September 19, 2024

Archie Parrish opened Archie’s Lobster House at 7130 Williamson Road in 1947.
It quickly became THE place for seafood in the Valley. It remained that way until it closed in 1978. The building was finally torn down in 1981.

Archie’s was popular with Roanokers for decades. Its menu carried all kinds of seafood and other things like steaks. Obviously, lobster was a big thing at Archie’s.

In October of 1960, Archie’s had a little event where it served what it said was its one millionth lobster. That is a staggering number. To reach that number since its opening in 1947, it would have had to average almost 200 lobsters a day.

From WSLS/UVA Archives: (October 21, 1960) Archie’s Lobster House said it sold its 1,000,000 lobster. It was served to Clem D. Johnston, President of the Virginia State Chamber of Commerce. Also Miss Virginia Cathy Birch of Staunton lit the new electric lobster sign. It is believed it was the first “animated lobster sign of its kind.”
The front of an Archie’s menu from 1965
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Roanoke Times & World News Staff Writer Joe Kennedy wrote a review of the Lobster House for the paper in March of 1977.

Straightforward Cooking Found at Lobster House

Roanoke Times & World News, Saturday, March 26, 1977

By Joe Kennedy

Staff Writer

It seems inconceivable that anyone who has lived in Roanoke for any length of time would not have heard of Archie’s Lobster House on Williamson Road.

Since I947, Archie Parrish has served up seafood including fresh Maine lobsters, and generally retained

his reputation as master of what may be Roanoke’s best-known restaurant.

Certainly Archie’s is famous among oldtimers. A glance at the framed photographs of Archie with

Louis Armstrong. Archie with Lionel Hampton, Archie with a vintage Miss America and framed newspaper articles shows just what a hot spot the restaurant (formerly a supper club) used to be.

The cover of the menu says the restaurant served its 1,000,000th lobster in 1960; and the lobster tank still stands near the door. and holds several live crustaceans.

No fewer than eight lobster dishes are listed on the menu, including imported lobster tail for $3 95 and up, lobster newburg at $8.50, au gratin at $8.50, thermidor at $8.95, and lobster dainties at $6 95.

Fortunately for those on shoestring budgets, the menu includes other items as well, such as numerous steak dishes, shrimp, chicken, ham, and seafood platters.

 My wife and I go to Annie’s on weeknights from time to time because (THIS LINE IS MISSING.)  the restaurant uncrowded, the seafood prepared in a straightforward way.

Curiously, we never ordered lobster, but I don’t know why.

 Last Monday, we arrived around 7:30pm and found perhaps 20 other customers distributed at tables and booths throughout the large, softly lit dining room.

We were led to the booth adjacent to the bar, which is not the best seat in the house but is the one we’ve been led to on other, uncrowded occasions, for reasons best known to those who do the leading.

Archie’s tried to appeal to a whole range of tastes. This 1965 menu offered up other entrees in addition to seafood. Steaks and Virginia Ham were also popular dishes at Archie’s Lobster House.

  A lengthy period of time-at least 10 minutes-passed before our waitress arrived to take our order, but she served us cordially and attentively throughout our meal.

 With funds limited as usual, we declined cocktails and chose out entrees.  My wife settled on steamed

Shrimp, french fries and tossed salad in lieu of sliced tomatoes, which were unavailable.

   I ordered creamy clam chowder, tossed salad, baked potato and trout stuffed with crabmeat and shrimp dressing.

   The food came along quickly enough, and again it proved to be straightforward and satisfying, with

qualifications.

The clam chowder was tasty, but the salads seemed a bit drab minus sliced tomatoes.

My wife‘s steamed shrimp, a goodly number served in their shells. delighted her Virginia palate, but to me, who was reared in Maryland, they seemed mild.

Nevertheless, they were better than those I’ve tasted elsewhere in these parts, where “steamed” and

“boiled” apparently are thought by some to be synonymous.

Her french fries were unremarkable, but my baked potato was just right, served with several scoops of

sour cream.

The price of her meal was $5.95.

I had ordered stuffed trout both to escape my soft crab habit and to break the boredom of what had been an unspectacular day.

I succeeded on both scores, for the dish was delicious. It consisted of a good-sized fish, its head sliced and pulled away from, but not off, the carcass, surrounded by the usual trimmings.

The inside of the 1965 menu. Archie’s was considered a premium restaurant at the time. If you adjust the prices for inflation, the lobster would start at a little over $30. The Special Cut Strip Sirloin would be about $46 by 2023.
This is an Archie’s advertisement from Roanoke’s 1974 phonebook.

The meat was flaky and warm, and it swam above the baby shrimp and crabmeat dressing. Barely a bone could be found.

Perhaps the best thing about the trout was that despite the trimmings, it still tasted like fish. At some restaurants. the garnishes, sauces and other special effects are so sophisticated as almost to obliterate the seafood, which may be fine with some people but is distracting to me.

My straightforward fish dish cost $6.45.

We declined desserts. When the 25 cents for iced tea and 35 cents for milk were added in, the bill came to just over $14, before the tip.

The meal had taken just over an hour, and it left us feeling as if our time and money had been put to good use.

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