Bars in Ottawa Pt I

I was doing some reflecting the other day, not in the sense of reflecting light, as I do that well enough, without any special training, but reflecting, in the sense of remembering things.  Bars seemed to come back to me.  Bars, as in licensed beverage alcohol parlours.

Some of these establishments are long gone, but a few still exist.  Others exist hazily as I was probably drunk when I went in and drunker when I came out, but I do have vague recollections of their decor.  Herewith, a list of Bars.

The Maple Leaf in Ottawa, site of much illegal drinking during high school.  A classic linoleum floor, Arborite tables and fluorescent lights.  Cheap draft and ghastly chuckwagon sandwiches that were reheated in a metal box, with what looked like a 300 watt lightbulb inside to heat your lunch.  After you got your chuckwagon sandwich and tore away the partially charred cellophane, you used mustard packets by the handful to douse the taste of the sandwich.   

The Ottawa House, Hull.  Long gone, but a huge beer parlour that sat five or six hundred at a go and had a balcony surrounding the main dance floor.  Quarts of beer served to anyone who could see over the bar.  Also home of my first brush with the original 12 percent Bras D’Or beer.  There was usually a band in attendance.  The Guess Who played there toward the end of their career and apparently I saw them.  Getting puked on from the balcony was a hazard of the Ottawa House, but they didn’t care if you took the party into the street too. 

The Eastview Hotel, Eastview.  (I refuse to call it Vanier, it’s Eastview, dammit!) Also long gone.  Had basement rec-room ‘oak’ panelling in the bar and a perpetually sticky floor from spillage.  Apparently there were people who lived in the Hotel. but I’m reasonably certain those folks never actually ventured out in daylight.  

The Chaud, Hull.  There were two Hotel Chaudieres.  The Rose Room and the Green Door.  The Rose Room was upstairs, where you took a date.  The Green Door is where you went to get drunk and fight.  Both held more than 2,000 patrons at a go.  You were brought a quart as a matter of course; only girls were brought pint bottles.  The servers all had bus-driver change machines hooked to their belts and could carry at least 20 quarts and four jugs on a tray, with one hand. 

In the glory days, the Chaudiere saw Louis Armstrong play the Rose Room.  Later, bands like Sha-Na-Na, the Staccatos, Octavian and the Five Man Electrical Band played there.  The Green Door was the kind of place where when you opened the door, you immediately ducked down, as there was either a bottle or a chair headed your way. 

The Chaud was also home of Gerry Barber, the toughest bouncer on the planet.  One story about Barber will suffice:  A patron was being unruly and Barber asked him to sit down and shutthefuckup, tabernac!.  The patron objected and showed his displeasure by breaking a nearly full quart beer bottle over Gerry Barber’s head.  Normally, this would knock most humans to their knees. 

Barber laughed out loud, in the face of the patron:  The 2,000 drunks in the room instantly became very quiet, as we knew what was going to happen next.  Barber grabbed the patron by the face and genitals, throwing him in the direction of the door, over a couple of tables.  When Barber strode over to where the crumpled patron lay, he was still chuckling to himself.  He picked up the patron by the belt, then used the patron’s head to open the door and toss him into the parking lot.  The band resumed playing and the rest of us resumed drinking.

The British Hotel, Aylmer.  The British sold something they called "Porch Climber", which was a fortified wine-related fluid:  Sort of a high-test sangria, without the fruit slices, juice, or images of Spain.  Porch Climber was sold in pitchers, like draft and if memory serves, was $3 per 64 oz pitcher, while beer was $5 a pitcher. 

Why it was called Porch Climber was never explained.  However, after a pitcher of that stuff, you’d be unable to get up on the porch, or for that matter, off the front lawn, where you had passed out, face down, the night before.  It also stained white Addidas three-stripe running shoes permanently.

The World, Ottawa.  The World was Ottawa’s premiere blues bar and had 300 as its’ listed capacity.  When bluesman Buddy Guy played The World, they sold 700 tickets and everyone showed up. 

Women, on those nights when the house was full, (Long John Baldry would also pack the joint), would routinely be assaulted, or to use the vernacular of the time, "felt up", as they tried to move through the crowd.  On occasion, a woman would be body surfed on the top of the crowd over to the bar, or the rest rooms, depending on where she wanted to go.

The Grads. Ottawa.  Originally a old fashioned "Ladies and Escorts" and "Men’s Entrance" type of tavern, it evolved into a watering hole for most of Carleton University, at one time or another.  The colour scheme was beige and red, like an old streetcar or the Ottawa Transport Company buses of the time.  The nicest thing about the Grads was the sign out front in Art Deco typography and design.  The restrooms were from the Night of the Living Dead.

Friends and Co.,  Ottawa.  In the disco era, Friends and Co was a meat-market of oak and brick, the concept being the ‘beautiful people’ of Ottawa would come together to drink and go home with someone different every night.  The beautiful people did congregate there and it was a spritzer and fern joint of the worst kind.

The Talisman, Ottawa.  The Talisman Hotel had a bar in the basement, which was done in full-on tiki lounge, with bamboo lamps, reed wall coverings, woven rattan furniture and servers in mahalo shirts in the dead of winter. 

I can remember vaguely, some of, the Zombies they served, as well as the sounds of a South Korean disco band doing "That’s the Way, I Like It" in very bad accents.  However, they did have a full horn section of stone killers and the keyboard player had a Hammond B3 with the lightweight Leslie speaker cabinet that he knew how to play.  He made the table lamps shake with that organ when they did "Gimme Some Lovin’ by the Spencer Davis Group. 

Barrymore’s, Ottawa.  Barrymore’s had an interesting history.  Originally, the Imperial Theatre, it was a movie theatre on Bank Street, then it was shuttered for a number of years, with the seats and screen still intact inside, covered in dust.  After a decade or two, it was reopened, at least the balcony and loges section, as Pandora’s Box, a strip club that was needlessly upscale for the time and neighbourhood.  Pandora’s restored some of the elaborate painting and gilt work of the original Imperial and recycled some of the velvet draperies for the peelers’ runway. 

