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| Special
Announcement |
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Alack
and Alas. During the week of Christmas this site's hosting
service appears to have inadvertently allowed the forum's
administration options to be accessed by anyone resulting
in most of the forum's deletion by some malicious entity.
Entries through March 10, 2008 had been archived, but those
which followed were not. However, the archived files are all
saved as pdfs which makes it impractical for me to attempt
to restore them in a forum format. Nonetheless I may be able
to put the pdfs together and post them for just viewing. Furthermore,
since what's left of the forum itself has been compromised
it will be unavailable into the foreseeable future--my apologies.
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| Under
a Red Roof |
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Described
as Howard D. Johnson's "baby," Red Coach
Grill was HoJo's chain of upscale restaurants.
Located on the Airport Rotary, Hyannis was also
called Barnstable and began as a regular Howard
Johnson's Restaurant location. The converted to
Red Coach site lasted into the 1980s, and in its
final guise was a Chili's.
The
vintage 70+ year old building was demolished in
October of 2008 after the Town of Barnstable purchased
it for $1.6 million. Oddly, public funds were
used to purchase the property on behalf of a private
developer who had planned to build a Circuit City
on the site. Read the news! Circuit
City
is operating in Chapter 11 bankruptcy, and has
closed more than one hundred locations. Will a
Circuit City actually be built at the Barnstable
site--unlikely. |
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| Thanks
to Dan Donahue for letting us know about the fate
of Hyannis. |
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| Perry:
re-View |
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| Perry,
Florida --
Photo December 16, 2008: Kummerlowe Archive |
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Below & Above: Even as late as 1989 the
many intact and well maintained vestiges of the Orange
Roofed chain continued to highlight the roadscape lulling
HoJo's fans into complacency.
By
late 2008, the property was still recognizable, but
had seen much stucco and many other alterations including
an oversized "carport" for the Patels. |
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| Photo
May 1989: Bob Venditti |
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| Carolinas
on My Mind |
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Built
in Howard Johnson's most classic and fully realized
modern style, the Manning property was opened in the
late 1960s at I-95's interchange with U.S. 301. A classic
Ramada Inn, Days Inn, and even a vintage Holiday Inn
came to occupy sites near the HoJos complex and the
area enjoyed a period of prosperity that lasted several
years. Eventually new development at other nearby interchanges
attracted most of the site's potential patrons resulting
in closure of all of its classic branded hospitality
offerings. The Howard Johnson's somehow lingered into
the late 1980s and remained incredibly intact as a no-name
motel until the middle 2000s. Likely no longer quite
the time capsule of HoJo's past, Robby discovered during
his November 2008 trip down I-95 that it had changed
hands and the Gate Lodge's Orange Roof had been painted
white.
Please
note that the Manning pages have not been updated and
contain a few broken image links--eventually I will
be able to correct the links and update the pages--thanks
for your continued patience, Rich. |
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| Photo
November 2008: Robby Delius |
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Above:
A Mansard Manor, Gold Rock's circa 1979 Howard Johnson's
yet maintains its name and Orange Mansard! It has also
been called Rocky Mount and is now referred to as Battleboro.
Gold
Rock's section was last updated on November 9, 2008
with 2006 photos and a couple of vintage early shots
by Bob Venditti.
Below:
Also known as Cayce, the Columbia-West, South Carolina
Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge was added to a circa 1953
Restaurant in the early 1960s. The Motor Lodge continued
to be a HoJo's until the middle 1980s and endured a
steady but slow decline which lasted until its ultimate
closure during 2005. The long-lasting Landmark's erasure
will have been completed by mid-December of 2008. A
CVS is scheduled to replace it.
Thanks
to Tom E. for his timely alert about Cayce's final fate. |
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| HoJo's
in the 60's: High Style! |
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| New
Castle, DE--
Ektachrome July 1964: Kummerlowe Archive |
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Above:
The New Castle Restaurant and Motor Lodge complex was
among the first group of standardized Howard Johnson's
properties, and was officially designated as the 28th
Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge when it opened in 1958.
An important and exceptionally visible link in the chain,
New Castle with its "squat" prototype A-frame
Gate Lodge and unusual open gabled Nims-type Restaurant
was built just south (west) of the Delaware
Memorial Bridge
(note the bridge's single span configuration in the
photo above seen between the Gate Lodge and guest building--the
second span was not completed until the latter 1960s).
Most
of the New Castle complex was demolished: however its
Gate Lodge and Restaurant were reused as parts of Mike's
Famous Harley Davidson
and might yet stand.
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Below:
Opened in 1964, the Newark complex was built in Howard
Johnson's fully realized standardized style, yet it
featured an unusual guest building arrangement due to
the site's terrain. Often Howard Johnson's served as
vacation get-a-ways for middle Americans during the
booming post war era. Seen below, Mr. Donahue took full
advantage of the Orange Roof's many ultramodern amenities.
He, his wife, and their brood ventured on many road
trips to enjoy HoJo's over the years! (Remember diving
boards at motel pools? And how bout that black model
500 standard Bell System dial phone out by the pool
for the convenience of Howard Johnson's guests! And
see the copycat Yellow roof of Horne's
which was just across the street from the Newark HJ!)
