Table of Contents
Steve Cahalan
There’s been a spurt of business openings in Galesville in the past few months, bringing additional life to what I’ve always thought is one of the most interesting downtowns in the region.
Clarissa Andersen and Chandra Crane opened Jungle Juice on Saturday at 19873 W. Gale Ave. in downtown Galesville. It’s a smoothie, boba tea and hot tea bar in the same storefront where Andersen also has been operating FernGrove Houseplants since early October.
FernGrove had been sharing the storefront with Revved Nutrition until Revved closed Nov. 20.
“While we do hope to cater to those who are on the go and looking for a nutritious and delicious way to start their day, we have also strived to make the space inviting and safe for people who wish to stay and hang with friends or work on homework,” Andersen said of Jungle Juice. “We have free Wi-Fi and many fun and unique single and multiplayer board games available.” Online ordering also is available.
Hours for both Jungle Juice and FernGrove Houseplants are 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.
Andersen started her FernGrove business in June as a vendor in the Galesville farmers market and it’s been in its current location since October. It sells quality houseplants, handmade plant decor and houseplant care items at its store,
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Andersen said. While it also sells online, she said, “Houseplants are only available for in-store pick-up.”
For more information about FernGrove, visit https://ferngroveplants.com or Facebook.
For more information about Jungle Juice, visit www.junglejuicewi.com or Facebook.
Kari Schulz opened The Main Fox on Nov. 19 at 16867 S. Main St. in downtown Galesville. It’s in the former location of the Solutions for Men & Women salon, which closed in July.
The Galesville native said her new salon cuts hair for men, women and children and provides skin care services such as facials, chemical peels, body treatments, full-body waxing, eyebrows, lashes and makeup. It also sells skin, hair and nail care products.
“I’ve always had a passion for skin care and have always wanted to own my own business,” said Schulz, who worked in commercial banking for 10 years before completing a cosmetology program and becoming a licensed esthetician.
Hours are Tuesday by appointment, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Friday, 8 a.m. to noon Saturday and other times by appointment. “I’ll also do bridal party” services, Schulz said.
For more information, call 608-863-0030 or visit the salon’s Facebook page.
Tara Herbst-Kopp opened The Rebel Glass Co. in July at 19893 W. Gale Ave. in downtown Galesville.
Her shop sells her stained glass creations as well as furniture that’s been refurbished by Abracadabra Refurbished in La Crosse, and handblown glass items and handmade soaps that are made by others. “I’m starting to make some handblown glass” items that also are for sale, Herbst-Kopp said.
“I also take custom orders and commissions,” she said.
She has been making stained glass items for about 30 years. “It had always been a hobby,” Herbst-Kopp said, until she made it a business.
She began selling her stained glass creations in July 2020 as a home-based business near Galesville. “We moved (the business to downtown Galesville in July 2021) to be more public, yet maintain our privacy,” she said.
Hours are 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and at other times by appointment. Hours will expand once her daughter Abigail begins working full time at the store in a few days, Herbst-Kopp said.
For more information, call 608-484-0147 or visit the store’s Facebook page.
Places of the past: 29 La Crosse area restaurants you’ll never eat at again (part one)
Sandy’s Drive-In
The Sandy’s Drive-In, at the southeast corner of Rose and Clinton streets, is shown here shortly after an addition was completed in 1972. The fast food franchise was at the location from 1962 until about 1975. Today, the site is home to River Bank.
Paul’s Pantry
Owner Dave Skogen stands in front of Paul’s Pantry, a delicatessen, bakery and convenience store that opened in 1983 at 237 Second Ave N. in Onalaska. The store was named for Paul Skogen, who founded the Skogen supermarket chain at the site in 1946. From 1998 to 2016, the building was used as a support center for the Skogen family’s Festival Foods grocery stores.
1985: Ranch House Dinner Theater
Scott Manthe, left, and Renee Lieder starred in the 1985 Ranch House Dinner Theatre production of “Butterflies are Free.” The Sparta performing arts venue was opened by Robert Irwin in 1984.
Happy Joe’s Pizza and Ice Cream Parlor
Dave Olsen, left, owner of Happy Joe’s Pizza and Ice Cream Parlor, helps employees build a 150-foot-long pizza in the parking lot of his Onalaska store in 1984. The event was a fundraiser for the Onalaska High School’s athletic department. The store, part of an Iowa-based chain, opened a year earlier at 808 Oak Ave. Olson renamed the restaurant as Pizza Pros Ala Mode in 2012, but it only lasted a few months under the new name. The building was torn down to make way for a Culver’s, which opened there in 2014.
