair company and various nightclubs) back here on this 2015 post. And this post revealed that 939 Broadway was also the address for Lorain’s Tucker dealership.

Here’s hoping that Broadway Mary’s enjoys much success and community support. Here’s a link to its Facebook page.