WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

548

Archive: https://archive.today/zzqEM

From the post:

>When Melton Jenkins Jr and his wife, Willie Mae, opened a small barbecue stand on Kings Road in 1957, they built more than a restaurant — they created a Jacksonville institution. Nearly seven decades later, it is shutting down. It is the latest in a string of restaurants to announce closures amid high food prices and a decline in consumer spending on dining out. The family-owned chain, known for its oak-fired meats and mustard-based sauce, will close all three of its locations and its online store on September 30. With its yellow-painted walls, red mansard roof, and smoke billowing from a brick pit, Jenkins Quality Barbecue became one of Jacksonville’s longest-standing Black-owned businesses.

Archive: https://archive.today/zzqEM From the post: >>When Melton Jenkins Jr and his wife, Willie Mae, opened a small barbecue stand on Kings Road in 1957, they built more than a restaurant — they created a Jacksonville institution. Nearly seven decades later, it is shutting down. It is the latest in a string of restaurants to announce closures amid high food prices and a decline in consumer spending on dining out. The family-owned chain, known for its oak-fired meats and mustard-based sauce, will close all three of its locations and its online store on September 30. With its yellow-painted walls, red mansard roof, and smoke billowing from a brick pit, Jenkins Quality Barbecue became one of Jacksonville’s longest-standing Black-owned businesses.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt