Last of Coit's Drive-Ins in Oklahoma City closes
Loved ones of the late restaurateur Don Coit closed the last of his drive-ins on Saturday after a yearlong struggle to reinvent the operation's appeal to younger customers.
Loved ones of the late restaurateur Don Coit closed the last of his drive-ins Saturday after a yearlong struggle to reinvent the venerable operation's appeal to younger customers.

Multimedia
The first of the three restaurants opened in 1954 at SW 25 and Western Avenue, and was the first to close earlier this year.
The remaining two locations, at NW 39 and Portland Avenue and NW 50 and Portland Avenue, closed just one year after the family put all three properties up for sale by Paul Ravencraft and Phillip Mazaheri with Price Edwards & Co.
When the listing was first posted, Jesse Coit, widow of founder Don Coit, told The Oklahoman that she and daughter Cosette were hopeful they could keep part of the operation in business.
“They couldn't survive in this environment anymore,” Ravencraft said Monday. “It was too much for them. Jesse Coit wasn't running it, but she was the owner, and family members were trying to help them to survive but couldn't.”
Coit's began with just a root beer stand with no windows, just a shutter board that closed when the day's business was over. Winter business was dismal, and Don Coit was looking for a way to survive the cold weather when an acquaintance at the fire department suggested he sell Christmas trees.
Don Coit traveled west to Washington and east to North Carolina. The family got to know the tree growers, staying at their homes, and before long his business was as well known for its Christmas tree lots as it was for its root beer stand.
If you owe under $729k you may qualify for 2.90% APR Govt Refi Plans.
www.SeeRefinanceRates.com
(APR 2013): If You Pay For Car Insurance You Must Read This Immediately
www.ConsumerFinanceDaily.com






Prev
Follow