Unicorn Restaurant
Karla Parker serves diners Helen Corbett and David Lehrke at Unicorn Restaurant, which owner Eric Bernhardt opened in 1984 at 312 S. Third St. The location, which had operated as Louie Bantle’s Restaurant for many years, is home today to the La Crosse Professional Plaza.
Pagliacci’s
Gary Roberts opened Pagliacci’s restaurant in 1982 at 308 S. Third St. The Italian restaurant closed in 1984. Today the building houses the offices of The Fortney Companies.
Maid-Rite Cafe
Bob and Irene Allen, shown here just before their retirement in 1984, opened the Maid-Rite Cafe in 1947 at 1117 Caledonia St. The restaurant, which was best known for its loose-meat sandwiches, closed in 2016.
Circus Supper Club
Sherry and Jim Welch, owners of the Circus Supper Club, are served some of the restaurant’s popular ribs by Rita Bagniefski. Pianist and entertainer Victor Borge famously stopped in the downtown landmark during a visit to La Crosse in 1974 and was one of the eateries most famous fans. Years later, Wettstein’s expanded its showroom into the space before closing in 2018.
Michael’s Cerise
Jim Pappas, one of the owners of Michael’s Cerise, is shown here in this 1984 photo. The Cerise Club first opened in 1959 at the corner of 32nd and Fairchild streets by Gerald Heberlein; it was destroyed by a fire in 1964. Heberlein reopened the club in 1967 at 1815 Ward Ave. Heberlein sold the restaurant to the Pappas family of Rochester, Minn., in 1976. The Pappas family closed the restaurant in 1993 and briefly reopened before closing for good the following year. Today, the site is home to the Hmoob Cultural and Community Agency.
In July 1976, the Cerise Club was the scene of the shooting deaths of Paul Whipple, a night bartender at the club, and his friend Theresa Schneider. The suspect in the case, David A. Leyden shot and killed himself the next month in Sioux Falls, S.D.
Ground Round
Musician Tammy Waller was a frequent children’s performer during the early 1980s at Ground Round. The North Side restaurant opened in early 1981 at 1930 Rose St. It closed in 1992 and was replaced by the Armadillo Mexi-Deli and, later, Edwardo’s Ristorante di Pizza, which closed in 2015. A new Ground Round franchise opened in Onalaska in 2015; it closed in 2018.
Wendy’s
David Lee stands in front of a Wendy’s restaurant at 2240 Rose St. shortly after purchasing the La Crosse fast food franchise in 1983. He also owned a Wendy’s at 3810 Mormon Coulee Road. The North Side location closed in 1989; today the building is home to Express Employment Professionals. The South Side location closed in 1989; today that building is home to Subway Restaurant. A Wendy’s opened in 2003 at 4422 Mormon Coulee Road, and another, which opened in 1984, operates across from Valley View Mall in Onalaska.
Elite Restaurant and Candy Shop
Paul Pappas, owner of the Elite Restaurant and Candy Shop, is shown here making confections at his store at 421 Main St. The Pappas family opened the store in 1912; it closed in 2000. Today, Fat Sam’s Main Street Bistro, which opened in 2012, occupies that space until it closed in 2017.
Big River Cattle Co.
Jon Schuster, shown here in 1983, opened the Great River Cattle Co. in 1980 at 716 Second Ave. N. in Onalaska. He sold the restaurant in 1989 and bought it back the next year, changing the name to Chicken Steak and Chocolate Cake. The restaurant changed hands again in 2006 and became Blue Moon, which was the name of the restaurant before Schuster’s 1980 purchase.
Esteban’s
Danette Shick, daughter of Linda and David Shick, tries on a sombrero during a visit to Esteban’s restaurant with her West Salem Spanish class. The restaurant opened in in February 1980 at 300 S. Third St. in downtown La Crosse and closed in January 1996. Numerous eateries have opened and closed at that location since then, and another, Lovechild is in business there today.
Fat Sams Bistro
Fat Sams Main Street Bistro operated at 412 Main St. in downtown La Crosse from 2012 to 2017. The restaurant, known for its gourmet sandwiches, salads and homemade soups, was located at the site of the former Elite Restaurant.
