It Happened at Michigan: A cozy respite from campus bustle

Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

Drake’s Sandwich Shop opened nearly a century ago at 709 N. University Ave. For generations of U-M students, faculty and staff, Drake’s was the go-to spot for a quick bite, a cup of tea, a glass of limeade or a red-and-white bag full of penny candy.

Originally owned by and named for pharmacist Claude Drake, the shop opened its doors in 1929. In the early 1930s, it was bought by Truman Tibbals, a Drake’s employee, who, along with his wife, Millie, operated the sandwich shop for more than 60 years.

Drake’s interior was quirky-casual, with avocado-green walls and wooden booths, a carved tin ceiling, and shelves packed with colorful candy jars and boxes of tea. The menu at Drake’s included cinnamon and toasted pecan rolls, fresh-squeezed limeade, and an assortment of sandwiches, such as bacon and peanut butter, orange marmalade, chopped green olive and nut, and the “Michigan” (chicken, lettuce, tomato, mayonnaise). 

The sandwich shop was reportedly one of the first spots in Ann Arbor to sell bagels, a prescient move given that Bruegger’s Bagels now inhabits Drake’s former location.

Drake’s was also a popular date spot for U-M students, and it was the unofficial break room for the Ann Arbor police. Truman Tibbals reportedly left the back door open so officers could stop in for baked goods at any hour.

Cartoonist and U-M alum Cathy Guisewite worked at Drake’s in the early 1970s, during her undergraduate years in Ann Arbor. In a profile in Michigan Today, she recalled that period.

“The most rebellious thing I did [at U-M] was join the Delta Delta Delta sorority,” Guisewite said. “And the most impactful thing I did was work at Drake’s Sandwich Shop, where I gained 40 pounds eating leftover grilled pecan rolls and milkshakes.”

Drake’s was seen by many as a cozy refuge from the bustle of campus, even if Truman and Millie themselves were reportedly reserved and rarely interacted with patrons. Some students and staff have said, however, that, behind the scenes, the couple imparted valuable life lessons and, in tough times, lent money or helped cover tuition.

For a few years, the Tibbals family operated a dance hall above Drake’s. When it first opened in the 1940s, it was known as the Walnut Room. Later, it was called the Martian Room.

Drake’s closed in 1994 after Truman Tibbals’ death, with most of the shop’s fixtures, signs and green booths going home with nostalgic former patrons.

When Michigan Today ran the retrospective “Limeade and love: Memories of Drake’s Sandwich Shop” in 2012, the comments section was flooded by U-M alumni waxing poetic about their Drake’s memories. In 2015, the site of Drake’s was celebrated with a historic marker.

During the 2015 celebration, Ann Arbor Mayor and U-M alum Christopher Taylor told the crowd, “We all have our special memories of Drake’s. My wife and I had our first date at Drake’s.”

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