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Archives for July 2012

July 15, 2012

Photo’s Hot Dogs


Does MPHS have photographs: Yes

Address: 1706 E. Kensington

Is building standing: Yes

What is at site: Photo’s Hot Dogs

When was business founded: October 30, 1989

Is business still operating: No, the Mount Prospect location closed in 2019

Who owned business: Jim Photopoulos

Interesting stories, facts, history:

Jim Photopoulos got the nickname “Photo” when he was a high school student in Buffalo Grove and it stuck. Photo started working in restaurants when he was ten years old. His family ran The Round Table in Libertyville, The Forum in Arlington Heights and Artemis and Sunrise Pancake House in Mount Prospect. When he finished college he worked managing the Artemis Restaurant while looking for a spot to start his own restaurant. In 1989 he found a spot near the Kensington Business center and set things in motion. After opening the store he started a major promotional campaign, bringing fliers and free hot dogs and shakes over to the receptionists at Kensington trying to drum up business. This worked and he soon had a lunch rush, sometimes serving over 300 people in an hour. He has used his successful business to give back to the community as well, offering many different clubs and organizations free food or discounts. He received both the Sam Walton Business Leader of the Year award from Wal-Mart and the Business Leader of the Year Award from the Mount Prospect Chamber of Commerce.

If you ordered delivery from Photo’s Hot Dogs in the 1990s, chances are your food was brought to you in this vehicle. Jim Photopoulos, the owner of Photo’s Hot Dogs, used a retired 26-year-old ambulance as his delivery truck. It was dubbed the “Photomobile.” In the early 2000s, the ambulance was replaced with a VW Bug.

Filed Under: Businesses of Mount Prospect

July 15, 2012

Paddock Publications

Does MPHS have photographs: Yes

When was business founded: 1898

Is business still operating: Is now the Daily Herald

Who owned business: Hosea C. Paddock

Interesting stories, facts, history:

Hosea Paddock began a newspaper in the developing communities surrounding Chicago. Over the years his company has been able to become the most trusted source for information in the suburbs and has successfully compete against the large Chicago papers. Paddock’s personal goals for the paper were to: “Fear God, Tell the Truth, and Make Money.” His company has continued with these goals and has survived for over a century. In this time, it has increased its popularity by reflecting the views of the readers. Paddock Publications has weathered two World Wars, the Great Depression, the dot com revolution, a fire in the offices, and a gun wielding irate reader.

 

Filed Under: Businesses of Mount Prospect

July 15, 2012

Mount Prospect State Bank

Does MPHS have photographs: Yes

Address: 1 E. Busse, 2 W. Busse, 100 S. Emerson, 111 E. Busse

Is building standing: 3 of 4 are

What is at site: BankOne Building

When was business founded: 1911

Is business still operating: It has merged with other banks

Who owned business: Started by William Busse

Interesting stories, facts, history:

The Mount Prospect State Bank was one of the most influential businesses in the development of Mount Prospect. The bank was formed in 1911, originally as a national bank. It became a state bank in the 1920s because of a need for more flexibility in real estate loans and other services. It was originally located in a small building on the corner of Emerson and Main, where a small parking lot is today. In its first year of operation, this small unincorporated town was disturbed by a botched robbery attempt, which ended with a shoot out in the road.

William Busse, the most influential person in the development of our community, founded the bank and used it as the financial backbone of his developments. Many of the homes that we live in today may have been financed by this business. The Mount Prospect State Bank started out in the tiny corner building and continued to serve the community from this modest location through WWI. Then, in 1928 at the height of the boom of the 1920s, the bank moved to a larger building a block north at 2 W. Busse. This building was originally the home of Busse Buick, another business started by William Busse. In this location the bank weathered the Great Depression of the 1930s and was one of very few financial institutions to go through the depression with uninterrupted service. During this time many banks went out of business. In 1933, shortly after his inauguration, President F. D. Roosevelt ordered all banks in America to close and work out their books. The Mount Prospect State Bank closed its doors for the first time. However, it was one of the first Banks in Illinois to reopen in a time when only about ten percent of the areas banks ever reopened.

The bank then worked through the second World War. Following W.W.II, Mount Prospect went into its largest building boom ever and the State bank was here to finance it. Between 1950 and 1960 Mount Prospect’ s population grew almost 500%. In 1967 the Mount Prospect State Bank moved again. They built the building that is now the Mount Prospect Village Hall. They continued to lend money and act as the community’s largest saving bank through the suburbanization of the 1960s. In 1975 they moved again to the tallest building in Mount Prospect, the bank building on Busse Ave between Emerson and Maple.

Filed Under: Businesses of Mount Prospect

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Mount Prospect Historical Society
101 South Maple Street
Mount Prospect, IL 60056
847.392.9006
info@mtphistory.org

The Mount Prospect Historical Society is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that is committed to preserving the history of Mount Prospect, IL, through artifacts, photographs and both oral and written memories of current and former residents and businesspeople.  On its campus in the heart of the Village, the Society maintains the 1906 Dietrich Friedrichs house museum, the ADA-accessible Dolores Haugh Education Center and the 1896 one-room Central School, which was moved to the museum campus in 2008, renovated and opened to the public in 2017, the 100-year anniversary of the Village.

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