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restaurant

Tabard Restaurant, 4040 Riverside Dr, in 1926.

It was also known as the "Jolly Gargoyle Country Home," opened August 9, 1926.

Matsonia Barbecue, 3184 W Broad St, in 1927. George Matson, proprietor.

Source: Columbus This Week v.4 #21, 8/21/1927 cover photo.

Schmidt's Sausage House, 240 E. Kossuth Street opened circa 1967.

Schmidt's Sausage House, 240 E. Kossuth Street opened circa 1967. Postcard taken before 1977 when publisher closed.

Source: Columbus: Firestone Photographs Inc postcard 091253

Marnies of German Village, 631 S 3rd St, is now occupied by the Bookloft

Source: Columbus: Aladdin Studio postcard #146635

Lindenhoff Restaurant, 169 E Beck St, was known over the years as the Rose Garden after 1933

Lindenhoff Restaurant was known over the years as the Rose Garden after 1933, Palmer Haus, and in 1981 became Lindey's. Lindey's celebrated its 25th annniversary 5/25/2006.

Source: Columbus: Aladdin Studio postcard #139981.This Week in German Village 1/19/2006 p.4; This Week in German Village 6/1/2006 p.5

Juergens Backerei and Konditorei, 525 S. 4th St., was founded by Juergen Klimke in 1970.

Source: Columbus: Aladdin Studio postcard #143944.

Golden Eagle Ice Cream and Restaurant, 595 S 3rd St

Source: Columbus: R L Genter postcard J6910

Clarmont Restaurant, 684 S High St

Clarmont Restaurant featured organ music by Vivian Boeshaar. Opened July 7, 1948.

Source: C J O'Brien postcard #50851 by Dexter Press loaned by Laura M. Kuhnert.

Green Gables Restaurant

A very traditional and popular "Old Reynoldsburg" restaurant in this 1987 photo, the year it closed.It was the Reynoldsburg stop for the Lake Shore system bus line.

The Reynoldsburg-Truro Historical Society has a display and a Columbus Dispatch article about the closing of the restaurant.

The building was recently sold and is now the store front for a palm reader.

Don's Drive In - ca 1950

Don's was quite a historical landmark in the fabulous fifties and on into the sixties. It was the unofficial town hall where all the movers and shakers held their lunchtime meetings.

Don's, of course, had the car hops and everything else that went with drive-in restaurants. There is a menu from don's on display in our fifties room at the Heritage Center museum.

A Burger King now stands where Don's Drive-in was, in the southwest corner of the Reynoldsburg shopping center.

Photo courtesy of The Reynoldsburg-Truro Historical Society Heritage Center Museum

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