Then it closed again and reopened as Barrymore’s, a pre-eminent live music bar and showcase.  Any big act playing Ottawa at the Civic Centre, if they could, would stay over an extra night, or come a night early, to play Barrymore’s.  Barrymore’s held, legally, 550 people.  I was fortunate enough to see George Thorogood and the Destroyers, Tina Turner and Huey Lewis and the News in Barrymore’s. 

There’s something galactically Right about seeing Huey Lewis or George Thorogood in a packed, smoky bar, with the entire place jumping up and down in unison, everyone, including the band, piss drunk.  Tina Turner had just released "Private Dancer" and was a mega-star, who had booked Barrymore’s months before, as a warmup date for her tour.  A Rolling Stones tribute band, the Blushing Brides, used to own the place when they played there.

Licensed as a bar, Barrymore’s didn’t have a bad seat in the place.  A big stage, left over from the strippers, and one of the first GE Talaria video projection systems that was installed for non-band nights.  They’d fire up the video system and play some of the very first music videos on the big screen at ear-splitting volume.  On very quiet nights, they’d hook an Atari Pong game up to the big screen and you could play Pong on a screen that was twenty feet wide.

Pineland.  Ottawa.  In what looked like a small, warmed over rural arena, next to a rental go-kart track, some of the 60’s and 70’s best local bands played Pineland.  The CFRA Campus Club for Coke, with Al Pascal, used to host the bands.  Pineland was the home for the Townsmen, the Staccatos, Octavian, Five Man, the Cooper Brothers, Bolt Upright and hundred more bands.  Ostensibly, Pineland was not licensed, but Gilbey’s Lemon Gin was readily available. 

I’m going to end it here, for now, but if you remember some of the old Ottawa hotspots, like the Red Door, the Laf, Salon Diane and Salon Colette, as well as the Claude, the Elmdale, the VD and some of the other holes, drop me a line.

There are more stories to be had.

126 responses to “Bars in Ottawa Pt I

  1. These are great stories, hope you don’t mind some additional info about Barrymore’s.
     
    The Imperial Theatre opened in 1914 and seated 1200 people.  A floor was installed in the 1960’s, running from the bottom of the balcony to the back of the original stage.  This space was eventually rented to Canada’s first all nude strip club, Pandora’s Box.  A floor was also installed at the front of the building over the original lobby, and was used as a massage parlor.  The strip club kept the original balcony theatre seats and had purchased the red velvet curtains from the Capitol Theatre when it was demolished, but never did any restoration. 
     
    Pandora’s Box was closed in 1978 for it’s failure to meet building safety standards.  4 partners bought the lease and renovated the space to open as a disco/supper club.  Cost overruns and a bad review by Ottawa Citizen Dave Brown columnist forced the club into bankruptcy within 18 months.
     
    In 1981 the lease was purchased by 3 partners who thought it would make a great live music venue.  And so it was for more than 10 years.  What many people may not know is the club’s legal capacity was 198 people, posted on the liquor licence behind the lower bar.  Security’s first priority was to make sure aisles, stairways and exits, were clear, especially if the club was over capacity.  Liquor, fire and police inspectors would drop in from time to time to make sure patrons were safe, and responsible managers were on duty.  The highest attendance was for George Thorogood, more than 550 people.
     
    The owner’s biggest concern was that the poured floor did not have enough support.  On busy nights the ceiling of the Nervous Onion would move up and down.  Perhaps that is why it is closed now.
     
    Aloha,       
     

  2. Yes Gerry Barber was a very tought bouncer, Im trying to find out more about him or if theres a family historian or any pictures, see i am somehow kin to gerry barber, he was my moms cousin and i googled his name today and thats how i came across your blog, if you know anything elts about him please e-mail me at chrisstgermain83@hotmail.com or if you can point me in the direction of someone who does thank you.

    • Yes Good Old west end Gerry .One summer after noon at the stanish Hall he escorted me out for being to mouthy .I know my right ear must be a inch longer then the other now as that’s how he was directing me out.Me be the drunk monchoman .I went to the side sreen window and starting yelling some really nasty things throw the window when I looked to the side their was Gerry running across the parking lot in full tilt I ran to my motor cycle and the stupid Yamaha junk wouldent start and he was comeing and foaming at the mouth Their must be a god because the bike started and I just got away .Good thing as I know I wouldent be typing this right now.Deap down Gerry was one hell of a nice guy and new my brother,s well

  3. Your write-up brings back memories, only because I left those places almost sober and remembering everything that went on. Just to make a note about the Chaud, short for Chaudiere Golf and Country Club. It was situated on the Aylmer Road in Aylmer, not in Hull, across from the Glenlea Golf an Country Club, known today as the Champlain Golf Club. The Chaud was a conbination of two watering holes. The Rose Room, situated upstair, was a very classy, old style dance hall with a mezzanine or balcony level on all four walls. The Green Room, on the other hand, was more of a dive bar where you could get wasted on beer and shop for your favorite drugs. Drugs were peddled in the same manner as peanuts and popcorn at a baseball game. "MESC, ACID, HASH!"The Chaud was sold after the owner, JP Maloney, died. It was levelled and replaced by what is now known as the Chateau Cartier Hotel and Resort. The golf course is in much better shape since the change.Another good place for seeing bands, such as the Cooper Brothers, was the Gatineau Golf and Country Club. The building was destroyed by fire and replaced by a Loblaws and strip mall in the 80’s.What memories we have!

  4. Oh, Pineland. I worked there for a couple of years taking money and stamping hands. But more than that, I painted the pictures and murals in dayglo. I painted a wild mandala on Octavian’s drum kits but it flaked off after a couple of shows. Fun times.

  5. Thank you Arnold, for droppnig by. And also a large thanks to others who have commented and filled in some of the gaps in the memories.

  6. just a small comment re the Chaudiere Green Door – I ‘lived’ there back in 1971 – 1973 when I graduated to the Rose Room after they got rid of Terry Carisse and started bringing in rock bands and I can tell you there’s no way you could fit 2000 people in the Green Door (maybe a couple of hundred); Rose Room – yes, GD – NO

    • Tom:

      OK, I’m guilty of exaggeration 🙂 Thanks for your comment. I’ll refer you over to the main site, which is roaddave.wordpress.com. The ds46ont one was used just for the migration from Live Spaces. See you around.

      Cheers!
      David

  7. What was the name of the tavern in the old Union Station in Ottawa. It was across from the Grand hotel (bar) on Besserer st. and Sussex

    • I moved to Aylmer in 75@14was telling a west coast buddy of Mr Barber rose room and what happens when the lights came on freaky he must of thought I was full of it so I google it should have been preserved as heritagei sometime would get freebies to babysit the bikes out front of Green door but before the door was a hall way get your dope Mike let’s go before the fucking lights lol

  8. So glad I came across this info – I had requested photos of The Chaud and here I am… About the Glenlea – was that across the The Chaud a bit down the road on way to Aylmer? I spent lots of weekends @ The Ottawa House – Loved the bands… what was the name of the blind singer -he was so good. Ray Hutchison? There was a nearby venue that I saw The Platters @ – same side as The Chaudiere – maybe further heading again to Aylmer… and The British Hotel in Aylmer – Western singer – Huey Scott… he took forever to prepare – warm up for his shows – back in the 60’s. My then husband’s favorite artist.
    What about the hotels downtown Hull like the dance halls @ Chez Henri & there was another popular one around the portage area. Not far from The Ottawa House.
    Man… it sure feels good to go back in time – I miss those days!

    About the tavern on Besserer & Sussex – it’s on the tip of memory. Shoot!
    Wish I could read more about Ottawa/Hull’s past entertainment venues.

    Oh… I used to go dancing on Bank Street – One b4 the exhibition grounds.. and the Oak Door – anyone remember those two?

    I sang @ age 14 @ La Salle Hotel on Dalhousie – My dad took me and put me on stage – Food was served so I was allowed in. I sang “You Made Me Love You’ lol How I miss my teenage & 20’s years.

    One last place was @ The Riverside in Eastview (Vanier) on Rifer Road.
    Gino Vanelli performed there he said @ his last show in October @ Nepean Centrepoint Theatre.

    I saw Elvis in 56 when he came to Ottawa – hmmm was it the colosium?

    Anyways – Thanks for the memories…

  9. Youngsters all what about the rendezvous or the masque rouge maybe Le soleil and for any one with an ounce of class cafe le Hibou

    • I was looking for info on the Rendezvous when I came across this blog. It was my tavern style experience as a University Student, when the bars closed in Ottawa that was where everyone went.

      • When I drove cab for ABC in the early 70’s, the shift would end about 1:00 am for us and we’ed head over to the Rendezvous. It had an atmossphere that we liked; kinda smokey and not too pretentious. The back room was our favourite and we would be left alone by the bouncers as long as we behaved ourselves, which we usually did.
        But I remember one night when about a dozen or us, guys and gals, showed up and took a table in the back. I had to use the washroom and wasn`t there very long but by the time I got back to the table, the entire crew were getting the bum`s rush out the door. I still don`t know to this day what the Hell happened but somebody must have pissed off a bouncer to a great degree and that was that.
        I miss the place even today as it represented the old Hull before all the Fed. Gov`t buildings went up.
        Fond memories,
        B

      • I was a bartender at e soleil new most of the guys working in the cubs and actually purchased the last two bottles of beer sold in the rendezvous before it closed

    • richard
      worked both Le Soleil and le Hibou loved them both for different reasons also bought the last available beer at the rendezvous when it closed a bottle of dow no one else would drink it

  10. I remember my first visit to the Chaud; the after party for our grade 12 ‘formal’ (held at the Talisman, natch) which shut down early after a crew member burned half his face while setting off a phosphorous flash-pot with a match, but that’s another story.

    What I clearly remember was someone setting off a backyard sized firework (the ‘Volcano’ sort) on a table next to a back wall of the Green Door. It went off for about a minute. And no one noticed or did anything about it. Coolest thing I have ever seen in a bar.

    Gerry Barber was the reason the Chaud wasn’t a biker bar. ‘Nuff said.

  11. The Plaza…Sparks St. west of Bank St, 1960’s -1970’s. Bar downstairs, 25 cent drafts, music upstairs, saw Canada Goose perform there.

    Le Soleil, Hull
    Disco Viva, Hull
    Sacs Disco Bar, Hull
    Bests Bar, Hull
    Rotters Club
    Chez Henri, Hull

    Trying to remember the name of a disco on Riverside that my parents used to go to in the ’60’s….

  12. Michael Krushnisky

    The nickname for the Riverside Tavern and Disco was “The Rib”. Upstairs, you could find the disco that had Playboy Bunny replicas serving drinks in the early to mid 70’s. The Tavern downstairs, (very similar to the Maple Leaf Tavern located on the corner of Montreal Road and St. Laurent Blvd.) was where all the heavy duty power-drinkers threw back quarts of ’50’, ‘EX’, etc. Fights were pretty common but generally just included fists and boots. Some taverns actually had what they called a ‘panic button’ in their bathrooms, if you got jumped you could reach to hit the buzzer so the waiters could come to your assistance. I remember being able to buy a quart for .75 cents at the ‘Leaf’ and the ‘Rib’ taverns, only place cheaper we knew of was the Ottawa House tavern across the Ottawa River in Hull Quebec for .70 cents. I also remember being able to purchase beer at any of these Taverns long before I turned 18 which was the “drinking age” at the time. As I sit here writing this response to the above comments I realize that I could likely talk about these places for days on end, I somehow completed Grade 13 at Rideau High School inspite of it being located down the road from the ‘Leaf’ (“ML”). I actually remember a teacher at Rideau whose class was scheduled on Friday afternoons, with most of the class down at the draft room of the Maple Leaf each Friday for long lunch hours, he finally relented and even taught a few classes while quaffing drafts with us at the Maple Leaf Draft room. “Those were the days my friend” however different from the old theme song of the All in the Family sitcom – “I knew they would have to end”, HA-HA.

  13. In reviewing all these postings, it seems there are several of us with the same mental problem: We were drunk. I’ll add the Sly Fox Disco on Carling Ave (now some evangelical church) that was originalloy the Sampan restaurant. Rumor was the Sly Fox had one of the floor lights from the set of “Saturday Night Fever” in the dance floor. Cheezy Hank (The Chez Henri) was also a fern bar in its’ later iterations.

  14. This is like eating peanuts, I can’t stop recollecting now. Do you remember the Lafontaine Hotel on Montreal Road, downstairs was the proverbial Tavern with more or less same atmosphere as the Leaf and the Rib, but upstairs was the ‘Golden Rail’ – Country music bands at their finest, packed to the rafters Thursday, Friday & Saturday nights, lots of women seated alone, always friendly and easy to meet. I vividly remember being in there one night when they announced that Elvis Presley had just died, there was literally a hushed silence over the place for a good minute while the patrons dealt with their shock. Another really dingy tavern I remember on Montreal Road was the Eastview Hotel, was definitely a place you wanted to have someone watching your back, lot of tough, dangerous characters frequented the Eastview, some had just been released from Prison or the detention centre on Innes Road (Holiday Innes) as they referred to it. Of course all of Montreal Road had plenty of watering holes and was like the gateway to the “Byward Market” by way of the Cummings Bridge (more stories for another day). Some people I knew kept up that way of life throughout their adult lives – I guess thats why I regularly find so many familiar names, only in their 50’s reflected in the Ottawa Citizen Obituaries.

  15. The Raceway Tavern on Clarence St. Classic Market tavern with hookers galore. Live music by Paul Henry. Bouncer Gordie Galinger kept us safe and his wife at the bar kept us drunk. Ahh, my sweet university days!

  16. I remember going to the Chaud to see Cheap Trick, drinking quarts and getting stoned right at your table because back then you could—that was an awesome show, from what I remember, because I don’t remember leaving the Chaud or how I got home that night. Someone mentioned the Talisman had a bar downstairs so for the record I believe it was called the Beachcomber! Also does anyone remember the Black Swan or Club Zink? Great stories …Cheers 🙂

  17. Wow I am glad I found this page what memories. I grew up in Carp and Saturday and Sunday nights we loaded up a few cars and headed to the Chaud. We never went into the Green Door, although we fought our fair share they had a different code of conduct down in that hole( bottles knives, guns etc). Do you remember the old guy that came around with the flash camera and would take your picture for a few bucks. I still have a pic from there from 83. The only place you could buy anything hash,pcp,lsd,pot uppers downers lol you name it. We just smoked the hash. Remember how the waiters would come around with their coin changers and flash lights. For a small tip they would hold the flashlight so you could see while rolling your joint on the table. If you were in a fight god forbid you had better get your shots in quick and get out of there before Gerry Barber got there and got a hold of you. I saw many a supposed tough guy get the crap kicked out of them be Barber and then ejected with his signature toss out the front door and down the steps, a buddy of mine had that pleasure one evening. One night a buddy and myself went in and had a sprinkle in the can and while we were walking by a stall with the door open we saw a biker looking dude (for lack of a better term) having a crap with the door open. My buddy and I were laughing as we ponied up to the urinal, we stopped laughing emediately when we heard ” hey stretch you think that’s pretty funny eh) my buddy is 6Ft 6 in and had a gun in his ear. Luckily a guy in the washroom saw this and got out and got Barber. The rest is history ( they didn’t call the cops for those things at the chaud).

    Anyway lots of great times. They don’t make places like that anymore.
    As a final note we had to drive through the hull , qpp, rcmp, nepean, Ottawa, opp police forces to get home. Imagine these days!!!

  18. Seems I just jumped in Mr. Peabody’s wayback machine, yeeesh.. yeah, I remember, or not remember getting home from the Chaud many a times. and damn, I shoulda taken that Raquel Welch poster from behind the bar..

    Glad someone remembered the Raceway Tavern. Interesting times were had there. And don’t forget the Albion Hotel. A good place to go when you didn’t want to be around others, or cheerful people. Quite sullen at times, but hey, the drinks were cheap..

    Being a west-ender growing up, there was always the CrazyHorse on March Road to fall back on, if you didn’t want to head into the city.

    And during the university days, the weekend routine was always the same.. Thursday nights at Oliver’s at Carleton U. ( saw some amazing early acts there, Dave Edmunds, Nick Lowe, John Baldry, etc etc). Friday nights were always the Algonquin Pub ( Powder Blues Band, Crowbar, Doug & the Slugs, etc), then over to Hull, hoping to find a date for Saturday night. Saturday night it was Disco Reflections at some hotel ( the Delta Inn) with your date, then over to Hull…. Sunday, sleep it all off and start over again..

    For a good bite to eat with your beer, there was always the Capri restaurant on Merivale, with their square pizza and huge jugs of beer, or Peter’s Pantry in the Carling area ( really hot waitresses there at the time), and damn, the name escapes me right now of the place on Richmond Road in Westboro where the Mill St. Brewery place is now..Kind of a rundown place, but the same faces night after night after night, each with their own life story to listen in on if they let you….

    and if you desperate, really desperate for a date, there was always the singles night at the Concord Hotel on Montreal Road on a winter’s Friday night…

    yeah, good times, good times. Thanks for the memories in dragging a lot of these up. The Rose Room was always the fave and the go-to place though. even at 16, with an underage ID card that would do McLovin’ proud, lol

    • The Capri and I have a long history, as I used to work at CJOH-TV. The Capri was where all the crews, most of the staff and a good percentage of management drank and occasionally ate. If you couldn’t find someone, you’d go over to the Capri and check the bar. If they weren’t in the bar, they were on the restaurant side. We’re talking the Old Capri, when they had the hobnail wood floors, before it was fern-bar’ed and redecorated, back when CJOH had a front lawn and there wasn’t a radio station building out front. Mind you, we got hammered at both Capri’s, so, actually it’s all moot.

