Started By
Message

re: Restaurant history thread - 112 missed restaurants in the history of F-ville

Posted on 7/19/14 at 10:38 am to
Posted by Litigator
Hog Jaw, Arkansas
Member since Oct 2013
7536 posts
Posted on 7/19/14 at 10:38 am to
Yes, I'd forgotten about the one on College. Generally I only went to the location in Oak Plaza because it was so close to campus.

I still see Marlo there from time to time whenever I pass through and stop to get something to eat. She used to cut my hair in school and had a salon in a shopping center on Business 71, not far from the Country Club and Drake Field. If I remember correctly it was about in the same spot as St. Michael's Disco Alley which was a popular club back in the day. LINK
Posted by wmr
North of Dickson, South of Herman's
Member since Mar 2009
32518 posts
Posted on 7/19/14 at 1:40 pm to
I remember most of those in that list. I've only ever known the one Marlo's Taco Shack but its been going for ages.

The ones I miss are:

Cafe Santa Fe on Center, not for the food, but for the drunken hell raising that happened there. People dancing on tables, karaoke, falling down those damned steep stairs to the upper portion. 3 buck mason jars of Long Islands, just begging to kill somebody. Such fun.

Casa Taco, it was probably just total garbage, but my go to was dipping a cheeseburger in their queso when really really drunk (which now that I remember seens like 5 out of 7 day a week in college). Also had the experience of ordering delivery at 3 am and passing out and not going to the door. I bet a lot of those "free cheese dips" were leftovers from other deliveries where that exact thing happened.

I ate at Boardwalk Cafe, and the only reason I really miss it is that its one of those places that I remember before Dickson got completely gentrified and rents went through the roof. Just a burger joint in a shady spot. We need more of that in this town and fewer chains. On the flipside, we used to be just a quaint little college town without much else going on. Dickson is stronger now than its probably ever been, and all signs point to more growth, more art, more bars, and more restaurants. I forget how much a part the square played in nightlife back then. I guess its strong now, too. Back then though, Center St held its own. Its a mystery to me why only the south side of that street seems to hold restaurants while the north side continues to languish some.


first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow SECRant for SEC Football News
Follow us on Twitter and Facebook to get the latest updates on SEC Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitter