Buzz-Inn Then and Now

2307 Central Avenue – Dodge City, Kansas

As late as 1960, the west side of Central Avenue between Plaza Avenue and Kinkead Street was lined with trees and not much else. James and Lois Hart had it platted in June of 1957 but development took a while to materialize.

The Ku-Ku Burger Bar was a 15-cent hamburger restaurant with an exaggerated gable roof and an actual, functional cuckoo clock on the front of the building. The exact origin has unfortunately been lost to microfilm.

Garden City Telegram, March 4, 1965, 3. Newspapers.com.

In August of 1964, Munroe Realty of Kearney, Nebraska advertised franchising opportunities with a minimum investment of $8,000 claiming to be the exclusive agents. However, William and Ferne Munroe relocated to Oklahoma City shortly after the brief ad run.

Sunday World-Herald, Omaha, Nebraska, August 9, 1964, 48. Newspapers.com.

That November, Joe Secrest of Manhattan, Kansas ran a similar ad in the Globe but with a minimum $10,000 investment.

Dodge City Daily Globe, November 24, 1964. Kansas Heritage Center.

By December, Ku-Ku had locations in Salina, Great Bend, McPherson, Arkansas City, and Winfield with another ready to open in Emporia. Restaurants in Garden City and Olathe opened the following year.

Ku Ku of Dodge City, Inc. was formed on April 5, 1965 and began hiring that summer. Although there still wasn’t much happening commercially in that area, the restaurant was well situated between the old high school on First Avenue and St. Mary of the Plains College.

Dodge City Daily Globe, July 30, 1965. Kansas Heritage Center.

A management training program was in place for franchisees to learn the Ku-Ku system but it mostly consisted of working in another restaurant to gain hands-on experience. There wasn’t a big corporate support system. In fact, Ku-Ku Franchising Systems, Inc. wasn’t officially formed until September 17, 1965. This Missouri company had a registered address in Kansas City’s John Hancock Building, which was a franchise farm, selling “opportunities” for multiple entities. And after a year, the minimum investment had ballooned to $20,000.

The Kansas City Star, September 12, 1965, 105. Newspapers.com.

At the chain’s height, there were reportedly as many as 200 Ku-Ku Burger Bars, mostly in Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, and Missouri but a couple outliers existed in Nampa, Idaho and Lima, Ohio.

Ku-Ku’s corporate entity went bankrupt and so did many franchisees after they lost their supply of ingredients and branding support. Several had taken out small business loans to open the restaurants and many foreclosures took place with equipment sold for pennies on the dollar. Some franchisees had luck selling to other chains like Hardee’s. Others, like Waylan’s Ku Ku Burger in Miami, Oklahoma, continued the brand independently.

Ku Ku of Dodge City formally changed its name to Buzz-Inn, Inc. in January of 1967 and initially retained the quirky architecture.

The Pirate-Schooner, 1968, 76. Published by Spearville and Windthorst High Schools, USD 381

Russell “Buss” Taylor and his wife, Mary, remodeled the building in 1972 and the front gable with the cuckoo bird was removed. By that time, inflation had raised the price of a regular hamburger to 19 cents.

Dodge City Daily Globe, August 9, 1972. Kansas Heritage Center.

The high school lunch crowd wasn’t enough to save the Buzz-Inn. A liquidation sale was held on February 28, 1978 and the corporation was dissolved that September.

The Wichita Eagle and Beacon, February 26, 1978, 61. Newspapers.com.

The building was moved to what is now the BLUE RV Park behind Miss Kitty’s Cafe so that First National Bank and Trust Company could build a drive-thru branch on the corner of Central and Kinkead. Architects Gurtner and Robison designed a modern building which “offer[ed] new approaches in style.” That was quite the understatement.

Bank President John Harding is pictured below during the groundbreaking ceremony in June of 1978.

Dodge City Daily Globe, June 21, 1978. Kansas Heritage Center

A grand opening event, which included a full parade from the main bank to the new branch, was held on April 21, 1979.

Dodge City Daily Globe, April 18, 1979. Kansas Heritage Center.

The bank was joined by a standalone Payless Shoes building just to the south around the same time. That store relocated to the Village Square Shopping Center by 1990 and was replaced by Curtis Mathes Home Center.

First National Bank was acquired by Bank IV Kansas in June of 1994. It changed hands a couple more times and became Bank of America around 1999. Bank of America exited Dodge City completely in 2014. Since then, the former north branch has had the appearance of a vacant building but it has obviously been in use. A number of businesses have occupied the former Payless including a Maytag store and a Credit Union of Dodge City branch. Marathon Health has been located there for a number of years.

This is how the site of the former Buzz-Inn looks today:

Photo by Jan Shaw

Apologies in advance to anyone this may offend but I laugh every time I see the former bank. It’s one of those places that cannot be beautified and it’s very close to the 50-year milestone for having it designated a historic structure. I guess it was considered edgy at the time but that property was better off with the wacky cuckoo clock.

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