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Kippy's
Restaurant
T'aint
what we have its what we give
T'aint
what we are its how we live
T'aint
what we do its how we do it
That
makes Kippy worth coming to it.
Kippy's
was a popular restaurant for more than 40
years in downtown Akron. It was opened
24hrs/7days a week and always packed with
customers. Kippy's opened up first on 103 S.
Main Street in 1938 by Mr. Bob Heath at the
age of 19 and his mother Gail. After turning
into a chain the Cuyahoga Falls location
opened in 1941 along with locations in Norton
and Barberton. The name Kippy came from a
1930's comic strip Skippy...the Heaths simply
dropped the S. The original building was
built below street level at the southeast
corner of Main & Mill Streets. Check out
the Memories Link to find out more about both
the Akron and Cuyahoga Falls Kippy's.
This
webmaster
became interested in Kippy's
because literally every side
of my family worked in one
location or another. In
1938 my grandfather Carey
Holland worked as a dishwasher
at 13 years old and then
preceded to become a cook and
grilled Kippy Burgers on the
stove by the window on South
Main Street. This particular
section of the website is
the reason this website was
born. In
1941 my Aunt Betty and Aunt
Belle worked in Cuyahoga Falls
as domestics and one of the
people they worked for needed
a babysitter and recruited my
grandmother, Bonnie Potts, to
made $5 a week babysitting.
They all had Thursday
afternoons off and would meet
in downtown Akron. They
would either go to (The
Strand) to listen to the swing
bands like Tommy Dorsey and
Glen Miller or head to the
Loews Theatre to see a movie
for 10 cents. Afterward they
always went to Kippy's. This
is how my grandmother met her
future husband.
Bonnie
Potts 1941
Carey
Holland & Bonnie Potts
standing outside Kippy's in
1943
Delores
Holland, daughter of Carey and
Bonnie Holland, started
working at the Cuyahoga Falls
location in 1971, 30 years
after her father first started
working at the Akron location.
Dee,
webmasters mother, worked at the
Cuyahoga Falls location during
1971-1975 and worked at
the Akron Kippy's for one day
due to a cook shortage. Check
out hers and others
memories.
My paternal
grandparents,
Dick and Nellie Fritz, also
worked at the Falls Kippy's
for many years before and
after I was born.
History
Bob Heath remembers that the original menu consisted
of Hamburgers, Coffee, Pie, Chili, Bottled Pop, and
Milk. Mr. Heath worked 16 hour shifts and had only 3
employees to operate the 104 South Main Street
Kippy's. There was seating for only 25 at the first
location and the building rent was $4.50 a month.
In 1947 Heath moved Kippy's to 45 South Main Street
where the seating enlarged to 100 and they started
serving Kippy Burgers, Biggie Burgers (w/special
sauce), Finger Lickin Chicken and milkshakes with
the logo of 'Freeze your teeth and give your tongue
a sleigh ride.'
Soon Kippy's turned into a chain opening in 1940 the
2100 Front Street restaurant and in 1946 it too
moved across the street to a larger location where
it stayed for the next 38 years.
In 1966 Arlington opened and in 1972 the Kippy's in
Norton Center opened up. All the stores ran on a 24
hour schedule. 130 workers were used to operate all
four Kippy's.
The Akron Kippy's closed in 1979 with the Arlington
and Norton following shortly thereafter in 1980. The
Cuyahoga Falls restaurant closed in 1984.
The menu showed on the pictures page was used in at
both the Main St. and Front St. locations at one
point in time, but the first menu (photo coming
soon) was typed out in 1941 and looked like this:
Friday -17 - 1941
Specials
Vegetable Soup - 10ç
Fish Sandwich - 20ç
French Fried Potatoes - 10ç
1. Fish and Chips
Cold Slaw
Coffee, Tea or Milk 35ç
2. Grilled Beef Tenderloin
Butter Fries or French Fries
Choice of Salad
Coffee, Tea or Milk 50ç
3.A Golden Brown Waffle
Maple Syrup and Butter
Coffee, Tea or Milk 25ç
Waffle with Ham 35ç
Waffle with Bacon 35ç
4 Hamburg Sandwich
Vegetable Soup and French Fries
Coffee, Tea or Milk 30ç
New: Kippy Blizzard Milkshake
with your sandwich or lunch 15ç
'It's thick enough to eat with a spoon"
Memories Jan 17, 2000 9:24
AM
From: Byron Hummel '53
I sure remember the "real birth" of R&R in our area
especially "Request Review". Some Fri.&/ or Sat.
nites in the early 50's we would be in Akron at a
teen center or hanging out at Kippy's we would stop
at the Mayflower Hotel to see Alan Freed in the
recording booth. Sometimes he would mention on the
air we were there, ask us to request a song, and
once even let us say hello on the air. My name was
mentioned in the 1953 "Cigam" as aspiring to be a "Moondog".
I don't recall that happening but life has been and
still is fun and especially fun is this site; to
revisit old friends, old times and old haunts. Have
a great life!
Dee Holland "I remember a cook (Wesley) would moo
over the microphone. Kippy's atmosphere was a party
all the time. We would always have their coffee
ready and waiting at their respective 'spots'."
Pam Modzel "Our uniforms consisted of black skirts,
white blouses and white nursing shoes."
Dee Holland "Pam's skirt was always waaay too short,
it only came mid thigh. On Friday and Sat nights a
falls cop would come in and 'baby-sit' the bar
crowd." And on nights before a holiday [it] was
busier than normal, we did triple then what would we
do on a normal night."
Dee Holland "1/2 price to cops in uniform. A bowl of
chili was 60 cents. Kippy's had two huge grills, 14
booths and two tables up front and two tables in
back. The one booth in the back was for the
employees except during bar rushes."
Dee Holland and Pam Modzel remembers some customers
and co-workers.
Co-Workers
Pam Modzel: Waitress
Dee Holland: Cook/Waitress
Vi: Waitress
Sissy: Manager
Carol: Manager (Hiram was her husbands name)
Joanie Billings:
Aunt Rube: worked Fridays and Saturdays only
Bill: Cook, lived on Myrtle Avenue in the Falls and
had long hair in a pony tail
Joyce: She had black hair but it should have been
blond. She lived on Patterson in Akron and walked
all the way to work. After leaving Kippy's she went
to Green Cross Hospital in the billing department.
Nellie Fritz: bussed tables (passed away on Sept
6th, 1995)
Dick Fritz: bussed tables
Donny Wright:
Deeder:
Marline Wells: waitress
Russ Poling: dishwasher had a bunch of brothers and
his mother came in to get his paycheck every Friday
Customers
Kelly: the Mailman, always came in at 6am
Grumpy: lived in 1580 front street and used a walker
Bud: a Cop
Lawson drivers - Nasty, Legs, Jim, Bob Ohrms the
bread driver, Tom Quine the mechanic.
The bread drivers came in at 11pm Then the Milk
drivers would come in.

Cuyahoga
Falls back parking lot....2003
An
old menu


The
front and rear of the Cuyahoga Falls location
today - 2003

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