Jennings Tavern was established at 4630
Excelsior Blvd. in 1934. The Village liquor ordinance was
passed on December 12, 1934, and the first license approved
was to H.W. Jennings - most likely Harriet Jennings, Mike’s
wife. The building was probably built in 1933, as that was
the year the property was connected to the water main. It
appears to have been a kind of
log house roadhouse. Milt Strelow, formerly a
bartender at Al's, managed Jennings Tavern and later managed
the liquor store. Ads for the restaurant in 1933-34 boasted
two cocktail lounges. The décor of the original building was
the “old log cabin,” featuring a two-story round stone
fireplace with a similar fireplace on the lower level.
Prices were modest: a porterhouse steak was 95 cents ($1.10
with mushrooms); chili was a quarter.
In 1946, Mike sold the building to Peter Kosmas and Kosmas’s
brother-in-law Anthony J. Kallas, and they ran it for
several years. Mike transferred his liquor license to the
pair in 1949; he died in 1951. From September 17, 1954 it
was known as the Park House Tavern. In 1956, Kosmas and
Kallas built a building across the street at
4700 Excelsior,
which they initially called the Park House but soon became
the Park Terrace.
The building at 4630 was later named Jennings Café. In 1960,
union trouble closed the restaurant, and "Catering Masters
of Holiday Lodge" was operated in the building. The Knights
of Columbus somehow had something to do with it. The
building was variously known as Jennings Holiday Lodge (with
“rustic charm”), Holiday Inn, and Holiday House. In 1958,
dance teacher Dorothy Henry gave lessons at Jennings Holiday
Lodge. In 1960, ads were run for “Ed Farrell and his
Catering Masters.”
Jim Jennings took control of the property in 1962, and by
1964 the problems were solved and the restaurant became
known as Jennings’s Red Coach Inn. The story told is that Jim
Jennings frequented a restaurant called the Red Coach down
in Florida and decided to use the name. The company that
owned the original Red Coach was not happy, but Jennings
promised to always call it Jennings Red Coach so as not to
cause confusion. In the 1970’s, the restaurant was known for
its French fried cauliflower, a favorite of Halsey Hall.
In late 1983, both management and staff of Jennings went on
strike, closing the Red Coach Inn for several weeks. The
workers made several economic concessions, including wage
and benefit reductions, but two of the main sticking points
were seniority rights and job protection.
The restaurant, always a fancy place with a lot of class,
closed its doors in 1999 to make way for Excelsior and Grand.
This information comes from a variety of sources: newspapers, books, yearbooks, phone directories, interviews, etc. Given the varied sources, we cannot guarantee that all of this information is correct, and welcome any additions and corrections. Please contact us with your contributions and comments.