Company type | Private until 1968 public offering; subsequently went private in a 1982 leveraged buy out |
---|---|
Industry | Dining |
Founded | 1933 |
Defunct | 2000 |
Fate | Sold off assets to private investors |
Headquarters | Newton, Massachusetts |
Key people | Donald Valle, Richard Valle, Judith Valle, and Arthur W. Hanson |
Products | Valle's Steak House specialized in prime steaks and lobsters |
Revenue | $69.5 million in 1981 (peak earnings) |
Number of employees | 3,600 |
Valle's Steak House was an American chain of restaurants that operated on the East Coast of the United States from 1933 to 2000. The chain's menu focused on steaks and lobsters. A family-run business, Valle's aggressively expanded during the early 1970s but was unable to weather the financial challenges of the gas crisis and the resulting economic downturn; increasing labor costs, the death of its founder, and the changing dining habits of its customers. The last Valle's Steak House closed in August 2000. [1]
Valle's Steak House operated as a full-service, high volume, low margin restaurant that emphasized prime steaks, fresh seafood, and Maine lobsters. Each of the restaurants was built to seat between 800-1400 customers. [9] A large wait staff trained to provide prompt service allowed for a fast turnover of tables by keeping the average dinner time to less than an hour. [3] By the mid 1960s the Boston area restaurants alone were serving over 12,000 lobsters each Friday night as part of their double lobster special and the chain was serving over 40,000 lobsters a week. [10] [11]
Early in his career, Donald Valle bypassed regional meat suppliers and established exclusive agreements with Swift and Company in Chicago which shipped beef directly by rail car to his Maine restaurants. [12] Vertically integrated, most of the company's beef originated from Valle's own ranch in Wyoming called the "Circle V" and was then shipped to slaughterhouses in Chicago. [11] Valle also invested heavily in making his restaurants efficient. In a 1965 interview with the Boston Globe Richard Valle showed off a $50,000 automatic dishwashing machine located in the kitchen of the chain's new $1.5 million Braintree, Massachusetts, restaurant. Valle also pointed out the row of broilers and the large, in-house bakery that allowed the Braintree location to serve 5,000 customers a day. [10]
Donald Valle had a reputation as a tireless worker and expected the same level of effort from his employees. Once, when taking a group of restaurant owners through one of his steak houses, Valle pointed out how trim his workers were because they stayed so busy. When one of the visitors pointed to a heavy set employee, Valle joked "He's new. Come back in a couple of months and you will see he's slimmed down." [13]
Training at Valle's was like going through boot camp but without all the pushups. It lasted six months. During that time they worked you like a rented mule. Not many trainees actually finished. You had to know the restaurant inside and out. [14] — Former Valle's manager
Valle's business model emphasized food over liquor with food accounting for over 85% of the company's revenues. [11] "We haven't been in the business since 1933 from selling liquor but good food and good service." Richard Valle said in a 1980 interview. [9]
Valle's Steak House began as a 12-seat café in Portland, Maine in 1933. The cafe was purchased at the end of Prohibition by Donald Valle. The cafe was successful and allowed Valle to purchase a larger restaurant in Portland's Woodfords Corner [15] and then a nightclub in Scarborough, Maine which he then converted into a restaurant. [11] Valle next expanded to Kittery, Maine where he constructed his first restaurant that was custom designed as a steak house. [3] In the mid-1960s Valle expanded to Massachusetts where he established three Boston-area steak houses in Saugus, Newton, and Braintree. They became, and remained, three of the busiest restaurants in the chain. [10] In 1968 the company went public and its shares were listed on the American Stock Exchange. By 1969, Valle's was serving over 200,000 customers a week, had 1,300 employees on its payroll, and had created and issued over 6,000 of its own credit cards. [13]
By 1970 the company had expanded into Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New York and was experiencing record earnings growth. [16] The success of the company attracted a buyout offer from the Campbell Soup Company. At the time of the offer, Valle's was operating 12 restaurants in Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New York and had five additional restaurants being developed. For the financial period ending on March 31, 1970, Valle's had netted $1,448,000 on sales of $19,200,000. Campbell offered to purchase all of the company's assets and assume its liabilities for $38,900,000. [17] Several months after the offer, negotiations collapsed. [18] In the wake of the collapse, Donald Valle stated that the level of control demanded by Campbell would have been detrimental to the continued success of the chain. [7]
In 1972, the company had begun construction on two additional steak houses in the Washington, D.C., area, plus another restaurant in Atlanta. Plans for restaurants in Yonkers, Philadelphia, Fort Lauderdale, and Daytona Beach had been approved and construction was slated to begin in 1973. Valle's had also agreed to sell a parcel of land next to its Hartford restaurant to a national motel chain for $325,000 and to serve as the hotel's sole banquet, lounge, and dining facility. [19]
One of the company's locations was in Saugus, Mass adjacent to the Hilltop Steakhouse that was, for a period of time, the highest grossing restaurant in the United States and often had a waiting time for a table that exceeded an hour. [20] While the Valle's location in Saugus was successful, it was also mocked as "...the place to go when you couldn't get into the Hilltop." [21]