    • The Kingsway on Richmond Rd in Westboro. Square pizza, joints at the table, # 2 police station around the corner!

  19. Anyone remember the bar where the Restaurant 18 is now or basement where Side Door is located….I can’t remember the name for the life of me…I think it had the word blue in it but not sure

  20. I remember all of those joints. At the same time I ran dances at Pineland, Parkdale, Lighthouse and Beamish Hill Chalet. Also managed Octavian and Liberation, so have a ton of great memories. FUN, FUN, FUN !!!

  21. Dean Hagopian.

    My nerves I’m hemmorhaging mentally from the waves of memories. EAsy on the hemp everyone. Seem to be missing another of my fave watering holes, super for music and talent too, On the upper Aylmer rd, it was a Golf Course also., Owned by Joe Sax, and his two shall we say very entertaining sons, Spent a lot of time there when I was living in Aylmer and working at OY. Super musicians, seem to remember Russ Thomas, before he changed his name and moved to Montreal. Spent many nights when Johnny Nash was there. We(being the Staccatos played at most of the places mentioned, so you can understand how weird my memories might be. Another kick ass quality bar we liked alot was the Duvernay in Hull. Played and got whacked there on many occasions, cause that ‘s what one did in those days and nights. Thanks for the rushes.

    • And thanks for a blast from the past from Dean Hagopian, back when AM radio was Boss! I’ll add memories of Al Pascal, Shelley Emmond, Trevor Kidd, Ivan Hunter, Dave “50,000” Watts, Bill Drake, Tom Lucas, Jim Johston, Art Stevens, Casey Fox, Rick Shannon and the Original Winter’s Nights on BY at the old joint on Richmond Rd.

    • Dean Hagopian ? Are you the DJ from CKOY in the 60s? Used to listen to you all the time …..

    • Ottawa lost a good DJ when you moved to Montreal. Can you remember the daily line-up of announcers at CKOY just before you left? Nelson Davis? Overnight Wood vs Kohl (CKOY vs CFRA)?

  22. K Mart resturant for the Algonquin College students was a great watering hole and dancing on the Rose Room floor as it heaved and moved with all the folks is a memory worth while!

  23. Pingback: Bars In Ottawa – Reprint | RoadDave

  24. how about the blind pig below the holiday inn.the bayshore hotel and the loading zone montreal road.my first discoteque for me was the sax on main street in hull later became j.r dallas.met the village people there april 15 1979 after the show at the civic centre awesome show tickets were 15.00

  25. also in the early 70s there was the banana boat duffs in bells corners the old spaghetti factory on york street.when i moved to the west 1974 it was the sanpan in 1975 it became the sly fox then 1978 it became studleys with 1 fifth of the saturday night fever floor.in 1979 it became bobby rubinos chicken and ribs and fantastic onion rings.after it became rentalex and the kraft house and now its the house of god.growing up downtown there was the saucy noodle almost across from the somerset theatre between kent and bank.of course peters pantry cant forget that awesome place the best pizza and the best zombies in the biggest snifter glasses.bells corners famous for branscombs.great bands and music.carling and brodview great chinese restaurant the sun luck.

  26. Let us not forget The Dill Pickle on Merivale Road, The Beachcomber, of course and Capone’s on Carling, out near Peter’s Pantry. And the Lindenhoff Gasthaus.

  27. and don’t forget the Sunken Dory on
    Merivale Road. Great ceasers . On the subject of the band Liberation my old friend Billy ” white shoes” Shenkman was the key board player, now a J/V partner at TD place home of the Ottawa Redblacks. He was a fine musician. Lead singer was the pride and joy, . baby boy, Jimmy Young.

  28. how about brandys on york street houlihans.the caprice on 99 laval street in hull.the cosmos in the cfra building on isabella ave.reflections at the embassy west.alexanders on the island.le marginal on eddy street.clu 61 aylmer.disco 2000 in gatineau. le club on wellington street.hurleys all over ottawa the rosebowl steakhouse at 1671 carling ave.which opened aug.15 1974.villa delli across from lawnsdowne park.

  29. Don’t for get the Quiet softly spoken places like the Vandom,The steirling west end Boys ya know their was a pair of boots named Wellingtons .The good good old days .Funny iam still kicking

  30. Great memories of so many of these places . Would like to see photos of them inside and outside .

  31. Doghousedonnie

    The market was home to the Commercial Tavern, a classic old tome beer and Country music Joint, which was torn down and became the Hard Rock. And who remembers the Sterling Tavern in Mechanicsville?

  32. Oh man. If you had a date you went to the Glen Lea to drink quarts and dance to the Playdates. If out with the lads from St. Pat’s you went to the Texas Tavern in Hull to buy a quart for $.90 and watch the Hull criminal element at play. Their packaged wagonwheels from the microwave would kill you but the pickled eggs from “Cheese Please Louise” were popular.

  33. Claude Hotel on Beechwood in Vanier drink quarts dance and get hammered

  34. The barn in Aylmer great groups played there…

  35. There was the body shop in Westboro

  36. About the Ottawa House of the 60’s.
    Saw the Stampeders but most often was Harry Younge & The Noblemen 66-68! Last saw them at the Wakefield Inn, Wakefield, Quebec in 1999. Sat down and had a brief chat with Harry. Sadly, he died a few years later!

