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September 8, 2020

Ronny’s Steakhouse–When the Loop Sizzled

 

Ronny’s Steakhouse closed over Labor Day weekend in Chicago’s Loop.

It was another signal in the shift of the urban community as a result of the pandemic. At one time there were six Ronny’s steakhouses in downtown Chicago. The last one standing was on the ground floor of the Thompson Center building. Government workers came to Ronny’s. Bank tellers ate there. There were wayward tourists. The late actor Philip Seymour Hoffman was a fan, most notably stopping in around 2010 when he was directing the “Long Red Road” at the nearby Goodman Theatre.

They are all ghosts in 2020.

Ronny’s was a place out of time during its time, which helped explain [...]

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July 28, 2020

When Central Camera had a record label

 

For no reason at all, looters and arsonists destroyed the historic Central Camera Co. store, 230 S. Wabash during the May 30 Chicago protests following the murder of George Floyd. Not long after the store was ruined, third-generation owner Don Flesch began a personal journey to see if there was anything he could salvage from his upstairs office.

Maybe he would find a lost letter from his grandfather Albert Flesch.

Or, a family photograph, of course.

Instead, he found sweet music hidden in a distant shelf.

During the early 1900s, Central Camera had a record label. Flesch discovered a cracked, smoke-tinged 78 by Peluso’s  Orchestra. It [...]

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May 31, 2020

The hopes and dreams of Central Camera

Chicago’s oldest camera store 5/30/20 (Andy Pierce photo)

 

I was at the historic Central Camera Co., store, 230 S. Wabash on Friday afternoon.

I waited outside the door to pick up some prints at Chicago’s oldest camera store. My friend and long time clerk Timothy Shaver came out. We did an elbow bump and I gave him condolences towards the recent passing of his mother at age 99. Third generation store owner Don Flesch arrived next. He offered me a piece of candy as he does with most of his customers. He pulled his face mask down a bit to reveal a smile that would never be denied.

We began [...]

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May 19, 2020

Bill Griffin–a vendor for the ages

Bill Griffin, Chicago vendor, 1980. (Courtesy of Lloyd Rutzky)

 

The world has been changing and Bill Griffin likely wanted no part of it.

“Griff” was the gruffest vendor at Wrigley Field and Comiskey Park in Chicago. He was proud to say that no one had worked the ballparks longer than him. His vendor life began in 1952. Bill spoke in an outlaw drawl that came from his native Oklahoma and he had the face of a postage stamp left out in a western rain. Bill died May 16 of COVID-19 at the Astoria Place senior home in Chicago. He was 88 years old.

Bill died the day after they started playing live organ [...]

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