Athens Restaurants of Yore: Charlie Williams’ Pinecrest Lodge

To calculate which restaurant in Athens has served the most meals to the most diners, we would likely have to engage in a research project worthy of 10 University of Georgia doctorates. Any rough guess would include long-running franchise locations like Red Lobster or the McDonald’s on Prince Avenue. The recently-closed Mayflower, in business for seven decades, would make the list, as would a few other long-standing favorites like the Taco Stand, Strickland’s, Wilson’s, Add Drug’s lunch counter, Tony’s, and Poss’ Barbeque.

Standing tall among those local legends would be Charlie Williams’ Pinecrest Lodge, not only a restaurant but also an event venue and historical site. Located off Whitehall Road, the Lodge occupied a large plot of land with a lake, multiple buildings, and other features, such as a water wheel that came from the old Puryear textile mill, creating a relaxing rural setting. It was in business from 1929 to 2004, a time span that saw the restaurant’s clientele increasingly appreciate it as a welcoming refuge from the growing city that surrounded it.

Only in the last three decades of that span did Charlie Williams’ operate as a restaurant regularly open to the general public. It was originally a dining and party venue available by reservation, mostly rented by University-related organizations. In either phase of its history, it was loved for the food it served, including barbecue, fried fish, hush puppies, and other Southeastern staples.

Recently, Historic Athens added what remains of the Pinecrest Lodge to its Places in Peril list. Since 2019, this list has enabled that organization, and local citizens interested in historic preservation, to focus their attention on structures that face demolition, fatal decay, or significant redevelopment. Though another restaurant, Rass ‘n’ Ruby’s, took the Lodge’s place on its historic property for a few years, by the end of the 2000s the buildings were unoccupied and beginning their decline, with the exception of one building adjacent to the water wheel, until recently rented out as a private residence.

As with most of our articles at the Heritage Room’s Athens: In Time blog, we begin the research process with old newspapers; given the Pinecrest Lodge’s University connections, the student newspaper the Red and Black most of all. The most frequent mentions of the restaurant that we find in the digitized Red and Black came in the paper’s society pages. Columns like “Social Briefs,” “Campus Capers,” and “Social Spin” from the 1940s through the mid-1960s let fellow students know about the parties taking place every weekend. Charlie Williams’ is mentioned regularly, with parties booked many Friday and Saturday nights. One example comes from December 5th, 1941, two days before the Pearl Harbor attack: a notice about a fraternity barbecue party taking place that day. Another example, a notice about a sorority hayride on January 10th, 1947, lists attendees (“actives and pledges”) and their dates. On the same page of the paper’s March 7th, 1952, edition, both a fraternity “shrimp supper and dance” and the Economics Society’s social are announced, apparently taking place at the Lodge on the same night. Which would you rather attend? The Lodge also became well-known in both phases of its history for welcoming the University football team, both before and after the “big game.”

No surprise, the restaurant also consistently advertised in the student newspaper. Below are examples of the ads run by the Lodge plus one run by Alpha Chi Omega for a “dance and crowning of Mr. Apollo.”

The parties held at the Lodge often featured live music. Indeed, the Lodge joined the fraternities themselves, located on Milledge Avenue, in being a crucial part of Athens’ music history. Before the 1970s–especially due to the strictures of racial segregation–the opportunities to see live music in formal settings in a small city like Athens were limited. The Last Resort opened in the later half of the 1960s and some restaurants featured music performances to entice customers. But in the 1950s and early ’60s, if you wanted to hear the rhythm-and-blues and rock-and-roll sounds that were dramatically changing American society, you had to go to private functions, fraternity parties most of all.

Local resident Chris Jones has been engaged in research on this topic for several years now, offering Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) classes and writing an article for BoomAthens, “White Fraternities and Black Music in the Early ’60s.” Both the Red and Black and his original research show that the artists who played at Charlie Williams’ included Brook Benton, Bobby “Blue” Bland, and none other than James Brown, one of the most influential performers and recording artists of the twentieth century. Brown, in fact, played multiple times in Athens during these years, sometimes with his own groups and other times with local acts like the Blues Benders backing him, almost entirely at fraternity parties, but culminating triumphantly in a concert for 8,000 attendees at the University Coliseum on May 7th, 1966, during Greek Week. (A charming artifact of this event comes from the Athens location of Miller’s department stores letting potential customers know they could buy Brown albums, as well as those of Dionne Warwick, who had played the Homecoming Concert the previous fall.)

