Riverfront Times, August 18, 2021

Page 26

SHORT ORDERS

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[ S T. L O U I S S TA N D A R D S ]

Sweet Spot For nearly 70 years, Donut DriveIn has been making St. Louis history, one sweet treat at a time Written by

CHERYL BAEHR

W

hen Kevin McKernan thinks back on his happiest childhood memories, the ones involving Donut Drive-In stand out the most vividly. On certain weekdays, he and his mom would head to the south-city doughnut shop — him rolling up on his big wheel — grab a couple of vanilla long johns and head to the nearby Francis Park for some quality time. It was such a simple outing, but it felt so special. “I remember going up there with my mom and my dog after kindergarten,” McKernan recalls. “I had other siblings, but they were older and in school all day, so this was the time I had my mom all to myself. It’s one of my happiest memories. Everyone who grew up in St. Louis has their own little doughnut shop, and that was mine.” A few decades later, McKernan can’t believe he is now the one in charge of keeping those memories alive at such a beloved institution. Since last year, he’s been the owner of the St. Louis Hills mainstay, where he sees himself as more of a steward than a proprietor of the 68-year-old shop. It’s a role he never thought he’d assume. A teacher by trade, McKernan got interested in business around the time he opened the Improv Shop in the Grove in 2009. That dip into entrepreneurship piqued his interest in other opportunities, and he would regularly check business brokerage sites to see what was out there. One day, he came across a posting that he assumed was for Donut Drive-In, and he knew he had to act. “I thought, ‘Oh my god, that’s Donut Drive-In; I can’t let anything happen to Donut Drive-In.’ It’s just too big of an institution,” McKernan says. “I started talking to my wife to see if we could swing

The Donut Drive-In sign has been a beacon for St. Louis for decades. | ANDY PAULISSEN

The staff keeps traditions of nearly seven decades going. | ANDY PAULISSEN

The coffee is on. | ANDY PAULISSEN

lost over the years. What McKernan does know — and what he stresses is passed down by oral tradition and not confirmed by any records he’s come across — is that the shop was built in 1953 by Wachter, Inc., a construction company that built several of the little white doughnut shops scattered around the city. From what McKernan has gathered, the owner of Wachter left the shop to his daughter, who was married to a man named John Harter; to the best of

his knowledge, the two of them ran it for a while before selling it at some point to Thomas Charleville, then-owner of Thomas Coffee Company. Charleville was at the helm until 1996, when he sold it to the Schwartz family, who ran several St. Louis-area Dunkin’ Donuts and operated Donut Drive-In until selling it to McKernan last year. “To me, swooping something up a year ago is less cool than the people who have dedicated years

it to make sure it keeps going. We met the owner, who was selling it because he was retiring, and told him that we wouldn’t change it.” McKernan has stayed true to his word, keeping everything exactly as it’s always been at the nearly seven-decades-old shop and staying out of the way of the longtime employees who serve as a living history of the place. At this point, that’s the best window into its past he has, since much of Donut Drive-In’s origin story has gotten

riverfronttimes.com

AUGUST 18-24, 2021

Continued on pg 26

RIVERFRONT TIMES

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