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Ho Jo’s No Go — 18 Comments

  1. Thanks for the HoJo piece, Neo. Charming. I loved your description of your wee hour meal.

    A visit to a Howard Johnson’s during family vacations in the 1960s was
    an experience I will always remember fondly. I loved seeing the orange and turquoise, my dad pulling off the turnpike, getting out of a hot car & entering the air conditioned cool of a HoJo. I clearly recall the feeling of sliding into a turquoise leather booth. But what I remember most was the “Orange Freeze”, an Orange drink/ Orange sherbet float. My sister and brother and I loved them. And of course the hot dogs with the beautiful toasted bun. And yes, the Fried Clams too! Happy memories.

    The last HoJo I was in is the one in Times Square. About a year ago (2004)I just went in to look around, knowing that it’s soon to be either totally transformed into something else or torn down. Sad. O well. Very enjoyable while they lasted.

  2. neo — I just put you in my daily blog list too. You’re getting better and better; I love your range.

    Howard Johnson’s was an icon from my childhood. My grandmother would take us kids there for a treat. For my birthday she bought me a “Satellite Sparkler” — Howard Johnson’s top-of-the-line $1.75 sundae topped with a lighted sparkler spewing magical ozoney sparks all over the restaurant table.

  3. Well, I loved it, the whole thing, your HoJo reflection and all the responses. Would you believe that I too have significant HoJO memories which I will share next time we meet.

  4. Haven’t been back to Boston in years but I wonder if the Brigham’s ice cream shops still exist. I loved their lime rickeys and now must make my own…inc. having to make the raspberry syrup since you can’t find any.

    The things we do for love…

    And now, even in VA, I can buy fresh clams at the grocery store. Nothing like a steamed clam…

    In Gloucester one year, the tail end of a huuricane came thru Cape Anne in early September. We all went down to the beach and collected dozens and dozens of mussels. A first for all of us: looked like clams, tasted almost as good…

    Sic transit, hmmm?

  5. The best thing about the old Howard Johnson’s was the RELISH that went on the hot dogs (very sweet), and the way they toasted the buns. Yum….

  6. When I was in high school, the only cool place to go after Friday night dances was the HoJo’s at Fresh Pond. NO ONE has ever made better fried clam rolls than they did. Remember the wonderful buttery toasted rolls? They used them on hotdogs as well.

    I actually met the real Howard Johnson at a wedding when I was about 7. He had a head like an egg

  7. During high school in the 70’s I worked at Friendly’s and on Friday/Saturday nights, us Friendly’s closers would clean up, lock up and head over to HoJo’s for a midnight breakfast before heading home. There were some nights, much to my parent’s chagrin, that I wouldn’t be home until almost dawn, having spent hours at hojos drinking coffee, eating pancakes and smoking cigarettes…great memories!

  8. Wow. Another piece of my old New England gone!

    I remember eating there as a kid – I can remember the bright orange roof that you could see from Mars. Yup, I remember their fried clams too (this was before I got involved with this weird cult called “the Jewish religion”.)

    Also I remember that my parents had boycotted it for a while during the civl rights era. I think that was a little before my time – or just about the time I was born – so probably what I’m remembering is that they spoke of having boycotted HoJo’s.

  9. Does anyone remember the parody of HoJo’s in Mad magazine, poking fun at the slowness of the service? The piece included one waitress that was pregnant for 27 months. But I also loved the place as a kid; getting out of the back of the station wagon after several hours; HoJo’s felt like home.

  10. Thank you Neo Neo for this sad information. Though Ho-Jo was never that big in Texas where I grew up, and came home to reside, I did love them when I was traveling or during my various “stateside” tours in the Army. The ice cream was a special treat, as were the fried clams. We weren’t used to fried clams in West Texas.

  11. My mother used to be a waitress there and we ate there often. I LOVED the fried clams (all you can eat). Sigh…next thing you know Dairy Queen will fade away too!

  12. Anonymous–beats me as to whether it’s “foot” or “neck.” I wasn’t sure about that either, and I actually googled it to try to check it out (oh, the weary labors of the blogger!). The best I could come up with was foot, but perhaps you are right; perhaps it’s neck.

    If interested, you can look at this. Then there’s also this, which indicates that clam strips were slicings from huge, commercially harvested clams–doesn’t say which part of the clam, though!

    Perhaps more than anyone ever wanted to know about clams…

  13. I believe the part of the clam that HoJos used is called the “neck”, not the “foot”.

    I have enjoyed your blog for a few weeks now; I am a native New Englander and we always thought the Clam Strips were missing something!

  14. When I was an undergrad at Brandeis (Waltham, MA) from 1981-85, the only place open for late night munchies was the HoJo’s on Rte. 128. Big Breakfast II, baby.

    Nice blog, btw. Bookmarked.

  15. I’m adding you to my reading list. Your blog/column/forum is thoughtful, balanced and lacks nasal whining.

  16. I remember seeing a great cover on Forbes magazine. It was an artist’s rendering of a Howard Johnson’s in the 50s, and then the same restaurant in the 80s. The HoJo was the same, but the landscape had changed.

    I wish I had hung on to that picture. I’m not so sure that I care about HoJo, but there is a fine sort of sadness–similar to what children, the most conservative creatures on the planet, feel–thinking about something that was once so fresh and exciting, ending. Not with a bang, but with a whimper.

  17. There used to be a wonderful HoJo’s in Coral Gables, FL right on South Dixie Highway (US 1). My little sister always insisted on having her birthday dinner there. When I got older and in high school, a tradition evolved wherein we would meet there at 6:00 am on New Years Day to eat off our hangovers (it was a 24 hour restaurant). Nothing more that a few boring memories, but the disapearance of the place saddens me. Perhaps mint chocolate chip ice cream will be to me what the famous madeline was to Proust.

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