|
Much of the following information was provided by Terri
Siderakos, the Keeper of the Flame of the Colonial Inn.
The
Colonial Inn Restaurant was established in about 1924 at
4301 Excelsior Blvd. at Joppa, originally part of the Hanke
farm. Village Council records show an F.P. Clark requesting
a license to run the Colonial Inn in April 1924, and a Matt
L. Marxen requesting a license in 1926.
Hennepin County Review 18 Oct 1928 p 2. "Excelsior
Ave was a popular thoroughfare last Wednesday night when the
Colonial Inn went up in smoke. Many have been the
conjectures as to what was going to become of this landmark,
because each day its chances of slipping into the sandpit
seemed better, but fire was a quicker destroyer, much as we
hated to see all that good lumber go to waste. It is not
known how the fire caught but it did not take long to
dispose of the big frame, and now the many travellors on the
boulevard can't talk about that anymore. What will be the
next favorite topic?"
In 1929 the owners
of the four lots were Palma F. Anderson and E.J. and
Florence Shaw. In 1932, Carl Bergstrom and Fred Howe
requested a permit to run a restaurant. In 1933, James W.
Roach and a Mr. Utecht requested a permit to sell pop. In
1933, Palma F. Anderson ran a restaurant on the site.
It was in 1933 that the Smiths took over the restaurant. L.
Norwood and Clara W. Smith had lost all their money in 1932,
and started over by opening a small upstairs cafeteria
called the Dutch Inn on So. 6th Street in downtown
Minneapolis. They served “businessmen's lunches” for 25
cents, featuring chicken pot pies that became one of her
specialties. When they took over the Colonial Inn, Mrs.
Smith remembered that it was surrounded by gravel pits. In
1935 they were able to buy it. For awhile they ran both
places, but soon sold the Minneapolis restaurant and paid
off the St. Louis Park property in two years.
They remodeled the Inn extensively, eventually adding
classic pillars, window boxes, and an old fashioned parlor.
Mrs. Smith turned it into an elegant, formal restaurant/tea
room, decorated with priceless antiques. Every year, the
Smiths would close down the Colonial Inn and go to Florida,
or wherever their antiquing trips took them. A promotional
flier describes:
Treasured antiques grace the interiors. The
crystal chandelier in the Colonial dining room once
looked down on gay occasions in a southern home. The
amethyst chandelier in the Amethyst dining room forms
the motif for the antique glass of the same shade which
fills the shelves in the bay windows.
In the 1940s, the restaurant was described by one young
busboy as "a place where the family might go on rare
occasions for a special anniversary dinner. Park High
Juniors and Seniors would be seen there in formal attire for
a dinner before the prom." Mrs. Smith was the hostess and
chief cook, while her husband supervised the staff. In 1938,
Sunday dinners were advertised for 65 cents.
In 1936, Mrs. Smith developed her own recipe for French
salad dressing, and it was so popular that she found herself
looking for empty ketchup bottles, etc. to put it in for
customers. This led to an addition to the back of the
building, where she started a side business manufacturing
and selling salad dressing. In 1959 she had full time help
managing the salad dressing business. Eventually this led to
a larger operation, where manufacturing and distribution
were handled separately. In December 1953, Mrs. Smith had
also begun selling her baked goods at the Colonial Inn
Bakery at Miracle Mile.
In 1959 Mrs. Smith sold all her properties except the salad
dressing business, which was taken over by Russell and Geri
Peel. The Smiths moved to Florida in 1962. Clara died on
April 28, 1964 at the age of 79 in West Palm Beach, Florida.
She is buried at Lakewood Cemetery. When Mrs. Smith passed
away, her daughter saw that the salad dressing business
continued, and the line expanded to different flavors. The
business was purchased by investors in 1974.
Mrs. Smith was a devout Christian Scientist, and asked that
when she passed away, memorials be directed to
First Church
of Christ Scientist, on Brookside Avenue. In fact, on June
7, 1951, the Christian Science Monitor published a
half-page feature on Mrs. Smith and her business.
The building that was the Colonial Inn housed the Westerner
Barbeque from 1959 to 1962. The new owners were David Rosen,
Joseph A. Cremisino, and William E. Thompson. (Norman Gordon
and Edith Schwartz are also listed as new owners in October
1960.) For the first time, it was open for the winter of
1959-60, opening for business on October 1, 1959. The
colonial décor gave way to western decorations. In May of
1962 it was uprooted to make way for a gas station, and Mr.
Howard Berge happened to see it from across the street. He
decided that it would be perfect for a home, and a couple of
months later he bought it and had it moved to a lot on the
shore of Long Lake in Orono. Berge make extensive
alterations, transforming it into a “rustic,
Scandinavian-modern chalet,” as described by the
Minneapolis Tribune in 1963.
In April 2010, St. Louis Park
Historical Society Trustee Jeanne Andersen and Member Terri
Siderakos made a trip to Orono to see the original Colonial
Inn building. Its current owner, Keith Vandenbranden, saw
our web site and contacted Terri, who is the “keeper of the
flame” of Colonial Inn history and we jumped at his
invitation to see the building. Terri said the house was
still recognizable as the restaurant, especially the ladies
and men’s rooms, which still had original pink and brown
tile. Mr. Vandenbranden had also made contact with David
Chatelaine, who shared pictures of the restaurant and one of
the ornate Faberge-like eggs that he created as a hobby. The
Colonial Inn was a mainstay in St. Louis Park history and it
was good to see that the building is in good hands!
FAMILY HOMES
In 1933 the Smiths were listed in the Directory as living at
4382 Utica, now Mackey, although city records show that the
current house was built in 1935.
From about 1938 the Smiths lived in a large stucco house at
4130 Excelsior Blvd. (also referred to as 3600 Excelsior),
pictured below.
When the Smiths moved to Florida in 1962 it was
turned into an office building. In 1964 it was the home of
the Electronics Development Co., which made "computer
hearing aids." Murray Risch was president, Hymen
Goldberg was the director of research, and there were 15
employees. It appears that the company moved to 4020
Lake St. in 1966. During 1962-1972, Max Winegardner
was the owner of the building. It was demolished in 1972.

Next door was the home of their daughter Margaret and
son-in-law, David Charletaine, which was built in 1949 and
is still standing at 4120 Excelsior. (In 1945 the
Chatelaines lived at 4150 Xenwood.) Margaret Chatelaine
(born December 16, 1913) worked with her mother at the
Colonial Inn, and David E. Chatelaine (born August 16, 1897)
was known for the Faberge-like eggs he decorated. There was
a long article about David in the June 25, 1953 edition of
the Dispatch. They all participated in the hunt for antiques
for the Inn and in their homes. The Chatelaines moved to
West Palm Beach after wintering there for 25 years. They had
a daughter Cathryn June who married Kenneth G. Thompson on
December 10, 1955. Margaret died in March 1973. David died
on April 16, 1992. Their home, pictured below, was built in 1949
and is now the
Colonial Office Building.

|
 |