Nob Hill
The dining room of Nob Hill is shown when it opened in Onalaska in 1979. The restaurant, at 910 Second Ave. N., changed its name in 1993 to the Lighthouse (at Nob Hill) when a lighthouse replica was built next to the restaurant; it closed in 1997. The location has since been occupied by Seven Bridges Restaurant, Seasons By the Lake and currently Two Beagles Brewpub.
1983: Showbiz Pizza Place
Kindergartners from Onalaska’s Irving Pertzsch Elementary School gather at Showbiz Pizza Place in Onalaska in 1983. The pizza chain opened just north of Valley View Mall in 1982 and was rebranded as Chuck E. Cheese in 1993. Although its neighboring movie theater was torn down to make room for Dick’s Sporting Goods in 2014, the kid-friendly restaurant remains.
Jensen’s Cafe
Owner Philip Jensen, the son of the restaurant’s founder, Tollef Jensen, serves customers in this 1982 photo at Jensen’s Cafe in Galesville. The cafe was located on the city’s square from 1902 until it closed in 1992.
The Mint
From left, Dane Gonzales, Corrie Brekke and Cody Cottrell opened The Mint restaurant at 1810 State St. in September 2014. The farm-to-table style eatery closed four years later in September 2018.
Oscar’s
Franz Butkovich carries a tray of pickled turkey gizzards while working at Oscar’s, a restaurant that first opened in 1981 at 139 Second Ave. S. in Onalaska. Owned by Bud Pretasky, the restaurant was designed to let customers grill their own steaks and seafood. In 1984, the eatery changed its name to Oscar’s Little Chicago, which had a mafia theme. A fire destroyed the building in 1986, and today the site is a parking lot for the Scoreboard Bar.
Walt’s Restaurant
A couple enters Walt’s Restaurant, 310 Mississippi St., shortly before it closed in 1982. The eatery reopened under the Walt’s name again a few years later before closing for good in 1989. Later it served as the hospitality center for G. Heileman Brewery. In 2002, the nearby City Brewery reopened it as City Bier Stube. Later it operated under the names Gottlieb’s, Lindner’s at the Brewery and Nell’s City Grill. The space remains vacant today.
Big Dipper
Merlin Wangen, owner of the Big Dipper in Sparta, prepares to serve an ice cream creation in this 1981 photo. The store, which was located at 106 N. Water St., is now home to MC’s Sparta Grill.
Party House
Millie and Don Roesler stand in front of the Party House restaurant in 1981 shortly before it closed. The supper club, which was located in the town of Shelby near the junction of Hwy. 14/61 and Hwy. 35, was the casualty of a road expansion project.
Bon Appetit
Lebanese native Assaad Maatouk, pictured in 1981, was the chef and part owner of Bon Appetit restaurant in 1980. The eatery, located at 515 Main St., was open for about a year. The location is now home to the La Crosse Olive Oil Co. Maatouk later ran the Casablanca restaurant, first in Onalaska during the 1990s and later in La Crosse.
Chop House
Henry and Leone Wright stand in front of their restaurant, The Chop House, days before it closed in April 1980. The eatery, located at 122 N. Third St., was best known for its breakfasts. That original plan was to tear down the building to make way for an expansion of First Bank-La Crosse, but the lender instead built a 10-story office tower at Second and Main streets. The former Chop House building is home to Digger’s Sting today.
Zorba’s
A fire destroyed Zorba’s Greek restaurant in 1979. In 1981, owner Demetrios “Jimmy” Mitropoulos was sentenced to eight years in prison on an arson charge. Emman “Mike” Minos testified that Mitropoulos paid him $2,000 to set fire to the restaurant at 304 Main St. The lot, that today is adjacent to Grounded Specialty Coffee, remains vacant.
Johnnies Bar & Grill
La Crosse firefighters battle a blaze that destroyed Johnnie’s Bar & Restaurant 20 years ago during the early morning hours of Feb. 26, 1994. Johnnie’s, which dated to 1947 and was located at 2620 South Ave., was a popular restaurant, widely known for its Friday night fish fry. The former site of Johnnie’s is now occupied by a parking area for Autotude at 2612 South Ave.
Perkins
The Perkins Restaurant & Bakery at 1411 Rose St. closed in August 2019. The closure was part of a nationwide downsizing by the struggling chain. The location on Hwy. 16 in Onalaska remains open.
Steve Cahalan can be reached at [email protected].