Lincoln Dairy Bar "Moo-ve" over

Martin Moo Moo’s Ice Cream Shop is 20

[MAY 11, 2000]  Everyone is invited to scream for ice cream at Martin Moo Moo’s Ice Cream Shop’s 20th anniversary on May 20th. The shop still lovingly referred to by local residents as the Dairy Bar, located at 1130 Broadway Street, has been owned and operated by the same family for the past 20 years. The shop will sell ice cream cones for 35 cents and milk shakes for $1 on the day of the celebration.

Roberta and Ephraim Martin purchased the building four years ago from her parents, Robert (deceased) and Darlene Veff of Lincoln. They changed the name of the shop from R & D’s Dairy Bar to Martin Moo Moo’s Ice Cream Shop and painted the "little brown house" white with black spots in honor of Roberta Martin’s lifelong love of cows. Roberta’s father had painted the shop brown and white to represent the flavors of ice cream that they served. Roberta Martin stated, "People began to refer to the building as the little brown shack." She felt that it sounded too mom-and-pop, and the cow concept was born.

 


[A new look for the millennium – Martin Moo Moo's
Ice Cream Shop, 1130 Broadway St.]

 

The cow theme has also made its way inside the shop by way of black-and-white checkered floor tiles and with cow paraphernalia lining the walls and hanging from the ceiling. Mrs. Martin said, "Most of the cow stuff has been given to me by my customers." Her cow collection is varied and extensive at the shop and at her home.

 

Although the building is still small, they have added onto it twice. For a while there was a small arcade room, but the 1980s brought with it home arcade games like Nintendo, and it became cheaper for kids to purchase game cartridges and play the games for as long as they liked at home. The arcade room was closed in 1990 and the space is now used for storage, according to Martin.

 


[Ephraim and Roberta Martin, inside Moo Moo's Ice Cream Shop, know their customers by their candy.]

 

"We are proud to boast that we have Lincoln’s largest banana split. We use two bananas and five scoops of ice cream. Penny candy and our grab bags are also big sellers. The kids like the suspense of the prize that is in the bag. Our customers buy candy for a penny as kids and ice cream as adults. We serve our customers what we would like to be served."

 

 

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Even though Roberta and her husband own the shop, she still counts on her mother, Darlene Veff, to help out in the shop when needed. "She’s always there for me. She’s an important part of our operation, and we wouldn’t be able to do this without her. We often get our after-school rush before our high school help can get here, so I call mom and she comes right over," said Martin.

As a result of the recent mild winters, the ice cream season has been extended. This year they opened in early March and last year they closed in November. The building is not heated, so they can’t be open year-round. Roberta spends the winter months being a housewife and loving it.

 


 [Ephraim and Roberta Martin, inside Moo Moo's Ice Cream Shop, show off some of their cow paraphernalia given to them by their customers.]

 

The ice cream shop lore included its own little mystery for a while. When her parents purchased the shop, there was a large, square hole cut out of the wall behind the cash drawer, and everyone had always wondered why. They eventually learned that for years the cash drawer was always coming up short, and one day they discovered that the money in the drawer had been falling out of the back of the drawer and into the wall. When the drywall was removed, they found that about a hundred one-dollar bills had fallen to the floor, and the mystery was solved.

 

The site of Martin Moo Moo’s Ice Cream Shop was built in the mid-’50s by Albert Edward Barnes from Atlanta, whose father owned and operated the Barnes White Dairy in Atlanta. Albert Barnes called his business the Lincoln Dairy Bar and operated it for eight years before selling it. Since that time it has had several owners.

 

[Kym C. Ammons-Scott]