Examples of these concerts mentioned in the Red and Black society pages follow. The column from November 14th, 1963, notes appearances by Brown, the Fiestas, Dee Clark, Booker T and the MG’s, and a performance by local favorites the Embers alongside the amazing double billing of Bobby Marchand and John Lee Hooker. No wonder the columnist states, “This ought to the biggest weekend yet in Athens.” As Chris Jones’s article notes, 1963 had already witnessed an impressive selection of artists playing for Greek Week.

The “Social Spin” from a year earlier mentions yet another James Brown performance, as well as appearances by Huey “Piano” Smith and His Clowns, Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs, and the Clovers.

To provide additional context, check out an Anderson Independent-Mail article by Vince Jackson discussing James Brown’s performances at a small Clemson club: with segregation still the law of the land, artists like Brown performed at smaller “chitlin’ circuit” clubs for black audiences, larger venues and college-related functions for whites.

As noted in the BoomAthens article, however, those university-related events in Athens were not officially sanctioned and did not take place on campus. University officials, at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, resisted integration. They were taking their cues from the state government’s efforts to stop Georgia teams from participating in integrated sporting events. The Interfraternity Council and the Student Council worked to overturn the policy. Court decisions, soon enough, resolved the situation. While events at the Lodge were not open to the public, some of the fraternity parties that featured live music happened outdoors and drew a great deal of attention. In addition to frat houses and the Pinecrest Lodge, some events noted in the Red and Black took place at the Wagon Wheel Supper Club. Similar concerts were happening at the Moina Michael Auditorium, located on the Atlanta Highway where the Heyward Allen car dealership is now. Some of the local bands that played these parties would go on to other musical endeavors. For example, the Jesters, via connections established by playing at fraternities, would go on to play in Myrtle Beach, backing up singers like Marvin Gaye at Cecil Corbett’s famous Beach Club.

In recent years, a great deal of attention from both local-history buffs and cinema aficionados has been directed toward Poor Pretty Eddie, which was, until recently, one of the few feature-length movies made in Athens, much of it filmed, to be exact, on the Pinecrest property. An exploitation film, but with an all-star cast, the financial backers of which clearly hoped would be another Deliverance, it never quite found its audience until retrospective interest in 1970s American cinema finally inspired viewers to take a second look. Among the many articles written about this film are local reporter Andrew Shearer‘s overview of its development and reception; a piece explaining why it is not one of the 366 weirdest movies ever made (maybe it’s no. 367); critical analyses by Foster Dickson and Elizabeth Erwin; a thorough study by Chris Poggiali that includes several stills, not least of the Lodge; and, finally, an essay about Athenians’ uneasy relationship with the film, written for Flagpole by Donald Shelnutt.

Live concerts continued to take place in the 1970s. In 1972, a local booking agency called Pedestal Productions put on a “Rock ‘n’ Roll Bonanza.” The Red and Black advertisement for it is below. The short-lived Pedestal also put on at least one show at the J & J Center, headlined by Ravenstone, recognized now as pioneers of live rock music in Athens.

Though concerts and large parties became rarer after the Lodge switched to being more of a regular restaurant, three decades later, in April, 2002, the Jesters played one of their later shows at the restaurant. Flagpole editor Pete McCommons previewed the performance, as seen below. As he says, the Pinecrest Lodge is “the place where it all began” for the Jesters.

The modern era of the Pinecrest Lodge began in 1975, when according to the following Red and Black article the business switched from being a space for rent to a restaurant regularly open to the public. The article explains that as the University’s fraternities and sororities grew in membership, the facilities at the Lodge did not always prove to be sufficient. And the Lodge, in turn, wanted more regular business.

The advertisement below, from April, 1975, suggests that the transition to a restaurant had taken place by then.

In a Red and Black ad from 1977, the restaurant continued to try to allure student customers, hungry “after a long day at school.”

By 1983, the cost had risen from the three dollars it had been in 1975 all the way up to $5.95. Stagflation?

A 1993 Red and Black ad shows that the restaurant at that point gave customers two options for its buffet, the “Country Style” and the “Steak & Seafood.”

