Welcome to the Tiki Central 2.0 Beta. Read the announcement
Tiki Central logo
Celebrating classic and modern Polynesian Pop

Tiki Central / General Tiki

Tiki Archaeology - Rummy's Polynesian House, Monocacy & Douglassville, PA

Pages: 1 23 replies

P
puamana posted on 05/18/2005

Here's a few pics of a recent menu find, from Rummy's Polynesian House, in PA:

The back of the menu lists 2 locations, in Monocacy, PA ( on Route 422, between Reading & Pottstown ) and on Route 2 in Douglassville, PA :

It copies all sorts of imagery from other tiki bar menus ( cover from the Kon Tiki ) and the first inside page with tropical drinks:

.... which copies the Hilton Hawaiian Village drink menu.

Another page of the drinks menu :

And the inside last page has some food listings and "Say it in Polynesian" translations:

Also, a matchcover from Rummy's, which only lists the Monocacy location :

It was interesting to find such an elaborate menu, from such a obscure place and location. I don't have any other info on this place, has anyone else heard anything about this spot ?

P
procinema29 posted on 05/18/2005

Thanks for those nicely-presented scans! Very nice menu...

F
FLOUNDERart posted on 05/18/2005

Sweet find. Never heard of the place.

It would be nice to find places with prices like that still too.

J
johntiki posted on 05/18/2005

Hmmm... You know what's odd? I went to Yahoo to see if I could uncover any references to Rummy's and came up with nothing. But then I did a search for "tiki Monocacy PA" and came up with a place named "Tiki Bar" in Boyertown. After a quick Mapquest search I found that the distance between Rummy's Monocacy location and this modern day "tiki bar" is only 15 miles.

Next I went back to Paumana's images and noticed on the back of the one menu it mentions what looks like a second location on Rt. 2 in Douglassville PA. So I did another Mapquest search to figure out the distance between Monocacy and Douglassville and it's only 3.77 miles - 12 miles from Boyertown.

Now this is why I'm finding this whole location very odd... and I begin by saying I can't vouch that "Tiki Bar" is actually a tiki bar... what are 3 tiki/Polynesian restaurants/bars doing in such a close proximity in the middle of Lancaster County? Lancaster County, for those who aren't familiar, is chock full of Amish farms and communities!

Now this is going out on a limb... but what if the surviving "Tiki Bar" in Boyertown had something to do with Rummy's? What if the decor was rescued from Rummy's before demolition and snatched up by the owners of Tiki Bar? Why in the hell was Lancaster Pennsylvania a tiki hotspot? Perhaps we've stumbled upon an Amish owned and operated, authentically decorated tiki bar hiding in the middle of nowhere!

Shit! I should have let this post go for a little while to keep us theorizing before I called the number listed for "Tiki Bar" on Yahoo. I got a perky young woman answering the phone with a hearty "Hello, Tiki Bar." I cut through all formalities and asked her straight up if the Tiki Bar was in fact a tiki bar. As expected she didn't understand what I meant - I explained simply that tiki was a Polynesian or Hawaiian style that was first popular in the 50's. She answered back quickly "No, our place is more like a mix of Key West and New Orleans...” If I wasn't prepared for such a big letdown I probably would have vomited from such a bastardization of themes.

In conclusion - thanks for posting Puamana! I enjoyed doing a bit of daydreaming...:)

SDT
Sweet Daddy Tiki posted on 05/18/2005

One of the few places to serve Mai Tias (is that a Mai Tai with Tia Maria?)

N
NuAku posted on 05/24/2005

I used to go to one of these locations when I was a kid. My grandfather (Pop-Pop)used to take me there. He lives in Pottstown, PA. It was a great restaurant. Blowfish lights, big fish tank, bamboo, and of corse TIKIS. The place is now a strip club called Sugardaddies or Sugarbabies, something like that. I have not been there to look around for any tikis outside. I doubt there are any inside, but if there are, they are probably smiling.

P
puamana posted on 05/24/2005

Thanks johntiki & NuAku for the posting that info. I'm originally from PA, and its always good to find something out about any of the places that were there. It seems like that area in particular was an odd spot for a Polynesian restaurant... all the better for escaping to a tropical atmosphere, I suppose ! Thanks for the info.

[ Edited by: puamana on 2005-05-24 08:23 ]

S
Swanky posted on 05/24/2005

A strip club. Sounds like this needs investigating.

C
captnkirk posted on 05/29/2005

Rummys Polymesian House is no more. This is what it looks like today.

It now called "Baby Dolls" and has been stripped inside and outside of any vestages of its former tiki glory. Locals told me it closed up in the early 1980s when the owner died. Probably about 1984, then remained unoccupied for several years, it then reopened as a regular bar, and a few years later as this place.

It is right along Route 422, the confusion about the location continues, some say its in Douglassville other say Monocacy. Its exact location is 40° 16.212 N, 75° 46.060 and has always been at this exact location it never moved.

I also visited the other "tiki bar" up the road, no tikis from Rummys or anywhere else ended up there, 'cause they don't have any.