Note
that the Newark Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge was by
late 2008 one of the last original Howard Johnson's
Motor Lodges still listed as such. |
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| Darien
Demolished |
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| Dairen,
CT --
Photo 2003: Bob Venditti |
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While
Darien's Restaurant closed in 2000, its Motor Lodge
lingered on until nearly the end of 2008. Plans published
in 2006 announced that the classic 1962 Howard Johnson's
would be demolished and a retail center anchored by
a Whole Foods Market was to be established in its place.
Delayed by land use and ownership issues, the redevelopment
was put on hold providing a brief reprieve to the site.
Alas not even the "global financial meltdown"
could save the 46 year old HoJo's, for its total elimination
will have been completed by the beginning of December,
2008. |
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Owned
by the Darien
Hospitality Group ,
the Darien Motor Lodge was one of the last original
HJ's in all of New England. Moreover it was the second
last of the several hundred built to continue to feature
a signature A-frame Gate Lodge topped with a space age
tower-style cupola and Lamplighter weathervane (the
last Howard Johnson's with a cupola topped Gate Lodge
complete with Lamplighter is Harrisburg--assuming
that it yet remains). |
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Above:
Even in its circa 1990s squared off state, the A-frame
Gate Lodge still boasted a gleaming Orange Roof and
towering cupola topped with The Lamplighter. Thank
you Scott C. for letting us know that Darien is lost. |
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| The
goal is to serve the hospitality needs of travelers with hotel and
restaurant descriptions focusing on Howard Johnson's. |
| Google
Bans ORANGEROOF
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Are
you tired of seeing so many online Advertisements...
This site had set up an agreement with Google's adsense division
to provide relevant content ads for viewers to click. You
see, Google charges advertisers and then offers webmasters
a small cut if they allow the advertisements to be displayed
on their sites. The set up pretends to be a way for the little
guy to make a few pennies in order to offset the costs associated
with providing websites like this one. But the whole scheme
is simply too good to be true, and after a couple of months
Google abruptly canceled this site's account seizing the $38
which had accrued. Meanwhile Google reported excellent financials
for the first quarter of 2008 with its stock price soaring
on the news (BTW, Google's two founders celebrated a one hour
increase in their wealth to the tune of $2.2 billion
each as a result). Hmm. So Google gets little guys to display
ads, cancels them, takes the money, and then posts a big profit.
How long before somebody catches on--I wonder? Below is a
copy of the short email Google sent: |
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While
going through our records recently, we found that your
AdSense account has posed a significant risk to our
AdWords advertisers. Since keeping your account in our
publisher network may financially damage our advertisers
in the future, we've decided to disable your account.
Please
understand that we consider this a necessary step to
protect the interests of both our advertisers and our
other AdSense publishers. We realize the inconvenience
this may cause you, and we thank you in advance for
your understanding and cooperation.
Sincerely,
The
Google AdSense Team |
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You
can Cancel Google... Well not really, but
there are a couple of things that you can do. First change
to another search engine like Yahoo! or MSN. Second and better,
switch to Firefox
and BLOCK Google's ads with AdBlock
Plus or
some other add-on
that might be available. This site was NEVER any kind of risk
or threat to Google or its advertisers and made every effort
to follow Google's rules. Nonetheless, even without the small
amount of revenue that was anticipated from Google to financially
support this site, it will remain online in one form or another.
Thanks for everyone's comments and encouragement! Rich
Firefox
AdBlock
Plus |
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| Site
remains largely dormant |
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11/15/2008:
Sadly, production of Howard Johnson's Toastees ceased some
six months ago. No doubt the miniscule royalties realized
by Mr. Kushner from his contract with the now defunct America's
Kitchen were all that sustained his "LaMancha Group."
Save for the now non-standard and virtually independent Lakes
Placid
and George,
as well as the de-oranged Bangor
restaurant little is left, for Toastees limited availability
in Publix
stores as well as in various supermarkets in the Northeast
United States represented the last tangible evidence of the
once largest and greatest hospitality chain on the planet.
Please
note that this site and its affiliated sections will be mostly
dormant until further notice. Due to personal circumstances
your webmaster and Howard Johnson's enthusiast has moved half-way
across the country and must focus on continued employment.
There will regrettably be little or no free time in which
to update this site. However it will remain online and available--and
of course--free of charge:) Thank you for your continued support
and interest! Richard Kummerlowe |
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| Hard
to Believe but |
| ONLY
Three Howard Johnson's Restaurants Remain: |
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At
the onset of my endeavor/adventure to document Howard
Johnson's in 1998, I never could have imagined that
I was witness to the end of an era. It is difficult
to believe that an institution so ingrained in our culture
could vanish almost without a trace. For it would seem
that with each passing day another HoJo's is closed
and demolished. Not that long ago Howard Johnson's was
the largest hospitality chain in the world. But now
this once ubiquitous roadside landmark fades from America's
rear-view mirror, and as we speed off into the uncharted
future fewer and fewer orange roofed Restaurants and
Motor Lodges remain to serve the hungry and sleepy motoring
public.
This
site commemorates the Roadside Empire created by Howard
D. Johnson, and chronicles with photographs and commentary
the story of a once vast organization and its legacy
to the American roadscape, and to the hospitality industry.
Please browse and enjoy the photographs, and I hope
that they rekindle many memories. |
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"Howard
Johnson's -- An American way of life -- convenience, comfort
and hospitality for the entire family, at home and away from
home." |
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