Dining out on a budget in the
50's and 60's involved jumping
in the car and heading to the
drive-in. We had lots of choices
back then for food delivered to
the car via
roller-skate-wearing-carhops.
For example, there was
A&W,
Sonic,
Big Boys and so on.
People had
cars. People got hungry. People
couldn't afford to spend much.
That all added up to the need
for drive-ins. And they could be
found everywhere. A small town
with a population of 5,000 or so
might have three or four
drive-ins doing a brisk
business.
Reading
all of that writing on the wall,
two music teachers from the
University of Illinois, Don
Hamacher and Jim Griggs, decided
in 1953 to get in on the fun.
They opened a drive-in in
Champaign and called it Dog n
Suds. It was a hit, so much so
that they were approached by a
sweet old lady with a bank
account full of cash to build
her one just like it.
Hamacher
and Griggs soon had a tiger by
the tail. The time was perfect
for franchised drive-ins, and
Dog n Suds had a lot to offer
potential entrepreneurs. They
quit teaching and became
restaurant magnates in short
order.
Dog n Suds
began springing up all over
Illinois, as well as nearby
Indiana, Michigan, and Ohio. A
rave review of their business
plan in a trade magazine added
to the furor, and by the 1960's
they had reached the southern
United States. They were
averaging fifteen new
restaurants per month during the
height of their success. By
1970, it seemed that every town
big enough to have more than one
stoplight also had a Dog n Suds.
But
unfortunately, a lot of sweet
memories bit the dust in the
70's. The economy took some
seriously bad turns, and then
there were those blasted Arabs
and their
oil
embargo.
The times were changing fast. We
didn't go to as many drive-ins
as we used to.
The glory
days for Dog n Suds were over.
Instead of fifteen new
restaurants opening each month,
now they were closing. The
founders sold out, and it
appeared that Dog n Suds might
well go the way of so many other
beloved memories that we grew up
with.
But
a funny thing happened. Some Dog
n Suds' survived. The brand name
had a fierce loyalty among its
customers, and many restaurants
weathered the storm. It was a
curious case of the Dog n Suds
name almost outlasting the Dog n
Suds franchise.
Nowadays,
Dog n Suds are down to,
ironically, fifteen in number.
But a new one was opened in
2007, in Norton Shores,
Michigan. Many of the survivors
have cashed in on the retro
craze, with redesigns that
provide old fashioned soda
fountains. Who knows, the
franchise may end up reinventing
itself and thriving once again,
like A&W did.
However,
some Dog n Suds' exist exactly
as they did when their customers
drove up in tank-sized cars,
ordered a dog and suds for less
than a dollar, and winked at the
cute roller-skate-riding carhop
as she placed the tray loaded
with goodies on the rolled-down
window.