HomeMy WebLinkAboutDixie Chicken Items Auctioned; newspaper article (03-18-2006)`We're not in trouble. We're just trying to get rid of some things.'
Katy Jackson, Dixie Chicken Inc. vice president
In the market for a moose head?
Dixie Chicken
offering items
for auction
LAURA HENSLEY
ale Staff Writer
he owners of the famous
Dixie Chicken are giving
patrons the opportunity
~ take home a piece of their
Ivorite bar.
Hundreds of items, including
raffiti-carved domino tables,
idder-back chairs, stuffed deer
eads - even a walk-in cooler
nd an old upright piano -will
e on sale March 25 during a
spring cleaning" auction.
The sale is merely a chance
~ clean out what's been in stor-
ge, not an indication that the
Kcal collection of bars and
estaurants run by Dixie Chick-
n •Inc. is going out of business,
wners said.
"We're not in trouble. We're
zst trying to get rid of some
Zings," said Katy Jackson,
ice president of Dixie Chicken
zc. "People put a lot of time
nd effort into The Chicken. We
re just trying to give a little
it of that back."
Founder Don Ganter died in
D04. The company has since
een run by his two daughters,
ackson and Jennifer Ganter.
Many of the items on sale
ame from Shadow Canyon and
Ze Hole in the Wall Saloon.
'he two Northgate bars closed
Est year and since have
ecome Midnight Rodeo and
I'Bannon's Pub, respectively,
.nder new management.
Other auction items once
ung on the walls of the Dixie
Y ,My: ~
Auctioneer Craig Conlee digs through some of the
items from the Dixie Chicken that will be up for auc-
Chicken, the iconic Northgate
beer joint. Some pieces were
used as a surface to shake a
hand of dominos or eat a ham-
burger.
The Dixie Chicken Inc. estab-
lishments have been known for
more than 30 years for their
rustic decor that includes old
signs and taxidermy accenting
the barn-wood interiors.
"If you've ever been in one of
those establishments, you look
ting rid of stuff. We are
she and her sister have been
left with several storage
barns packed full. of stuff
ranging from rusty bear traps
ri ~:
\ s2
~t r::.p
,nail,
~,~,
~`
attached to some of the
things, but really, it's all just
stuff. We know it's not going
to bring him back." .
Conlee said Ganter was an
avid collector who was con-
stantly on the lookout for
interesting items to decorate
his bars and restaurants.
Eagle photo/Paul Zoeller
tion. Bidding on taxidermy items, domino tables and
an assortment of chairs will take place March 25.
around and think, `Where in
the world did all of this stuff
come from?"' said Craig Conlee
of Conlee Auctions, which is
presenting the sale. "Really,
this is aonce-in-a-lifetime
opportunity to own a piece of
history."
Jackson said her father never
sold anything or threw any-
thing out over the years, and
See CHICKEN, Page A8
looking in someone's closet.
These are some things that.
maybe [Ganter] wouldn't sell,
but it's been tough for the
girls, and they need some clo-
sure to come out of this."
Conlee said the auction has
sparked widespread attention
from former Texas A&M Uni-
versity students who hold fond
rF You Go
WHAT: Dixie Chicken Inc. auction
WHEN: ('larch 25, 10:fl7 a.m.
WHERE: Conlee-Garnett Movirig an
Storage Warehouse, 6D1 S. Bryan St, i
..Bryan
DETAILS: Viewing will be from 1 to
p.m. Friday and the following day from
a.rn. to thestart of the. auction. Bid
also will be taken at www.ebayliv
auctioris.com.
tables -the trademark fur- •
nishings of Dixie Chicken
Inc. establishments. Conlee
thinks the tables could fetch
several hundred dollars
apiece.
"But that's the fun of the
auction," he said. "You never
know how much something
will go for."