The restaurant expanded its options for customers in other ways. One was by offering take-out. The menu shown below likely dates from the 1980s or later, given the presence of Diet Coke, which debuted in 1982.

A 1984 article from the Red and Black captures what it was like to go to the restaurant. It notes the smaller buildings and other fixtures on the property, brought there by Charlie Williams and restored; these, combined with the water wheel and large dining rooms, helped create a traditional, home-cooked feel to the dining experience, even if it did count as “going out to eat.” Also of note is that former Athenians, coming to town for football games or other occasions, would flock to the restaurant.

Beginning at the latest in 1995, a second, smaller location, called Charlie Williams’ Pinecrest to Go, opened at 2020 Timothy Road (in a building that has since been replaced by the westside location of Loco’s).

The Pinecrest Lodge closed rather suddenly in early 2004, with the sale of the property. As noted above, another restaurant operated there for a short time, and Pinecrest to Go stayed open after the Lodge closed. Soon enough, though, the whole operation had became part of the city’s past. In the late 2000s, residents renting the waterwheel house held parties that featured local artists, keeping alive the tradition of live music on the Pinecrest property.

More recently, Mike Williams passed away, as reported by the Athens Banner-Herald.

As with our article on Rocky’s and and its eccentric proprietor, Bob Russo, we end with a few items from the Heritage Room Vertical Files. (The take-out menu shown above is also from these files.) These artifacts have been digitized at a high resolution. As with the clippings above, you can open these in separate tabs to view the full-sized versions.

First up is a newspaper clipping. In this 1998 Athens Daily News/Athens Banner-Herald profile of Mike Williams, we learn more about him and his family and hear some of his observations about life and Athens.

Up next are three brochures, the first of which below shows both Charlie and Mike; it notes that Mike is the owner, suggesting this document dates from the late 1970s.

The colorful brochures seen below obviously came later.

A second version of this brochure used a couple different pictures. Besides the water wheel, these brochures identify a covered wagon, a liquor still, a sharecropper’s house, a fountain, and a blacksmith shop. These structures as well as the multiple dining rooms, and all of the memories and artifacts of the meals and parties held there, together create an Athens institution.

Athens Restaurants of Yore: Rocky’s Pizzeria

Our article on “Athens’ Oldest Restaurants” promised future posts about beloved Athens restaurants no longer in business, making use of materials found in the Heritage Room vertical files. The series begins with one of four local restaurants established by Bob Russo, an Athens fixture remembered for his outsized personality and his role in the local debate over restaurant outdoor seating.

Russo’s first Athens restaurant opened in early 1979, named simply Russo’s Gyro (later, around 1983, it became Gyro Wrap). Reading through old local newspapers, one finds that Russo quickly became a vocal presence around town. Early advertisements for Russo’s Gyro bore the mysterious message, “Develop solar energy.” On February 1st, 1980, the Red and Black reported that Russo had a large Canadian flag on display outside the restaurant, to show appreciation for the support the Canadian government had expressed in response to the Iranian hostage crisis.

Next up was the Grill. When it opened in 1981 at its original location on Broad Street, the restaurant struggled to find customers. It began to prosper, according to Russo, when Howard Cossell, while interviewing Herschel Walker on television, praised the Grill’s hamburgers. Is this true or merely Russo’s contribution to local legend? Who knows?

Two years later, he opened Chow Goldstein’s, a combination of a Chinese restaurant and a Jewish deli. Unlike his first two restaurants, this one proved a hard sell, though it is remembered for one of its advertising methods: hiring people to wear sandwich-board signs and walk the nearby sidewalks. Among those who accepted the gig was local newspaper columnist Ed Tant.

Russo got more attention, sometimes negative, for his support of restaurants being allowed to have outdoor seating. You can read the protracted coverage that the debate received in the Red and Black (if you have a lot of time on your hands); suffice to say that the City Council ultimately decided to continue allowing “sidewalk cafes” provided that enough space was allowed for pedestrians, as reported on February 8th, 1984.

Within a few months, Russo had closed Chow Goldstein’s and opened Rocky’s in its place. Named after his father, who had moved south from New York to help Bob, the pizzeria would become a fixture of downtown as much as Gyro Wrap or the Grill. Its defining features gave the restaurant a distinctive feel that few of its customers have forgotten, including: cheap lunch specials, the mural that adorned an interior wall, and a model train that ran on a track set up near the ceiling (first installed by the proprietors of Tony’s Restaurant, Chow Goldstein’s predecessor in that building; and for decades one of Athens’ most popular restaurants). The Athens Observer of April 19th, 1984, reported on the switch from Chow to Rocky’s, as seen below.

