Classic Restaurants of Durham
By Chris Holaday, Patrick Cullom and Don Ball
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About this ebook
Chris Holaday
Chris Holaday is a writer, college teacher, and historian in Durham, North Carolina.
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Classic Restaurants of Durham - Chris Holaday
years.
Introduction
More than any other type of business, restaurants are famous for pulling disappearing acts. They open—sometimes to great fanfare—and then are suddenly gone, often without warning. The restaurant business is tough, and every proprietor will tell you that it’s all about finding that perfect combination of menu, location, price and service. Success in the restaurant business is also about fitting in to the community, and many restaurants that appear to have the recipe for success will still fail because they cannot find their niche. Despite the many challenges of the restaurant business, some do succeed. Every city has a handful of longtime dining establishments, and it is often at one of them that some of the locals’ most indelible and cherished memories are formed. From birthdays and graduations, prom nights and first dates to countess other celebrations, these favorite restaurants often serve as the venue for important events. In the city of Durham, North Carolina, this tradition is no different.
The restaurant history of Durham is actually rather unique due to the city’s distinct components. Durham began as nothing more than a country train depot; but eventually, in 1869, a community sprung up around the depot and was incorporated and named for the doctor who had initially donated the land for the depot. It was the area’s popular tobacco crops that led to the rapid growth, and for much of its existence, Durham has been a blue-collar town built around the tobacco industry.
Durham grew quickly; in 1881, the population was just 2,100, but six years later, it more than tripled to 7,128. The growth of the restaurant industry did not keep up, as the 1887 city guide listed only five restaurants: G.W. Atkinson, B. Green and J.T. Wilkins & Co. (which was also a store) were all located on Mangum Street, while the other two listed eating establishments, T.P. Capps and Alex Craig, were in Hayti on Parrish and Church Streets. Of course, restaurants played a different role in society then, as most people ate at home. In 1887, the number of cooks in the city, most of whom were employed in private homes, was just 119. By comparison, the city had 8 well diggers, 8 tinsmiths, 11 shoemakers and, to keep the heads of women appropriately covered, 12 milliners.
In 1940, photographer Jack Delano of the Farm Service Administration captured the neon glow of George’s Grill at 536 East Main. The building survived until 2008, when it was torn down to make way for a parking lot. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.
In the 1940s, Miles restaurant on Roxboro Road served barbecue and other southern staples. The building later became the home of Leo’s Seafood #2 and now houses Saigon Grill. Courtesy of the Durham County Library, North Carolina Collection.
An 1899 advertisement for Thanksgiving at Proctor & Co.’s Restaurant that appeared in the Durham Sun. Apparently, due to new restrictions passed by the city, Proctor’s closed in 1902 after being in business for twelve years. The Sun reported, It is unfortunate for the public that the last white restaurant in the city is to be closed. This was a great accommodation to those who did not care to stop at hotels of boarding houses. This leaves only colored restaurants, outside of the places we have mentioned. The public will be greatly inconvenienced.
Courtesy of Digital NC.
Soon, however, numerous diners, luncheonettes and cafés were established to feed the rapidly increasing number of workers in the cigarette factories and textile mills, as well as tobacco farmers who brought their crops to town to sell in the huge warehouses that once dominated the city. As industry grew, Durham’s population rose from less than seven thousand in 1900 to over eighteen thousand in 1910. Owning a restaurant became a much more viable business option with so many more mouths to feed. While tobacco may have been king for over a century, Durham is also home to prestigious Duke University. Over the years, a number of restaurants thrived because they were able to become popular student hangouts. Another important element of Durham’s culture has always been the African American community. Because Durham had a burgeoning middle-class black population—thanks to the presence of large black-owned businesses, like North Carolina Mutual Insurance, and a prominent black college—many restaurants sprang up to serve it. The area known as Hayti, in particular, was home to many long-lasting restaurants.
The story of the restaurant industry in Durham is one of racial strife, urban decay and stunning rebirth. As with all southern cities, Durham’s restaurants were racially segregated by law until the mid-1960s. Many establishments served both black and white customers but had separate entrances for both. On February 8, 1960, a group of black students from North Carolina College (now North Carolina Central University) began protesting the segregated lunch counter service at the F.W. Woolworth’s department store downtown. They attempted to expand the protest to S.H. Kress and Walgreen’s, but Kress was able to close its store before they arrived, and Walgreen’s roped off its lunch area. These protests eventually expanded and led to similar efforts elsewhere.
On Sunday, August 12, 1962, after a Freedom Rally at St. Joseph’s AME Church, a reported crowd of five hundred people left the church in a caravan of cars and drove to Howard Johnson’s on Durham–Chapel Hill Boulevard. There, they demonstrated in the parking lot against the restaurant’s segregation policy. Photo by Harold Moore. Courtesy of the Durham Herald Collection, University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill.
The Do-Nut Shop was founded in the mid-1940s by George Logan in the Hayti neighborhood. Logan, who also owned the Regal Theater next door, soon named his son-on-law, W.G. Bill
Pearson, manager of the restaurant. The Do-Nut Shop had the ability to seat over sixty-eight people, and it had a banquet room next door that could hold one hundred people, the green and pink Jade Room. This ad is from the late 1940s. Interestingly, Pearson, who had graduated from what is now North Carolina Central University, eventually decided to go back to law school. He became a practicing lawyer, and the site of the Do-Nut Shop was his office. In the mid-1970s, Pearson became the first black district court judge in Durham. Courtesy of Andre Vann.
On May 18, 1963, demonstrations were held across Durham. Protesters targeted several restaurants, the courthouse and city hall. Dealing with these protests was the first issue on the agenda of newly elected mayor Wense Grabarek. He appointed a committee to resolve the city’s racial tensions, and he made the bold move of appointing Harvey Rape, owner of the popular Harvey’s Cafeteria, to the committee. Rape had been vehemently opposed to desegregation, but apparently, Grabarek felt if he could change Rape’s mind, then other dissenters would follow. The plan worked, and Rape agreed to desegregate his dining room. Within a few months, segregation had ended in most of Durham’s restaurants.
The Lincoln Café at 114 South Mangum Street, directly behind the Kress building, was run by Greek immigrants Mike Galifianakis and Peter Ligets for many years. It primarily served African American clientele. Galifianakis was the father of Congressman Nick Galifianakis and grandfather of comedian Zach Galifianakis, and Ligets was the grandfather of Durham restaurateur Gray Brooks. The Lincoln Café was yet another victim of urban renewal in the late 1960s. Courtesy of the Durham Herald Collection, University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill.
Interestingly, Durham did have what was probably one of the only integrated lunch counters in the South during the 1950s. Mutt Evans, who served for six terms as the mayor of Durham, owned Evans’s United Department Store on Main Street; a judge told Evans he would need to follow the law and segregate his counter. Evans, whose lawyer had researched the issue, replied that the law only applied when customers were seated; the judge agreed, and Evans was able to maintain a desegregated counter by removing the stools and raising the counter to elbow