Lum's
Lum's was an American family restaurant chain based in Florida with additional locations in several states. It was founded in 1956 in Miami Beach, Florida by Stuart and Clifford S. Perlman[1] when they purchased Lum's hot dog stand for $10,000. Over the next few years, the Perlman brothers opened three additional Lum's restaurants, for a total of four by 1961.[2]
Lum's in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, 1966 | |
Subsidiary | |
Industry | Restaurant chain |
Fate | Liquidation; some franchisees remained in independent operation |
Founded | 1956Miami Beach, Florida | in
Founder | Clifford S. Perlman, Stuart Perlman |
Defunct | 1982 |
Headquarters | US |
Area served | United States |
Parent | Wienerwald |
Clifford Perlman, in addition to owning Lum's, had been serving as the president of Southern Wood Industries, Inc., resigned that position to work full-time for Lum's. Under the brothers, Lum's began aggressively expanding and franchising; the signature item was hot dogs steamed in beer. In 1969, Lum's, Inc. was admitted to the New York Stock Exchange.
Lum's, Inc. purchased Caesars Palace for $60 million in 1969. At that time, Caesars was a 500-room hotel-casino on the Las Vegas strip. The food operations of Lum's, Inc. were sold in 1971 to John Y. Brown, then chairman of Kentucky Fried Chicken along with a group of investors.[3] At the time of sale, the company owned and franchised 400 stores in the continental US, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and Europe.
In 1978, Wienerwald Holdings, A.G., a Swiss holding company and parent of the Wienerwald restaurant chain, under the direction of Friedrich Jahn, purchased the 273 restaurant chain from Brown.[4] Wienerwald had overextended itself and was forced to file for bankruptcy in 1982. Two Jahn-controlled Lum's franchises were also forced to close all of their 70 Lum's locations and file for bankruptcy.[5]
The original Lum's location closed in 1983.[6] For a time, there was only one Lum's operating, in Bellevue, Nebraska.[7] In 2010 a Lum's opened in Seekonk, Massachusetts[8], but later closed, leaving the Nebraska restaurant as the sole location. The Bellevue location closed on May 28, 2017.[9]
The Miami Beach location was still open around 1998.
For a time in the 1970s, the company's commercial spokesman was Milton Berle.
Lum's makes a cameo appearance in Martin Scorsese's 2019 film The Irishman.
References
- "S. Perlman, Co-Founded Lums Chain". San Jose Mercury News. January 6, 1988. Retrieved October 11, 2007 – via NewsBank.
- "Lum's Chief: From Law to Hot Dogs". The New York Times. February 1, 1970. p. F12.
- Bamash, Isadore (July 24, 1971). "Resignation Denied By K.F.C. Chairman". The New York Times. pp. 31, 34.
- Tagliabue, John (July 18, 1981). "Wienerwald's U.S. Challenge". The New York Times. p. 29.
- "2 Lum's Owners File for Chapter 11". New York Times. September 24, 1982.
- "Lums first store to shut down". Miami Herald. May 22, 1983. Retrieved October 11, 2007 – via NewsBank.
- "Lums Restaurant – Bellevue, NE". Yelp. Retrieved May 10, 2012.
- "Things to Do - Lum's". Providence Journal. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
- Hansen, Sarah Baker (June 2, 2017). "Last Lums Restaurant closes after 49 years in Bellevue; chain had about 400 locations at its height". Omaha World-Herald.
External links
- Lum's TV Commercial with Milton Berle
- The Daily Meal 11 biggest failed restaurant chains: Lum's