It's a nice place, Here is what it looks like.

I had a good if not somewhat expensive meal there. Only one tikidrink, it's a hurricane mixed up with some pineapple juice in it and it was pretty good.

T
tikibars posted on 08/28/2006

I've been researching this place for TRT2, and the most curious part of it all is that there is no Route 2 anywhere in the vicinity that I can find.

It is possible that Monocacy was the biggest town around when this place was built, so the owners listed their location as being in Monocacy (you'll notice they just say 'route 422', but don't give actual address). Later on, Douglassville may have become a bigger burg, and being closer to the restaurant than Monocacy, confusion arose.

Still doesn't explain the owners printing Route 2 on their menu - this might have been the name of a local road that was also later changed.

JC
Jeff Central posted on 08/29/2006

Cool menu puamana!!!

Thanks for posting the awesome pics!!!

Cheers and Mahalo,
Jeff

H
Humuhumu posted on 06/17/2008

This place has always confused the bejeezus out of me (it's true! I'm bejeezus free!). Adding yet again to the confusion:

William Byrne just added this nifty little zippo to Critiki. It's confusing because... ah, dang, I've already forgotten why it confuses me... oh yeah! I thought that one location was on 422 and the other one was on route 2, but this makes it sound like 422 IS route 2, but then of course it doesn't actually say "route 2" it says "R. D. 2" and probably doesn't have anything to do with route 2. What would that stand for? Anyway, it's sort of neat, if a little plain. A cool find.

TD
TIKI DAVID posted on 06/17/2008

R.D. means 'rural delivery'

TG
The Gnomon posted on 06/17/2008

On 2008-06-16 21:39, Humuhumu wrote:
it's true! I'm bejeezus free!

Wow! The seamstress is back!

You've been missed.

C
craigr posted on 10/03/2008

I enjoyed seeing the memorabilia from Rummy's. I grew up in the area, and we used to eat there often as little kids. My sister and I would fight over who got to sit in the peacock chair if we got a corner table!

I wanted to correct a few errors and address some questions:

  1. Rummy's was in Berks County, not Lancaster County. There aren't any Amish people for 30 miles from where Rummy's was.
  2. There was only ever one location. Route 422 in Monocacy was the physical location. As someone else pointed out, RD 2 means rural delivery, route 2, from the Douglassville post office, so that's the postal delivery address.
  3. Rummy's was there starting in the 1940s, not the 60s as reported in one post. My parents were married in 1952 and went to Rummy's well before that, as did other relatives.
LL
Limbo Lizard posted on 02/12/2011

:down: I saw the matchbook up on eBay, right now; adding the pics. :down:
Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/5475/4d56ba31.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=6765b2a12ed9b2d3f053cb6642ae72d4

C
captnkirk posted on 03/14/2011

This is what Rummys looks like today according to Google street maps.
They fixed it up a little, but it is still a strip club.

Image Missing: http://im1.shutterfly.com/media/47a1dd35b3127ccefcc84c9d779800000030O08AatW7Jw2atQe3nwY/cC/f%3D0/ps%3D50/r%3D0/rx%3D720/ry%3D480/

D Image Missing: https://www.gravatar.com/avatar/5ade1110ab7c7bc7c47c4d58088b90da?d=blank&s=192&fit=fill
Dustycajun posted on 07/10/2011

I tried for this matchbook from the Rummy's in Monocacy on ebay a while ago. It provides a nice rendering of what I am assuming was the sign outside the restaurant.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4e1a218b.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=2c80ce653df48328c3706829072fe406

Another one of the shield/Tiki/Torch combos. Would be great to find a photo of this bad boy.

Back of the book.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4e1a215f.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=b489a61b5cdfbb177c8f4a2e7cd82c04

DC

D Image Missing: https://www.gravatar.com/avatar/5ade1110ab7c7bc7c47c4d58088b90da?d=blank&s=192&fit=fill
Dustycajun posted on 02/07/2012

I finally got the postcard from Rummy's Polynesian House.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306c25.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=507894901198a097fd4f5feff0d0b2d5

Some close ups confirm it had all of the classic Poly Pop elements - bamboo, lauhala, murals, Leetegs, Puffer Fish, fishnet globes and Tikis.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306c2f.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=b5833dd7a5742ef1d8e919dd082aa85e

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306c7e.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=d325887e685074820527804ab04bc9d1

The outside was a little sparse, but the front doors did have two big Tikis.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306c8a.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=cd3ba6f5b413006bd279cc8a5ee25650

The proprietor was Warren "Rummy" Steinle.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306c0e.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=1b4b56986c744219fa4617df223f54a5

I found and article on-line about Rummy's wife, Marian Steinle, who was 101 years old in September of 2011. If contained the following information:

Rummy (a nickname alternately explained by his love of a card game, rum mixed in his cocktails or childhood stories) loved life, enjoyed people and decided to be in the vanguard of the Polynesian-themed restaurant craze of the '50s '60s and '70s.

"One time he went to a Trader Vic's (a popular national chain) and said, 'That's the kind of restaurant I'm going to have,' " Steinle said. "After that, he was always bringing back what he called his 'artifacts' from around the world to decorate the place."