One can follow Russo’s story during these years in a series of profiles that the Red and Black published. An article on May 11th, 1979, introduced readers to Russo’s Gyro. An article on November 10th, 1981, came in the wake of the restaurant’s success. The November 15th, 1983, edition, updates us with information about the Grill’s and Chow Goldstein’s early development. The latter restaurant’s quick demise was covered in “Change in Chow Is on the Way,” dated April 25th, 1984, with Russo having almost completed its transformation into Rocky’s.

Russo sold Gyro Wrap and The Grill within a few years of establishing them. While he held on to Rocky’s longer, he soon enough moved on to Atlanta, setting up Rocky’s Brick Oven Pizzeria on Peachtree Road. A brief note in the Atlanta Constitution lets us know that the Atlanta Rocky’s opened in early 1987, and that Bob’s dad, the namesake Rocky, was again helping out. The new restaurant, as any Athenian at the time could have guessed, got attention both for its food and Russo’s attention-getting activities, such as posting intriguing messages on the restaurant’s outdoor sign or personally delivering pizzas to Hollywood stars making a movie in… Wetumpka, Alabama? Perhaps we should not be surprised, as the Atlanta Constitution had reported, 15 years prior, how Russo’s Gyro had became a favorite hang-out spot for the cast of the television series Breaking Away, which was filmed in Athens.

The featured item from the Heritage Room vertical files for this post is a Rocky’s menu, found by one of our intrepid staff members at an estate sale. The menu is of course undated (would it be excessive for archivists to beg restaurateurs to date their menus?) but perhaps a former employee or loyal customer could provide a rough guess based on the items offered and their prices.

While the menu may date from the period after Russo sold Rocky’s, the spirited text introducing the restaurant to new customers definitely suggests Russo’s influence. For more insight into the life of this much-missed Athenian, one should read Flagpole editor Pete McCommons’ tribute to him, published in 2003 after Russo’s untimely death, a suicide apparently prompted by health concerns.

To follow the stories of Gyro Wrap, the Grill, and Rocky’s, one can continue to peruse back issues of the Red and Black, which covered these and other downtown eateries so popular among students; after its founding in 1987, Flagpole also offers plenty of information for local history buffs. For example, on May 24th, 1990, the Red and Black profiled Steve Sgarlato, who purchased the Grill from Russo. An article in the February 28th, 1992, edition, discussing pizza options in the Classic City, makes note of the Athens Rocky’s new owner, George Matta, who later went on to helm the popular Mexican restaurant and hang-out spot Compadres. The Flagpole of March 7th, 2001, discusses Matta’s temporary purchase of two large buildings downtown, the Michael Brothers (where Compadres was located) and the Morris, to help save them from redevelopment.

–Justin J. Kau

Athens’ Oldest Restaurants

Update: The Mayflower closed in November 2023, leaving the question of which restaurant is Athens’ oldest open to debate. Also note that the Bar-B-Q Shack on Lexington Road closed earlier in the year.

The Mayflower Restaurant, located downtown, is the oldest Athens restaurant currently in business, having opened February 12th, 1948, according to a recent profile published in the Athens Banner-Herald. Moreover, unlike many restaurants—as we will see here—it has been at the same location all those years.

How long has it had the distinction of being Athens’ oldest?

When the Varsity restaurant at the intersection of Milledge Avenue and West Broad Street closed in 2021, several news outlets stated that it had been in business in Athens for nearly 90 years. To be precise, though, the downtown Varsity opened in 1932 and its second location most likely opened in 1963. The official Varsity site inaccurately states that it opened in 1962. Articles in the Red and Black show that construction began that year (see the cover article of February 1st, 1962). Delays in construction were reported on November 6th, 1962. Varied sources state that the restaurant opened in 1963, 1964, or 1965; the only exact date given is March 11th, 1964, in a 1992 article in Athens Magazine by Tom Barrett, a fact supported by an advertisement found in the program for the opening game of the University Coliseum, which happened to take place in February 1964: the ad says, “Opening soon.” Either way, the two Varsity locations co-existed for about fifteen years, the downtown spot closing in 1978 according to reports at the time in the Athens Banner-Herald.

