Vintage-KC-Magazine-Spring-2018-small

community ^ vintage dining

Vintage Dining: Leavenworth The city of Leavenworth, Kansas – population roughly 36,000 – has never been known as a culinary Mecca … but it should.

Words and Photos by CHARLES FERRUZZA

Breakfast is served all day.

The Romanesque Revival style of the The Depot

I t is, after all, the location of the grand mansion once owned by 19th-century British-born restaurant entrepreneur Fred Harvey – creator of his namesake Harvey House lunch rooms, restaurants, souvenir shops, and hotels, which served rail passengers on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, the Gulf Colorado and Santa Fe Railway, the Kansas Pacific Railway, the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway, and the Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis. Harvey, famous for his spotlessly tidy dining venues with consistently good wholesome food and attractive, trained waitresses, was the forerunner of iconic American restaurateurs like Howard Johnson and Ray Kroc (who built the McDonald’s burger chain); if there hadn’t been a Fred Harvey, someone would have had to invent him.

Leavenworth is also home to one of the last remaining outposts of the once-celebrated NuWay sandwich shops (famous for crumbly loose meat burgers and homemade root beer) founded in Wichita in 1930; there used to be several operating in the Kansas City metro. And for a final note of nostalgic noshery, there’s still the 87-year-old Homer’s Drive-In (formerly a root beer stand with male carhops wearing long-sleeved shirts and ties) at 1320 S. Fourth St. The carhops are long gone and so is most of the “drive in” business (although the staff will run out the front door with your call-in order), but the cozy diner still serves burgers, homemade chili, Frito pie, shrimp baskets, and deluxe plate dinners: fish, ham, beef brisket, turkey, country-fried steak, and catfish for $8.49 In Leavenworth, there’s only one restaurant

that has serious vintage credit – and at least one ghost! – The Depot, tucked inside the 1887 Romanesque Revival rail depot at 781 Shawnee St. Formerly the passenger depot for the Leavenworth, Northern and Southern rail line, the handsomely appointed dark pink sandstone building originally offered separate waiting areas for male and female travelers, a station manager’s office, rest rooms and wood- burning fireplaces. Opened in 2015 by Mike and Mary Nachbar, The Depot was a dramatic facility for a fast- growing small town and even after the space no longer operated as a train depot and the venue stood empty, local entrepreneurs bought the historic building as a future asset for the town. The building, with its shiny wooden floors and amber glass mullioned windows, deserved to be saved. But for what?

10 VINTAGEKC SPRING 2018

Made with FlippingBook Online newsletter