The Braintree, Mass Valle's was the fifth restaurant in the chain to open and one of the busiest. On Thanksgiving Day 1979, the Braintree location "... prepared 1,200 pounds of turkey to serve to an expected 2,000 customers", for a holiday that was only their "... fifth busiest day of the year for the restaurant, behind Mother’s Day, Christmas, Easter, and New Year’s Day. [22]
Revenues and earnings continued to grow into the mid-70s but at a slower rate. Growing inflation, unemployment and rising gas prices caused Richard Valle to warn investors that although the company would continue to expand, earnings would not be able to maintain their momentum. "Inflation, the cautious attitude of the consumer, and the energy crisis are uncertainties facing the industry." [23] By 1977 both revenues and profits had begun to decline. [24]
Donald Valle's death in 1977 saddled the Valle family with an estate tax bill it was not prepared to pay. [25] Combined with declining sales and increasing costs from the firm's continued expansion, in 1981 Richard and Judith Valle attempted to sell their controlling shares in the company to a group of non-family executives and private investors for $17,500,000. Two different proposals were provided to shareholders over a 24-month period. At the time of the proposed sale, the Valle family and its trusts owned 66.7% of the company's 2.5 million common stock shares outstanding. The company was operating 32 restaurants that despite generating $65,900,000 in sales, had lost $569,000 for the year ending on March 31, 1981. [26] During the effort to sell their shares, Richard Valle stepped aside as president of the company. In his place, Arthur W. Hanson, 54, formerly executive vice president of operations became president and also acquired the newly created title of chief executive officer. Richard Valle described the change as "the start of [a] regrouping" that would allow him to focus on the firm's long term strategy as the chairman. [27] Prior to the finalization of the buyout, Valle's had already begun to close restaurants for this first time in its history. Among those that were closed was the Rochester, New York store that had opened in 1971 and had never turned a profit. [9]
After the buyout, the chain continued to sell off properties. Between 1982 and 1984 the company sold all of its Florida locations, none of which had been open for more than seven years. [28] By the mid-1980s some of the company's largest restaurants outside of Florida had also closed to include Fall River, [29] Atlanta, [30] and Miami. [31] The Portland restaurant was among those that were sold in 1983 when Judith Valle, using funds from the buyout, purchased the Portland Valle's Steak House from the company and operated the restaurant as an independent entity. Another important development in 1983 was Arthur Hanson creating the Polar Bear Restaurant Corporation headquartered in Needham, Mass as the parent corporation of the remaining restaurants. By agreement with Judith Valle, she was allowed to use the "Valle's Steak House" name for her Portland restaurant. [7]
The last three Valle's Steak House restaurants operating as part of Hanson's corporation closed on Friday, December 27, 1991. The restaurants were located in Kittery, Maine; Andover, Mass; and Hartford, Connecticut. [32] [33] [34]
Judith Valle's restaurant continued operating in Portland as "Valle's Steak House" until it finally closed its doors on Sunday, August 20, 2000. [7]
A number of reasons contributed to the decline of the Valle's Steak House chain.
Valle's was also faulted for the straight line architecture of its large dining rooms that caused some critics to compare the restaurant to a cafeteria. [37] Other critics questioned the wisdom of using a regional New England menu in southern locations such as Atlanta where customers of the early 1970s were unfamiliar with clam chowder, baked stuffed lobsters, and New England–style pot roast.
In 1972 ... Atlanta wasn't as cosmopolitan as it is today. It was still very Southern. The idea of a Northeastern steak house didn't really excite people there. I can't tell you how many times people would ask, 'Where's the fried chicken? Where's the mac and cheese? Where are the collard greens? [14] — Former Valle's manager
Valle's Steak House was a landmark East Coast restaurant for decades and continues to be discussed in various articles and on blog sites. [38] [39] [40] Artifacts from the chain are sold widely on eBay and other web sites.
Valle's Steak House, once located at 465 William S. Canning Boulevard, Fall River, has been gone for nearly 30 years but still brings back fond memories for many locals. The restaurant opened without much fanfare in time for Christmas in late December 1970. It served up steaks and a variety of lobster dishes, braised shortribs with sauce Jardiniere and remember the Bloody Marys? When the Fall River Valle's opened, it was one in a small chain founded in 1933. By the time it closed, there were more than 30 Valle's along the East Coast. — 2012 article from the Fall River, Mass "Herald News" [29]
Since 1991, many of the Valle's restaurants have been razed or, in some cases, repurposed. The Andover location which was among the last to close, still stands and has been used as a comedy club and a bar and grill. As of 2013 it is a part of the Massachusetts-based Italian restaurant chain named "Chateau." [41] The Braintree restaurant that was once the largest and one of the busiest in the chain subsequently became a "Hilltop Steak House" and served in that capacity until 2006 when it was torn down to make way for a Toyota dealership. [42] [43] The location is remembered for then presidential candidate Ronald Reagan making a 1980 campaign speech at a South Shore Chamber of Commerce luncheon held in the restaurant's main banquet room. [44]
The Kittery location still stands but is no longer a restaurant.
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