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Jim Economou

True Tulsa

Jim Economou

Michael Cooper

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May 4, 2010

The first thing I noticed about Jim Economou is, at the ripe young age of 80, how much energy he has. I spent a couple of days trying to get in touch with him directly because he always seems to be on the run–and yet, he still is a clearly devoted family man. I ought to know; he was eager to put me on the phone with his grandson (a current writer for National Lampoon, by the way) whom I attended high school with.

Economou’s father, Christ, brought Coney Island to downtown Tulsa in 1926 and his business has not only endured since, but has become one of downtown’s true treasures. Just one look at restaurant reviews on the internet for Coney Island and you’ll see passionate comments from people who have been raised on them. Jim himself has been with the restaurant through all of its incarnations since the age of nine and finally took over the reigns from his father in 1973. Today the downtown Coney Island stands only a block away from it’s original location.

Economou is pictured in the dining room of Coney Island, sitting in an area of public school chairs that have remained with the business since the beginning.

True Tulsa is a weekly project that highlights the people and places that make our city great. Find out how you can get involved in This Land Press.

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  • http://topsy.com/trackback?utm_source=pingback&utm_campaign=L2&url=http://thislandpress.com/05/04/2010/jim-economou/ Tweets that mention THIS WEEK’S TRUE TULSAN: Jim Economou, owner of the historical downtown Coney Island. [ — Topsy.com

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  • http://Yes Dr. Paden

    Possessive pronouns have no apostrophe! ;^)

    Curiously, the original Coney Island, in or near NYC, shut down 20 or 25 years ago!

  • Sandra Barnes

    I was a student at the downtown Central High School and graduated in 1976. Since I would go to First Baptist Church of Tulsa on Wednesday evenings, I would walk to Central Library to study after school, eat dinner at Jim’s Coney Island and then walk to First Baptist Church of Tulsa at Fourth & Cinncinatti. My mother would pick me up after church to go home. I miss those delicious steamed coneys. I can taste them now.

  • http://www.MavenHoldings.com Larry Favalora

    Great story series… I enjoy the great views we get of Tulsa through your lens. You capture an emotion, not just an image. I can just smell the Coney’s! Thanks, Mr. Cooper.

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