[Congressional Record Volume 148, Number 44 (Thursday, April 18, 2002)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E590]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING CLIFTON J. SHIPMAN FOR COMMUNITY SERVICE
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HON. CHARLES H. TAYLOR
of north carolina
in the house of representatives
Thursday, April 18, 2002
Mr. TAYLOR. Mr. Speaker, I rise to honor one of Western North
Carolina's most outstanding citizens, Mr. Clifton J. Shipman of
Hendersonville, on the occasion of his receiving the first-ever
Community Service Award given by the Hendersonville Merchants and
Business Association. On Wednesday, April 17th, 2002, the civic and
business leaders of Hendersonville gathered to pay tribute to Cliff's
character, entrepreneurship, generosity and community service in
bestowing upon him this prestigious award. Clifton J. Sliipman truly
exemplifies the best combination of the American spirit of enterprise
coupled with service to his community, and the following newspaper
story gives an account of why he is held in such high esteem.
[From the Hendersonville Times-News, Apr. 18, 2002]
Shipman Receives First Community Service Award
(By Jim Wooldridge)
Hendersonville, NC.--A local entrepreneur, known as much
for his modesty as for his business success, won the first
ever Community Service Award given Wednesday night by the
Hendersonville Merchants & Business Association.
Clifton J. Shipman, 79, owner of the Chariot and the
Cedars, plus much of the property on both sides of Seventh
Avenue downtown, was chosen unanimously for the award, said
presenter Carolyn Swanner.
``In reviewing his record, we found he started more than 25
businesses here and was operating 15 of them at the same
time,'' Swanner said. ``And that was before we had
computers.''
A third-generation native, Shipman started his enterprises
between the time he ended his World War II service in 1946
and his partial retirement five years ago. He was probably
best known, she said, for Clifton's Cafeteria at the corner
of Church Street and Seventh Avenue. The building is now the
Chariot, a dining room for private meetings and for most of
the Hendersonville civic clubs.
``The impressive thing about Cliff was his extraordinary
modesty,'' said Mac Drake, a lifelong acquaintance who got
his first job from Shipman. ``He never sought recognition for
charitable work that touched so many people.'' An example, he
said, was Shipman's giving the former Lutheran church
building across Church Street from the Chariot to the
Reformation Presbyterian Church.
His first business was the Hendersonville Riding Stables
and Saddle Club, which offered not only horseback riding but
three dances a week, many featuring big-name orchestras such
as ``Les Brown and His Band of Renown.''
This property, on State Street, was Clifton's home until he
bought a farm in Flat Rock several years ago. A barn on the
property is the theater for the Hendersonville Little Theater
company. He opened a newsstand in 1948 in the Brooks Building
on Third Avenue West. It was named The Smoke Shop and was
popular with young people, Swanner said. He opened his first
restaurant, Clifton's, in the same building in 1950.
In 1951, he leased Hendersonville's public swimming pool on
Washington Street and ran it until 1954, when he sold it to
the American Legion. He started the Smokehouse restaurant on
Asheville Highway in 1954, a business which today is the
Quarter House.
He leased Boyd Park in 1954 and built a miniature golf
course, tennis courts, shuffleboard courts, and a dance
pavilion. In 1958 he leased Jump-off Rock from the Town of
Laurel Park and built another dance pavilion, this one with
picnic area and gift shop.
Shipman converted a gasoline service station on the
Asheville Highway into Hendersonville's first fast-food
restaurant. It was a huge success, Swanner said, because
burgers, fries and milkshakes were priced at 19 cents; soft
drinks, 5 cents.
Started in 1959, this restaurant was named the Hasty Tasty.
He built a new building for it in 1962 on the corner of
Church Street and Eighth Avenue East. The building cost
$3,800 and Shipman sold enough 19-cent burgers to pay for it
in four weeks, Swanner continued.
The Chicken Shack restaurant was another converted service
station he operated in on Seventh Avenue West until 1995. It
is now used as a bus stop.
Concentrating on Church Street, Shipman built his Minit
Carwash in 1966 and the cafeteria two years later. Using the
cafeteria's cooking capability, he bought the Chariot
building on Seventh Avenue in 1970 and made it the main
meeting place for service organizations.
He bought the Cedars in 1976 and spent two years restoring
the former mansion as a location for wedding receptions and
dinner meetings. His last major purchase was the former post
office, now called the Federal Building, at the corner of
Church Street and Fourth Avenue East.
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