  37. WOW. OK, here goes.
    What was the other name of the Stirling? And I don’t mean ‘bucket of blood’. Rick and Dino’s after the Carleton closed?
    I think Friends and Company was Squires/Nozzle? Speaking of Rideau St, how about Dave’s Den/Rideau Tavern, Black Swan, Arnolds, Mollys, The Grand, The Albion. Saw a midget country band at the Raceway……….
    Steve’s Steakhouse, open late. Became the Makut.
    Downtown, Fife and Drum, great bands, had a beer with James Cotton. The Tap Room, big Ed, little Ed and Gil.
    Bank, the Rotters, 80s, Jungle. Saw John Cale, think it was the 80s Club, above the Gilmour?? The Alex on St Paddys Day, original green beer.
    Branscombes/Barons? in Bells Corners.
    Anybody remember a place in Hull, Nouvel Epoch (sp) ???
    Bon Vivant, Serge.
    Back in the days of CFL blackouts, Danny Kelly’s Carlsbad Hotel.
    Gerry’s on Bank (Hiway 31) close enough to the K&S for late snack.

    I know there are more, but I feel better now.

    I also think that i/we are lucky to be alive 😉

    • I lived on K&S Pizza for 20 years – I remember going in and meeting Kelly in the first week that they opened, when I was around 7 years old. Still the best (with Bella Vista, a close second).

  38. Talk about a walk down Memory Lane – this is great. Got into the Ottawa House when I was 16 and never missed seeing Harry Young and the Noblemen when they played there. I don’t think anyone has mentioned the Standish Hall (above the Rendevous) nor the Carleton hotel (near the West End Market. How about the “Longest Bar in the Gatineau” ? Don’t recall its real name or where it was – not one of my better perforrnances.

  39. Here are some places that I recall…..The Albion Hotel/ tavern ..25 cent draft, a tray for $2.50….the Del Rio restaurant on Rideau St and their pizza-burger pizzas…the Prescott Hotel on Preston and their meatball sandwiches…the Grand hotel near Parliament Hill and their Friday 5 cent baked bean lunches so long as you had two draft…that Irish Pub on Rideau St.,Muldoons …the Alexandria hotel on Bank St for St Patrick’s Day.. Lenny O’Brien’s St Patrick’s Day blow outs…the Chez Lucien on the Market…the pig n’ whistle pub…the Hay Loft. crocks of old cheese,peanut shells under foot.

    • I worked the Hayloft ’74/5 and ’78. I’ve been wondering if anyone knows what happened to NABIL, the best bartender in Ottawa. He moved on to Brandy’s, as many of us did, but I moved to the Coast and lost track of him.

      • I met so many great people at The Hayloft and Brandies in the mid seventies and into the eighties, a friend of mine from High School; Guy Lolocher was actually the Manager at Brandies for a while so it made it that much easier to drop in with regularity, I’m sure I probably spoke with you at least a few times during those years. Those certainly were the days, HA-HA

        Michael

  40. Remember the: Grads, Vendome, Alexandra, Plaza, Ritz, Belle Clare,Grand, LaSalle (one in Ottawa one in Hull),Richelieu, Commercial, Elmdale, Claude, Maple Leaf, Lafontaine, Bytown, Windsor, Capitol, .The only taverns left are the Carleton, Dominion and Lafayette. Oh yeah I just remembered the Chez Lucien and the Raceway. On the Quebec side were the: Belle Amis, Standish Hall ,Rendezvous, Wellington, St Louis, Ottawa House, Texas, Bank, Chez Henri, Montcalm, Glenlea, Chaud(Rose Room and Green Room), Gatineau, Aylmer, British, Chamberlain, Sur Le Lac, Deschenes, Laval (free beans & French bread), Raftsman, Manoir des Rapides. I remember as a kid, down in the flats “The Duke”. This is from memory and I’m sure I’ve missed a bunch, obviously a misspent youth. The longest bar in the Gatineau was. In Kazabazua.

    • That’s a thorough list of Taverns for Ottawa/Hull, just thought of another one; the old Eastview Hotel – up Montreal Road from the Leaf towards the Cummings Bridge, in the heart of what was then known as Eastview now Vanier. The list was so complete but I think the Gilmour Hotel on Bank Street and the Riverside Hotel (Rib) were also missing. Cheers,🍺 Mike

    • I have 83 years under my belt and remember and frequented most establishments.
      Hey mike were you a friend of Carl Edgel

  41. The Barn in Aylmer (managed by Don Dugas & family) had many exquisite bands, so did The Glenwood Bowl (managed by Gary Downes). No booze (unless snuck in), just great music and good clean fun. Many local badns including The Stacattos, The Girlfriends, The Townsmen, Robby Lane & The Disciples, just to name a few, played there. People from “everywhere” came to join in on the fun. It was a great place for teenagers to hang out. They were even opened on weekend days so people could drop in to play games, ping pong, etc. It was very well supervised. They had dances in the afternoon (windows blocked to create darkness and ambiance). The Gatineau Golf & Country Club had a fantastic night club where stars like Bobby Cortola and Ronny Dove performed. Those were the days!

  42. Does anyone remember The Voyaguer Hotel on Montreal Rd by the Highway before Orleans. Upstairs was a dingy little bar with strippers.

  43. Pingback: Most Popular Post | RoadDave

  44. I’m 34 years old sadly mostly these are all before my time.

    I remember being a kid, and staying over at my grandmothers on Pretoria in the Glebe. I recall being taken out to dinner and I swear the place was called Dimes. Does this ring a bell.

    What about the Eurostar on Elgin (Where Town is now), or The Penguin Rock Bar (Where Hooley’s is) or The Blue Bayou at Dows Lake, or South of the Border on Merivale, or Lady Jane Donuts on Bank Street which became Joey’s now it’s something else. There was also the Beef and Brand in the Gloucester Center, Pandarosa all over Ottawa, Tramps, and Double Deckers in the market. The Dill Pickle above Barbarella’s now the Glue Pot Pub.

  45. RJ’S Boom Boom Saloon, The Liquor Dome, Icon on Lisgar, Jaggers, My Cousins Place, and Swagman Jacks on Elgin, IP Loonies where the Lone Star is on Lemieux acorss from the St- Laurent Mall. Denim and Diamonds, Zuma’s Rodeo, Straits saloon where Ric Emmett played about 15? years ago. Oregano’s where the Grand Is, Peanuts, and Cozzy’s in Hintonburg.

