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John Parker

John Parker

When you were hungry and didnā€™t have any money, the Pied Piper had your back.

The owner of the small Pennsylvania Street diner on The Hill, John Parker, had a book where you could chalk up your debts. Although, in the late 1950s, most people seldom let it get past $20, Parker never squawked, and a couple of people, it is told, ran it up to $100. But as long as you paid Parker before summer break or made some arrangement with him, it was OK.

I have only heard it referred to as the Pied Piper once or twice. True enough, the red letters above the door said that, but nearly everyone called it Parkerā€™s.

Parker ā€” a small man with ruddy cheeks and a hard-worked face ā€” worked every day from 6a.m. to 6 p.m. except on Friday afternoons, when he closed at 2 p.m. because thatā€™s when many of his customers were drinking.

Parkerā€™s place had seven stools, a cash register and a small upraised counter on the right side of the diner where ā€œthe bookā€ was kept. In addition to the money owed for food, various bets were placed under different customersā€™ names. One could open the book to their name, for example, and the total owed would be near the bottom of the page: ā€œ$13.72.ā€ The right side of the page could read, ā€œWhite Sox to win the pennant, $5.ā€

The place had a small grill where Parker cooked hamburgers, eggs, ham, bacon, steak, hot dogs and morning rolls. He turned the grill on in the morning with a pair of pliers. He had a tin to cook poached eggs, along with a toaster, coffee pot, small freezer, shelf for rolls and pies, and a milkshake maker. That was it. The menu remained the same; the prices remained the same. You could get a hamburger steak dinner, which included a double hamburger portion, fries, bread and butter, soup or juice for $0.65 or a small steak with the same extras for $1.25.

You had to take two napkins and throw them down on the fries before you ate them. But you only did this when Parker was facing the grill, otherwise heā€™d tell you to ā€œget the hell outā€ if you didnā€™t like the food. Jack Wyrick (A&Sā€™61) was the expert at sopping up the grease before Parker turned around.

But everyone, especially CU athletes and fans, went to Parkerā€™s. His coffee was good, his prices were cheap and, of course, you could eat on credit.

The last time I ate at Parkerā€™s was the summer of 1960. Sadly John died suddenly in January 1962 and Parkerā€™s was no more.


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Photo courtesy Carnegie Library for Local History