Complete
Locke-Ober History

King’s Directory of Boston, published in 1883, reported:
“ The leading French restaurant of the city is Ober’s, on Winter
Place, off Winter Street. This has more than a local fame. It is most patronized
by the possessors of long purses. It has a large general dining-room, a café,
and several private supper rooms. The viands here are unsurpassed by any
place in the city.”
The story of Locke-Ober begins some thirty years earlier. The buildings in
which it is located were originally constructed as dwellings at sometime
prior to the
records covered by the building department. Luis Ober’s name first appears
to be connected to Winter Place in 1870, although in 1879 he makes reference
to “This place of over twenty years standing, where French cooking, par
excellence, is made a specialty.” It appears that Ober took over 4 Winter
Place from a Mr. F.A. Blanc who was operating a restaurant there in 1868. It
is believed that Ober was one of Blanc’s customers.
Luis Ober was born in the French department of Alsace in 1837, coming to New
York with his parents at the age of fourteen. As a young man he worked in a number
of trades- barbering, bookselling, taxidermy, buying and shipping produce- in
New Jersey, Cincinnati, Philadelphia and finally Boston. Ober was then, by the
time he came to terms with Mr. Blanc, comparatively a man of the world. The availability
of Mr. Blancs restaurant at 4 Winter Place offered Ober the opportunity to put
his experience and growing sophistication to use in some enterprise of his own.
Prior to 1875, Ober seems to have operated only a small cellar café at
Winter Place. The records of the City Building Department show that he filed
an application to remodel numbers 3 and 4 Winter Place into a café and
dwelling in 1875. It is reported that Eben Jordan, a co-founder of the Jordan
Marsh Company advanced the funds which Ober needed to purchase and remodel the
buildings. When the restaurant opened as Ober’s Restaurant Parisien, a
table was reserved in perpetuity for the executives of Jordan Marsh. Ober’s
successors continued the tradition.
This period from 1875-1886, referred to as the first phase of remodeling resulted
in bringing the restaurant out of the cellar. At the completion of this phase
the main dining room and kitchen were on the first floor (street level) with
two dining rooms on the north end of the second floor, and living quarters for
the Ober family on the remainder of the second floor and third floor.
In 1886 Ober began the work referred to as the second phase, much of what remains
visible today. Following eleven successful years of operation Ober decided at
this time to take on a much more costly and time consuming effort, a grand refurbishing
of the Restaurant Parisien. During this time the entire second floor and the
third floor private rooms were added as dining areas.
Mahogany from San Domingo, huge plate glass mirrors from France, decorated
ceilings, etched gold wallpaper, German silver cloches, stained glass, graceful “electrolier” chandeliers
and a wonderful hand-operated dumb waiter of brass on brass poles, which
faithfully lifts drinks from the bar to dining room above were some of the
many materials
and items assembled by Ober.
The mahogany was carved by French artisans, and local craftsman were recruited
to decorate the ground floor ceiling. The intricately carved mahogany is most
noticeable on the front and back of the long L shaped bar in the main dining
room. The six heavy silver tureens and platter covers designed to be lifted by
pulleys, were made by Reed and Barton. More than one hundred years later these
tureens continue as the most distinguishing hallmark of the dining room.
The finely painted dining room ceiling of leaves, flowers and mythical animals
in deep greens, yellows and browns remindful of a Etruscan spring would be impossible
to duplicate today. The delicate Art Nouveau stained glass motifs filtering the
afternoon light are said to resemble those being designed in 1890 by Louis Comfort
Tiffany in Brooklyn.
At this time Ober also decided to add two unique pieces of art to the dining
room, one purchased on a trip to France and the other commissioned and painted
in Boston.
The first, a bronze sculpture known as Gloria Victis, was sculpted by Marius
Jean Antonin Mercie. The original of Gloria Victis was honored by being placed
in the courtyard of the Hotel de Ville (City Hall) in Paris in 1874. The
Gloria Victis at Locke-Ober was positioned in the dining room and became
Boston’s
most famous hat rack. The exposed foot of the statue has traditionally been
hand rubbed for good luck by the patrons of Locke-Ober, including many from
the nearby
securities district wishing financial good fortunes.
The second, being a large portrait painted by Tomaso Juglaris in a garret in
Bromfield street, rumored to have been commissioned by Ober for $80.00.
Over the years the painting on the north wall of the men’s café has
been credited with a romantic history and identified as a certain Mademoiselle
Yvonne. Mr. Lawrence Dame art critic for the Boston Herald, “ Tomaso
Juglaris, born in Turin, Italy, in 1844, created this real work of art. Some
say the model
was his wife. He studied at the Turin Academy of Fine Arts and in Paris under
Thomas Couture, with a flair for figure painting which is stunningly apparent.”
The guardian of tradition in the Café, this young Victorian woman with
goblet in hand whose draped form surveys the room, sets the tone for what has
been Boston’s favorite establishment for over a century. Throughout
it all, she has remained serene and composed, showing emotion only when Harvard
loses to Yale, and as tradition has it must hide her disappointment behind
a black crepe sash.
By 1886 Ober was the master of Winter Place. His success however, invited competition.
