fb-pixelAnd then there was one . . . HoJo’s making its last stand - The Boston Globe Skip to main content

And then there was one . . . HoJo’s making its last stand

The Bangor, Maine, restaurant will serve its last meal Sept. 6, but the hotel will remain open.Robert F. Bukaty/AP/File 2015

BANGOR, Maine — The closing of one of the last two Howard Johnson restaurants in a couple of weeks will mark the end of its fried clam strips, ice cream and other menu staples that nourished baby boomers and leave the once-proud restaurant chain teetering on the brink of extinction.

The slice of roadside Americana will no longer be served up in Bangor after Sept. 6.

For waitress Kathe Jewett, it’s the only job she’s held since starting work when the restaurant opened in 1966.

‘‘It’s bittersweet, but it’s nothing to be sad about,’’ the 68-year-old Jewett insisted Tuesday during a break from serving customers. ‘‘I've been here for 50 years — and it’s time.’’

Advertisement



The closing will leave only one Howard Johnson restaurant, in Lake George, N.Y.

Before falling on hard times, Howard Johnson took restaurant franchises to a new level. The orange-roofed eateries once numbered more than 800, with the New England-based restaurant chain predating the ubiquitous Howard Johnson hotels.

Howard Deering Johnson started the business in 1925, when he inherited a soda fountain in Quincy. That evolved into a chain of restaurants featuring comfort food and 28 flavors of ice cream. The orange roof with a blue spire represented a dependable place for travelers to park the family car, grab a meal and spend the night.

In Bangor, the Howard Johnson Restaurant and Lounge in its heyday was popular with travelers and locals alike, including horror and science fiction author Stephen King. King, who lives in Bangor, said he used to eat there often and enjoyed the patty melts and milkshakes.

Owners David Patel and his wife, Sally Patel, kept their restaurant going for the past four years as business slowed and hours were scaled back to just breakfast and lunch.

‘‘It’s not worth it to keep it open. We tried for four years,’’ Sally Patel said Tuesday, noting the hotel side of their business remains healthy and will be unaffected by the restaurant closure. ‘‘We felt bad to close it.’’

Advertisement



Patrons dined inside Howard Johnson's in Bangor. David Sharp/Associated press

Fortunately for HoJo fans, the Lake George restaurant appears to be on solid ground and is open year round.

‘‘We’re doing great,’’ owner John LaRock said. ‘‘We’re going to do some renovations this winter. Spruce it up, keep it going.’’

He said it’s a ‘‘good feeling’’ to be keeping the HoJo legacy alive.

‘‘Knowing I have the only one left makes it special,’’ he said.

There was a tinge of sadness Tuesday as Bangor diners digested the news.

Christopher Leek, of Orrington, learned while celebrating his 49th birthday with his girlfriend and his mother that the restaurant he’s visited since childhood is about to close.

‘‘I'm devastated,’’ he said. ‘‘It’s my favorite breakfast place. It’s a homey place.’’

Walter Mann, of New Haven, Conn., who started a website dedicated to documenting HoJo’s restaurant history, said he and other HoJo fans still hold out hope that an ‘‘orange knight’’ will step forward to revive the restaurants. If not, he'll still cherish the memories.

‘‘A lot of people have warm, fuzzy memories of a more innocent time,’’ he said. ‘‘People certainly crave for something like that to bring back the good memories.’’

Kathe Jewett has worked at the Howard Johnson restaurant in Bangor, Maine, since 1966. David Sharp/Associated Press

Associated Press writer George Walsh in Albany, N.Y., contributed to this report.