  46. How fun reading all of these posts. Definitely takes me back. Lived in Ottawa 1984-1986. Stoney Monday’s, Le Zinc and JR Dallas in Hull. I worked at Hunter’s Crossing and wud visit Peter’s Pantry….can’t believe it was 30 years ago!

  47. Good grief! I remember so many of these places like I was there two years ago. I/we are really getting up there. Would love to have them back just to visit for a month- or two. Best times ever..Hurley’s on Baseling…Anybody remember the name of the house band at the Fyfe and Drum (Tap Room). Same sets over and over…but decent to dance to..

    • Fyfe and Drum,had nickname the Broken Arms.Believe the house band,were called Harper.The Tap Room,was close to the Fyfe,Albert and Metcalfe,street area.,in the basement of another hotel?

      • Tap room was in the basement of the Berkley Savoy Hotel on Slater between Metcalfe and O’Connor.

  48. Omg this brings back so many memories. I worked at the Skyline hotel in the coffee shop in the late 60s….so many big names would stay there. We used to love to go to the Glen Lea to dance, have quarts of beer, pickled eggs and French fries….or the Ottawa House which always had great bands. Those were the days my friends!

  49. Was it the Fyfe and Drum,downstairs that Gloves played at and we sang along in 1973? Off to Dublin rang true on and on

  50. ah yes the VENDOME the post brothers owned that place EVERYBODYbehaved there…………….

  51. I worked at Pandora’s Box for about 3 weeks doing sound and lights. Quite an eye-opener for a twenty-something kid. The money was shite, but it was a learning experience.

  52. Spent many a night at the green door working as a roadie for Red Hot (Pat Travers). Think I was in many of those bars. Spent a few mornings in Hull bars that opened at 8am for the midnight shift from E.B Eddy the paper mill. Excellent history of Ottawa bars back then, tried to explain it to my kids but words fail me.

  53. I lived in Ottawa from ’77-’83 while a student at Carleton. I waitressed & bartended at Oliver’s, the Trio Village Pub, Holden’s on Murray St. east of Dalhousie and Friends & Co. Does anyone remember the name of the disco in Hull in about ’80-’82? It was 2 levels, and I was there one night when Joe Jackson guest-hosted as DJ after a concert he did in Ottawa. I’ve scanned this blog and don’t recognize any names.

  54. Maybe Tabasco

  55. I used to work at Hunters Crossing circa 1985

  56. A couple of Good Friends and I used to go for a couple of quarts at the Stirling Tavern. Does anyone know, for history’s sake, if it was originally named the ‘Stirling House’? (Great Blog btw.)

  57. We called it the Bucket of Blood

  58. Hunters? Wow. Went there all the time. Place to meet girls.

  59. 1962 to 1967, Texas Tavern!!! god, what a place to get totally pissed then drive to Nate’s on Rideau St. for smoked meat sandwiches and get sobered up for the drive home. Carleton engineers used the basement of the Standish Hall
    for the same purpose! those were the days!

  60. I recall the Whip in Hull where i had my first draft beer and just across the brige in hull the interpervancial hotel and on the other side of the street the pool rome dont recall the name……..not sure maybe the BP……

  61. Pingback: The Most Popular RoadDave Post | RoadDave

  62. Who remembers the trapeze act /band at the chaud?

  63. My husband worked at the Vendome. So did his cousins and his brother. He and I were just dating at the time. I would go with him but I never had to worry about the rough crowd because I knew all the waiters so no one bothered me. That’s where I learned how to save your drink from being spilled. When you heard a chair scrape on the floor the first thing you did was grab your drink then you looked to see what was going on. The bartender was Donny, can’t remember his last name but he liked making drinks that would knock you out. Oh my so many memories! It was a very rough place. The Golden Rail was another place.

  64. Ummm … that is not The Ottawa House as described. No balcony. Maybe held 200. Sounded more like the Chaud Rose Room, but then moved on the describe the Rose room. Green Door and Rose Room both ninth same hotel. Two different floors. I think you must have been drunk most of the time 🙂

  65. Could have been the Standish hall.

  66. Okay, I stole a story from your blog for my song. When the big bucks pour in I’ll send you your cut. An ode to Gerry Barber: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rxKYXFs_Xe0

  67. Wow

    I grew up at The Grads Hotel on Somerset st in Ottawa

    For me it was like the scene in Goodfellas when I got to my table and there’d be 3 or 4 cokes waiting for me so many friendly faces and hellos from everyone

    My Father was Ronnie Thompson
    He worked there for years and he had many friends there and coworkers
    JP Reneaud his brother
    Jr
    Nick the bartender
    Ronnie Shaw
    Ronnie Tibeau
    John owned it then
    Young Jeff at the bar
    Lois and Edith in the kitchen
    Coony
    Ivan and terri
    And so many I’ve forgotten
    For me it was home
    I learned how to tell a bullshitter coming from a mile away
    And I learned to respect the old folks
    The working man
    Back then they’d cash your paycheck while you enjoyed an ice cold qrt of beer

    When it burned down
    I was sad to see it go

    Stevie Thompson
    The fat kid

  68. Kevin Forrester

    Great post! Excellent read! I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Memories of when I had hair…namely a mullet!

  69. Hey Road Dave, I enjoyed your history of the Ottawa bars. You might enjoy listening to this song https://ottawapaul.bandcamp.com/releases Also if you don’t mind I’m going to use some of your texts for a little video I’m planning to make about the Chaud.

  70. A flood of memories come back with the mention of these bars from the past. A couple others stand out to me as well, like the “Ottawa House Tavern” on Rideau St. Does anyone remember the “Saucy Noodle”, for a quiet evening of songs? I used to love listening to “Ginette And The Night Owls”, can’t remember if they played the Grand Hotel, or the Albion Hotel, but I think the Grand. This would have been late 60’s, early 70’s. Love this page. Thanks for the memories.