In short, depending on how you distinguish between multiple locations of a franchise restaurant, either the Mayflower only recently became Athens’ oldest restaurant or it has been for a long time. Unlike most chains, the two Athens Varsitys had the same owner, but naming them collectively as Athens’ oldest restaurant seems like “quite a stretch” to me.

Deciding who gets the award for second-oldest gets even messier. Many would say it goes to Strickland’s Restaurant, now located on the outskirts of town on the Atlanta Highway, but until 1995 located downtown. It apparently opened in 1960, albeit under the name Essie’s Cafe. In its later downtown years it sat at 311 East Broad Street, but was originally located just a few storefronts down at 447 East Broad. In the 1976 Southern Bell Telephone Directory, it was at 447, as seen in the advertisement below. In the 1977 Johnson City Directory, it had moved to 311.

If one wants to be strict and exclude restaurants that have changed names or changed locations, then the silver medal may go to ADD Drug Store. Its beloved lunch counter has been serving malts and burgers and more since the store opened in 1961. The advertisement below comes from the Southern Bell telephone directory of 1966, referring not only to the luncheonette but also showing that it had the same phone number then that it does now.

However, there is another contender for second place. Since it opened in 1957, the University of Georgia Center for Continuing Education has included among its features a restaurant, open to the public. These days of course it is called the Savannah Room, but the available evidence suggests that in its early years it was merely referred to as the restaurant at the Georgia Center. For example, a brochure for the University published in the late 1960s, found in the Heritage Room’s vertical files, makes note of a “Dining Room” at the Georgia Center, as compared to the cafeterias at Snelling, Memorial, and Creswell halls. That said, an article at UGA Today about the restaurant’s famed strawberry-ice-cream pie suggests that there has been a great deal of continuity at the restaurant since the early 1960s, not only in the food served but in those doing the cooking. So perhaps it’s Athens’ second-oldest.

Now we jump ahead a few years. Another local culinary institution that, like Essie’s-Strickland’s, changed names at one point is Plantation Buffet. It began as Hanley’s. Or, to be precise, “Hanley’s Hickory Pit,” as listed in the 1977 Southern Bell directory.

In next year’s directory, it is simply “Hanley’s.” In 1982, according to the restaurant’s web site, the name change to Plantation Buffet happened. For many years, Plantation was known for serving barbecue goat. That is no longer the case, but come lunchtime it is still packed with hungry customers making multiple trips to its buffet line.

Also opening in 1977 at its original east-side location (2222 Barnett Shoals Road, to be exact) was Peking Restaurant. The Red and Black reviewed it, as seen below.

Though the original closed in 2016 (having long since moved from that original address to the Green Acres Shopping Center), the west-side location on the Atlanta Highway, with its elaborate Chinese-design facade, remains. It opened in 1988, as announced in the advertisement below from the 1988 Southern Bell telephone directory.

Yet another grand opening occurred in 1977: the Taco Stand. Advertisements and classified advertisements running in the Red and Black that year confirm that it has been at the same address, 670 North Milledge Avenue, all these years, with an east-side location opening in 1985 and locations in Atlanta, Watkinsville, and downtown Athens coming and going in the meantime. These Taco Stand closings have all occurred recently enough to be reported at online sources: Patch; Tomorrow’s News Today; the Athens Banner-Herald/ Online Athens. Clarke Central High School’s Odyssey magazine recently gave us an update on the original location.

As the historian moves into the 1980s, he comes across more restaurants that are still open today: besides the aforementioned second Taco Stand and second Peking, there are the Grill (established 1981, moving from its original spot at 229 East Broad to 171 College in 1989), Mama Sid’s (1983), Weaver D’s (1986), DePalma’s original downtown spot (1988), La Fiesta (the extant east-side location opening in 1989, its defunct original spot on Hawthorne opening in 1983), and the Globe (1989), a bar that, unlike most Athens bars, has served food for at least significant portions of its history. Also, the original location of Loco’s at 724 Oconee Street, now gone, opened in 1988; its east-side and west-side versions remain, though the latter has changed locations. And Kyoto Japanese Steak and Seafood House was open by 1987; it later became Inoko, which, though now closed, its distinctive Alps Road building having met the wrecking ball, still survives (sort of) in the the form of two Inoko Express locations. Another restaurant that survives in such an indirect fashion is Gyro Wrap, its beloved long-standing downtown location, launched in 1979 under the name Russo’s Gyro, not surviving the pandemic, a new version around the corner on College Avenue opening in September 2022.

