G.O.A.T Squad Spokesman
Logic Is Absent Wherever Hate Is Present
The overt cism 


The overt cism

Trump's America.This is so fukking ridiculous I cant even get mad at it, any nikka who eats there takes a skyscraper L![]()
AND its in Texas too. If you go into a southern town and see a restaurant like that, you know EXACTLY what time it isTrump's America.

Something like thatIs this one of those edgy hipster marketing campaigns to get attention?
AND its in Texas too. If you go into a southern town and see a restaurant like that, you know EXACTLY what time it is![]()
And that's why I believe any black person especially AA who uses that word to describe another should be shot dead because our ancestors suffered to gotdamn much for us to turn around and use that same word on each other. And I don't gaf how that makes some of y'all feel.The c00n chicken inn started back in the 1920's:
c00n Chicken Inn
Back to Online Encyclopedia Index
![]()
Labor Union Protest in Front of the c00n Chicken Inn, Seattle, 1939
Image Courtesy of Shoreline, Washington Historical Museum
The c00n Chicken Inn was a fried-chicken restaurant chain located in the Pacific Northwest from the late 1920s through the late 1940s. The chain was famous for its ubiquitous ‘c00n’ logo, a caricatured African-American male rooted in 19th century minstrel theatre and early 20th century advertising. The most prominent manifestation of the c00n caricature was the 12-foot high ‘c00n head’ that served as the entrance to each restaurant location.
Maxon Lester Graham and his wife Adelaide founded the c00n Chicken Inn in Salt Lake City, Utah in 1925. The early success of this location prompted the opening of two additional chains in Portland, Oregonand Seattle, Washington in the early 1930s. The patrons and employees of the c00n Chicken Inn chains were predominantly white, though African-Americans were hired to work in the kitchen of the Salt Lake City branch.
Graham adopted the c00n caricature and created the ‘c00n head’ as a gimmick to attract customers in the emerging age of roadside restaurants, novelty architecture, and automobile convenience. Graham additionally promoted the chain through the distribution of postcards, newspaper advertisements, matchboxes, children’s fans, spare tire covers, and delivery cars, all of which prominently featured the c00n Chicken Inn logo. The c00n logo saturated the restaurants’ interiors as well. Plates, forks, menus, and placemats featured the caricature, as did menu items such as the ‘Baby c00n Special’ and the ‘c00n Fried Steak.’
African Americans opposed this blatant display of racial hostility. In 1930, the Seattle branch of the National Association for the Advancement for Colored People (NAACP) and Seattle’s African American newspaper The Northwest Enterprise protested the opening of the local c00n Chicken Inn by threatening Graham with a lawsuit for libel and defamation of race. In response, Graham agreed to change the style of advertising by removing the word ‘c00n’ from the restaurant’s delivery car, repainting the ‘c00n head’ entrance to the restaurant, and canceling an order of 1,000 automobile tire covers. This small stride, however, was not enough to fully erase the image of the caricature from Seattle. Graham violated his agreement with the NAACP but managed to evade the lawsuit by changing the color of the c00n logo from black to blue.
Graham closed the Seattle and Portland locations in 1949. The c00n Chicken Inn restaurant in Salt Lake City, however, remained open until 1957. It is remembered today in films such as Ghost World and The Confederate States of America; relics of the c00n Chicken Inn are generally regarded as Black Memorabilia collectables.
Sources:
http://depts.washington.edu/civilr/c00n_chicken.htm; http://www.ferris.edu/jimcrow/links/chicken/; Williams-Forson,Psyche A.Building Houses out of Chicken Legs: Black Women, Food, and Power (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006)
Contributor:
University of Washington