  71. Paul McCartney once told me, “Never be a name dropper”, but since you asked…wait, what? You didn’t? Oh well. Here it is anyway. (Actually, I did shake hands with all the Beatles in the early ’60s during their first North American tour, but that’s another story.) So, first up, Gerry Barber.
    In ’71 I was labouring on the mean streets of Quebec from Aylmer to Buckingham doing asphalt reinstatement for Gazifere de Hull, anywhere they added, deleted or repaired a natural gas service or mainline. One day in mid-summer, two of us were grunting away in Gatineau being harassed by the usual complement of incorrigible undisciplined urchins. My compatriot finally had enough and in order to get the head urchin to bugger off flicked a soiled broom at him, depositing a few specks of tar on his lily white shirt. The urchin ran home crying – served the little monster right, I say. About forty-five minutes later, Barber and the kids father come stampeding down the street with the urchin in tow, ready to rumble. Barber asks the kid to identify the assailant and as soon as he pointed out my mate, Barber attacked. My mate beat feet to the truck but Barber grabbed his leg before he could secure himself in the cab and started whacking his leg against the doorjamb. Meanwhile, the urchin’s father came at me. Although all I had to defend myself was a push broom, I had also had some military experience and so as he attacked, I gave him a horizontal butt stroke to his cheek bone with the bristle end – which set him on his arse. At which point I considered getting into it with Gerry, only to realize that I had seen smaller mountains (Gerry was a hefty lad), so I demurred. Luckily, a neighbour had witnessed the fracas and called the gendarmes who arrived promptly and defused the kerfuffle in short order. A few years later I heard that some aggrieved drunk that Barber had given the bum’s rush ambushed him outside the Chaud and pumped a few rounds into his sorry skull. Whether that’s true or not, I cannot say. But Gerry Barber lived every bit of his own legend.

    Le Hibou on Sussex was the joint of choice for the more jazz-oriented musicians at the after hours jam sessions that happened almost every weekend during the late sixties to the mid-seventies and, being a jazz wannabe saxophonist, it’s where I spent too many late night weekends. Anybody could sit in and tootle a set with whomever the headliner was so I was able to jam with such luminaries as Marcel Breau (Lenny Breau’s cousin), Mirislav Vitous (Weather Report) Syrinx (Here Come the Seventies) and Dewey Martin (Local Kemptville lad and ex-drummer for Buffalo Springfield). Dewey was temporarily escaped from L.A. and was dating the girl across the landing from my squeezes apartment in Centretown on Metcalf between Gilmour and Lewis, just around the corner from the banana building and across from the Christian Science church. One Sunday afternoon in late January or early February a bunch of us were gathered in my girlfriend’s place watching a football game (may have been the superbowl?) and Dewey was drunk and stoned as usual and kept pestering my girl for more beer or another joint or whatever. At last, I told him to get his own beer and as he stood up, he lost his balance and did a face plant on the coffee table sending beer, wine, snacks, ashtrays, candles, joints, and related miscellany flying. At which point I grabbed him by the scruff of his neck and down the stairs he went out into the frigid dusk. Five in the morning he was knocking on the door. Somebody rolled him and took his snakeskin boots, leather jacket and cowboy hat and wallet. He was borderline hypothermic, so we got him stripped down and into a hot bath. The best jam I ever played at Hibou was with a pick-up group from Montreal trying to be a six piece jazz ensemble -I don’t remember their name, but one night between Christmas and New Years we improvised a rendition of Greensleeves in a fast 6/8 tempo, kind of Buddy Rich Swinging New Big Band style that blew everyone away – including the band. It was just one of those nights when everything clicked in spite of itself and you would think, “fuck me, I could maybe just be a celestial object!”…until reality reared its ugly head, that is.

    A friend of mine was masquerading as the bouncer at Pandora’s Box on Bank in ’72 (I say masquerading, because he was about as much the antithesis of a bouncer that anyone with more than three active brain cells could imagine) and maintained an elevated level of popularity dealing Bolivian Marching Powder to the dancers/strippers. The source eventually was condemned to the graybar hotel and to secure a consistent supply, we pooled our meager resources and bought one of our mates (the one who had the biggest cohones and the only one of us who had a passport) a plane ticket to Bogota where he scored about a kilo of fresh, uncut, high-test blow which he mailed back in oversize Columbian greeting cards, a few grams at a time. Worked flawlessly. Never tripped the Posties sorting machines. The girls got primed and twirled their hair and danced and danced and danced and danced and danced and danced and danced some more until their six inch heels were worn to nubs and g-strings and pasties dripped salty bodily fluids and lines were drawn and inhaled and beer was quaffed and pissed away and joints were rolled and burned and a good time was had by all.

    Early sixties to mid seventies. Those were the golden years, never to be repeated, thank God: If compelled to endure an encore, I’d never make it out alive.

  72. I didn’t see any mention of the Black Bottom Club. It was at the Riverside Hotel in Vanier in the early 70s. It was a classy place where people went to dance dressed up to the nines, long before discos. The servers were women in bunny (as in Playboy bunny) costumes. The music was mostly Motown. It was the most diverse club of the time and attracted many young people from the Caribbean There were hardly any restaurants that were open late back then so we would often end up at Denny’s on Bank St which was terrible but open 24 hours.

  73. Friends and Co used to be called Squires the best bar in the world. Used to see Sneezy play there all the time; It was called the Capital House before that. I think a huge part of my heart is still at Squires, Also have fond memories of the Lafayette, the Chez Henri, the Ottawa House and of course the Chaud.
    Thanks for the memories everyone; it was the best of times.

    • Hello.
      Memories of Squires,small bar,but great live music.Remember seeing The Backyard Symphony,Eugene Smith and the Warmup Band,and blues bands,from Toronto,etc.
      Of course,many many quarts of beer were consumed,at that time!

  74. Omg I know this is an old article but so well written. I used to run with Gerry Barber Jr. back in the day. This brought back great old memories.
    Shoot me a line at nuhomebldr@gmail.com and I can share few you don’t know…l

Leave a reply to al d. Cancel reply