Dudley S. McDonald, who operated a confectionary at 16 Winter Place and owned
Nos. 1 and 2 Winter Place agreed to help Frank Locke set up a café in
the space next store to Ober’s vacated by the Winter Place Club. In 1892
Frank Locke’s Wine Rooms opened for business.
Locke was born in Loudon, New Hampshire in 1848. After serving in the Union Army,
and coming to Boston after the war, he established a successful saloon on the
corner of Broad and State streets.
A booklet describing Locke’s new quarters paints a picture of a Victorian
extravaganza clearly designed to outshine Ober’s:
“ The building is now entirely finished, and the establishment open to
public inspection and patronage. The business connected is that of supplying
the public with fine wines, liquors and buffet luncheon. …. “the
general appearance is as of an enchanting picture, a fairy grotto, a sumptuous
apartment in some palatial edifice” …
Locke’s grandiose saloon catered to men exclusively, but welcomed the “gentle
sex” from the hours of nine to eleven am for viewing the wonders of
the place only.
Unfortunately today the only reminder of Locke’s Wine Rooms is a replica
of the giant padlock that hung outside Nos 1 Winter Place as its’ sign,
bearing the name Frank. Today the padlock has the words "Locke-Ober" on it
and is hung over the building between the two original establishments.
Both proprietors left Winter Place abruptly.
In 1894, twenty five years after taking over the “cellar restaurant” Ober
sold the business to Wood and Pollard a firm of wholesale liquor dealers.
Ober had accumulated a sizeable estate over the years consisting of securities
and
properties.
Locke was less fortunate, as he had a short time to enjoy the pleasures of
the Wine Rooms for he died in April, 1894 at the age of forty six. One month
after
Locke’s death Wood and Pollard bought the Wine Rooms from his estate, now
owning all four buildings on Winter Place. The buildings were immediately combined
by breaking through the wall separating Locke’s from Ober’s.
Wood and Pollard renamed the restaurant the Winter Place Tavern.
Emil Camus, the guiding spirit of the modern day Locke- Ober enters the scene
at this point, 1894. Camus an elusive biographical subject was thought to be
a quiet, reserved and some thought haughty man. Arriving in America from France
in 1890 in his late twenties he worked in New York for the famous restaurateur
Louis Sherry. After two years at Locke-Ober under Wood and Pollard, Camus moved
to California.
In 1898 John Merrow, who headed an operation that operated the Revere House,
purchased the Tavern from Wood and Pollard and named it The Winter Place
Hotel. Merrow’s tenure ended in bankruptcy. Emil Camus returned from
California in 1901 and formed The Locke-Ober Company, for the purpose of operating
the
restaurant and catering to a select group of patrons. He immediately announced
the securing
of the services of Mr. J.B. Bailhe, the famous French chef for many years
with Mr. Ober.
Finally, after many unsettling years it appeared that Locke-Ober had a leader
and a direction that would establish order and set goals for the business. Camus
and Baihe created a bill of fare that would combine the most popular American
regional dishes and ingredients with French cooking methods, while also incorporating
French classics such as Sweetbreads Eugenie. This culinary strategy has never
left the kitchen at Locke-Ober, and exists even today. Under the guidance of
Camus Locke-Ober reached its goals of becoming a complete restaurant of the highest
standing with outstanding service and attention to detail.
Emil Camus was considered a genius at assembling a seasoned, conscientious
staff, which was critical due to his temperament which was inclined to function
more
or less behind the scene. He set the standard for Locke-Ober during the early
1900’s and carried it on through the First World War, Prohibition and
the Great Depression. During prohibition the Wine Rooms were closed and sold,
with
not a trace being preserved. Camus continued until he died on April 27, 1939
exactly thirty eight years to the day since his return to command in 1901.
As a memorial to Camus, the same standard of excellence, which included the dishes
he perfected with his chefs, the service he insisted upon and the professional
atmosphere he created are all being upheld today.
The Locke-Ober Company has had many changes in ownership and managers since Camus,
most notably Charles Little and Bill Harrington, who have left their marks on
Locke-Ober. In 1950 the second floor of what was the Wine Rooms was acquired and
extensively remodeled. In 1981 this room was finally completed with the addition
of panels carved in France and acquired from the Astor home in Newport by Mr.
David Ray. In 1974 the Ober room was remodeled with the application of the quartered
oak paneling acquired from the Columbia National Life Insurance Company around
the corner on Franklin Street.
It was also in 1981 that the restaurant finally recovered the original Locke’s
location in full. In 1988 an addition in the form of a private club known
as Yvonnes was opened in the three buildings located on Jackson Place, adjoining
the original Wine Rooms.
Locke-Ober was purchased by Winter Place LLC in 2001, and is currently operated
in the same configuration as in 1910 under Camus. Main dining room, kitchen
and lounge on the first floor, two large party rooms on the second and 6
intimate private á la carte rooms on the third. The addition known as Yvonne’s
is utilized for private functions.

A special thanks to Ned and Pamela Bradford for
their excellent contribution:
BOSTON’S LOCKE-OBER CAFE
AN ILLUSTRATED SOCIAL HISTORY WITH MISCELLANEOUS RECIPES
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