| Lucille Sarah Mirabella was born in Fayetteville, N.C., on March 8, 1922.
She was the daughter of Sir Reginald Theodore Mirabella, a decorated Three Star
General who was instrumental in ushering through the treaty of Versailles.
Reginald served at Fort Bragg after his return from the Great War in 1919.
Growing up with such a dad, Lucille was no stranger to fireside stories of
patriotism, pride, and heroes. When 1940 rolled around and the world was on
the brink of a Second World War, Lucille was dating a young man named James Earl
Davis, a GI in the 82nd Airborne Battalion stationed at Fort Bragg. Soon
after her man left for the fight of his life in Europe, Lucille took up
employment at the North Carolina Maritime Shipbuilding Company in Wilmington,
N.C. This is where Lucille gained independence, working days at the
shipyard while restlessly awaiting James's return from the war.
Frequently, Lucille would organize "war room" nights where all the ladies of the
neighborhood would gather to read letters from Europe and Asia, knit blankets,
and make batches of jellies, jams, sauces to send to their boys. Lucille's
friends soon discovered her knack for comfort meals and good southern-style
cuisine. When James's letter came back stating, "Lucille, the boys believe
your BBQ sauce could be used in peace-making negotiations!" all the neighbors
agreed. Perhaps her independence didn't sit well with her folks back in
Fayetteville, but they were proud of the hard-working, young patrior she had
become.
In the winter of 1945, the war was winding down and Lucille was missing the
comfort of her family and friends back home in Fayetteville. With no sure
return date set for James, Lucille moved back home and started a small
neighborhood cafe. Serving her mom's classic recipes and her newly-learned
cooking secrets from the "war room" nights, Lucille marveled as her cafe soon
became a beacon of all that was comforting to the waves of soldiers returning
home form the war. When James came back in later 1946, he married his
sweetheart and together they worked the cafe. Through the 1950s they
developed countless recipes and traditional dinner fare. Three kids later,
James and Lucille had formed a thriving business guarding their secret recipes
and cooking methods. They passed down their secret recipes from generation
to generation. In 1999, those same guarded recipes were passed down to the
owners of Lucille's American Cafe in Weston and hence, the American tradition
was reborn! Today we uphold the same ideals that Lucille lived and
believed in back in the 1940s: great food and friendly service for a fair price.
If only Lucille was here to see us today! |