Mama Sid’s friendly atmosphere was apparent from its earliest ads running in the Southern Bell telephone directory, as seen here. How many born-and-bred Athenians had childhood birthday parties there? A lot. We should note too that Mama Sid’s was originally Express Pizza East, an off-shot of the popular Express Pizza, located near campus on Harris Street. Classified ads in the Red and Black indicate that the east-side Express opened in early 1981.

DePalma’s announced its opening with the cheeky advertisement seen below, from the September 20th, 1988, Red and Black.

So far we have only discussed local (or in the Varsity’s case, Atlanta) businesses. But certain national or regional chains’ Athens locations have been here for decades, whether in the same building, such as the Red Lobster on West Broad Street (which ranks among Athens’ oldest, having been in business since at least 1971) or not, such as the McDonald’s locations on Prince Avenue, West Broad Street, and Gaines School Road, all of which have seen the original structures demolished and replaced by the chain’s new models. These McDonald’s spots also warrant places among our town’s oldest restaurants, the Prince opening in the ’60s, the Broad and Gaines School in the ’70s. The Prince location, in fact, has been demolished and rebuilt more than once.

Other national chains in Athens, as listed in the 1970 Mullin-Kille city directory, still present in some form in present-day Athens include: the Arby’s on West Broad Street, Burger King (at a different location, 1078 Baxter Street), Dairy Queen (at its recently-closed location at 1076 West Broad Street), two Kentucky Fried Chickens (on Milledge and Hawthorne, both closed), Pizza Hut on Baxter Street (long since closed, though the building still stands), and Waffle House spots on Broad Street and in Five Points (both gone). So the only one that, like the Prince McDonald’s, is still at the same address is the Arby’s, with its old-fashioned neon-light sign—the structure itself, though, having lost its vintage look.

By the time of the 1980 Southern Bell telephone directory, these fast-food joints had been joined by the Wendy’s at 415 Prince, the Captain D’s next door at 425, a second Burger King on Barnett Shoals Road (the current east-side location, though the address has changed slightly more than once), the Domino’s on Baxter (at 529, whereas it is now at 396; the first Domino’s in town at 753 West Broad had already come and gone), Dunkin Donuts at 771 Prince, a third Kentucky Fried, on Lexington Road (which moved to Barnett Shoals around 1988), Krystal on Baxter (closed), another Pizza Hut (on Lexington Road, the building still standing, giving Athens two examples of a meme the internet loves: former Pizza Hut buildings), Popeye’s at 1125 Prince, the International House of Pancakes at 1180 Baxter, and two Schlotzsky’s (171 College Avenue downtown and at the Alps Shopping Center, the latter of which is more or less at the same place today). That totals to nine restaurants that are still with us today, if one includes the Schlotzsky’s, Kentucky Fried, and Domino’s that made short-distance moves; adding to the Red Lobster, Arby’s, and the three McDonald’s spots, we have only 14 chain franchises that were open in 1980 still in business today. No one said running a restaurant is easy.

For a fuller portrait of Athens’ dining options at the time, the following document provides a listing (however incomplete) of restaurants circa 1980. It was found in the Heritage Room vertical files.

The number of restaurants, local or otherwise, still extant that opened in the early ’90s includes the following: the Bar-B-Q Shack on Lexington Road, the Last Resort downtown, and Peppino’s, originally downtown, now at the intersection of Whitehall and Milledge. Also, Fresh Air Bar-B-Que, the original location of which, in Jackson, Georgia, opened way back in 1929, first appeared in Athens during this time (its two Athens locations are these days, in some form or other, different businesses than those in Jackson and Macon, but remain linked by name and history). That’s not to mention again numerous chains, like Chili’s, that have operated at the same location since that time.

For future posts at this blog, we will highlight long-standing Athens restaurants no longer with us, using scans of additional artifacts from our vertical files. Among those to be featured are the Chase Street Cafe, Wilson’s Soul Food, and Charlie Williams’ Pinecrest Lodge.

–Justin J. Kau