What was once simply Rummy's Tavern (the business was open from 1941 to 1989) became Rummy's Polynesian House.

It was decorated with fish tanks, bamboo, tiki wooden statuary, blowfish lights and even a life-sized flexible manikin of an American Indian at the bar.

I also found some news print ads for Rummy's extending from the early 1960s to the late 1980s.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306b85.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=3c56dc5bcecb8bf7f30a5a369bdd1916

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306b7c.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=14c04b9d5715651119071daa56705aa2

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306b71.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=6aa8a78cff6defbfacc31c69883f2d21

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306b8c.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=925b29e692571918435c2980977f55d8
Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306b95.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=acc4ae0c647bf1ae324adf68e151c705

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306bad.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=f7c08eb7b9330a0270cea1a41fbd3afd

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306bcf.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=a1d91967336fb6de00cf793f8c49bb35

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306bea.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=9ab9eb4991589c3ee6b5986fa086b59a

Here is an article about an attempted Tiki theft in 1972 with gun play!

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306ba0.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=3911c149c095b6a7fcf300623d52657b

And an article from 1989 when it sold. Opened in 1941 and switched to Tiki in 1961.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4f306bda.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=81044b409ac37ab09d9243c6e3c28043

Nice to finally get some history on this one.

DC

B Image Missing: https://www.gravatar.com/avatar/e01c7e12080283066ced001977e37f65?d=blank&s=192&fit=fill
bigbrotiki posted on 02/07/2012

Wonderful post and history, DC. Sort of the story of Polynesian pop in a nutshell.

What do I spy, with my Tiki eye?: The mural is classic Matson menu. The door post Tiki on the left could be a Guanko.

And the Tikis painted on the doors: On the left we have the Islander LA menu Tiki, and on the right one of the two Langermann's Luau Tikis. :)

D Image Missing: https://www.gravatar.com/avatar/5ade1110ab7c7bc7c47c4d58088b90da?d=blank&s=192&fit=fill
Dustycajun posted on 05/28/2012

A hula girl swizzle from the Polynesian House.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4fc3b443.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=ac2f06c5a97e1f05da110ce71dce8d3d

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4fc3b43b.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=11712ca6399699cb3c070950691066be

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4fc3b432.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=9601161ffd588b34c51f4414711f5636

And Puamana's menu photos re-posted to counter the dreaded Red X.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4fc3b5fd.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=d533c43c08f7880484e945a89bea4a30

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4fc3b621.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=c50873aeaedbd93bf3048f04b12c4800

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4fc3b612.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=73c34e1d59904ec29ead3f773beb6b82

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4fc3b60a.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=340f19bb8d806a1c0dc2b862ffb21713

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4fc3b61a.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=3121d874f90847861a516deed4182f7c

Now where have I seen that drink menu art before?

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/388/4b862f37.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=1954563bb638ca56440d2441049a7eeb

DC

D Image Missing: https://www.gravatar.com/avatar/5ade1110ab7c7bc7c47c4d58088b90da?d=blank&s=192&fit=fill
Dustycajun posted on 10/27/2012

Got this really nice place-mat from Rummy's Polynesian House.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/508c49e9.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=6adb87254bc2e7d6f4675d9178809340

These place-mats are hard to come by, being fragile.

Some close ups.

The specialty drink

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/508c4a40.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=d7cb5da2f4feb57b1105b97834bf7ae9

Rendering of the sign

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/508c4a27.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=679c9a0a99cdb67464fc9a2cd43eda43

The building. Looks like a Buddha was added to the front of the building.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/508c4a78.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=d8948c36c196eb471ff93bceba015012

Which explains the image on the matchbook.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/4e1a215f.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=b489a61b5cdfbb177c8f4a2e7cd82c04

DC

B Image Missing: https://www.gravatar.com/avatar/e01c7e12080283066ced001977e37f65?d=blank&s=192&fit=fill
bigbrotiki posted on 10/27/2012

Wow, nice find! This drives home again the fact that paper place mats are potentially the most promising source of Tki Temple graphics after menus, yet they are the rarest one. While menus, postcards, matchbooks and even cocktail napkins were saved as mementos of a special night out, placemats were usually tossed, as due to their nature they ended up getting crumpled or stained during dinner.

Fragile indeed, they truly are "paper ephemera".

[ Edited by: bigbrotiki 2012-10-27 14:13 ]

D Image Missing: https://www.gravatar.com/avatar/5ade1110ab7c7bc7c47c4d58088b90da?d=blank&s=192&fit=fill
Dustycajun posted on 02/21/2013

I just got a cool die-cut menu from Rummy's with a blue Tiki on the cover.

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/512596cd.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=eaf1c0dc2247cec00fd745a52e49905d

Now where have I seen that before?

Image Missing: https://tikicentral.com/resize.php/uploads/8169/5125971b.jpg?w=1280&h=1280&fit=max&sharp=5&s=5a71e7ee063806588dbba43f5641fe2a

DC

Pages: 1 23 replies