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Choosing our religion

How one little post-war doughnut shop became synonymous with Boston’s identity
By MIKE MILIARD  |  March 2, 2007

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It’s all about the coffee. When I told my mother I was writing about Dunkin’ Donuts, she shot me an impish look: “Gonna find out if they put anything in it?”

Mom’s got it bad. Who can fault her for hoping to pin blame on nefarious additives for her daily five-mile trek to and from a Dunkin’ drive-thru for a fix in a Styrofoam cup? She’s not alone. Heck, she’s better off than a lot of people. Like the lady in the TV ad — based on one Brocktonian’s true story — who bushwhacks her way through what seems like miles of highway-side bramble, finally steps gingerly over a guardrail, and crosses three lanes of traffic to bring coffee to her gridlock-stuck carpool mates. Or the transplanted New Englander in Houston who drove 35 miles every weekend to the nearest Dunkin’ just for a cup of that sweet, creamy Arabica nectar.

People far afield know about us and our affliction. They’re piteous and perplexed. A few years back, when my girlfriend was living in San Francisco (sadly bereft of Dunkies), her friends quizzed her incredulously about the caffeinated cult they’d heard rumors of back East. “What the hell,” a guy asked her, “do they put crack in the coffee?”

Of course, they don’t. (I don’t think.) So what is it? You and I both know what Dunkin’ Donuts means to Boston and New England. It’s a lynchpin of our identity. It’s a religion. It’s a cult. People in these parts freaking love Dunkin’ Donuts. Why? This has become much more than mere caffeine addiction. And it can’t simply be ascribed to its hometown roots. (Do people start MySpace pages paying tribute to Fidelity or Gillette?) What is it that engenders such fervent loyalty? How does a huge multinational corporation maintain such a stranglehold on the affections of a region?

“Good puzzle would be to cross Dublin without passing a pub,” mused Leopold Bloom in Ulysses. A better one would be to traverse the Hub without passing a Dunkin’ Donuts. There are 269 Dunkin’ stores or kiosks within a 15 mile radius of Boston proper. Indeed, it often seems there’s one on every other corner. Across New England, there are nearly 2000 Dunkin’ outlets: that’s one for about every 6000 people.

Every day, Dunkin’ Donuts serves 2.7 million customers in 4400 stores across 36 states (including New England), and in 1700 locations abroad — as far away as Bulgaria, Qatar, and South Korea. Worldwide sales, as of August 2006: $4.7 billion. And they keep getting bigger. Canton-based Dunkin’ Brands Inc. announced plans last year to grow to nearly 15,000 locations by 2020, more than tripling its US presence. But even as it pushes onward into Cincinnati, Jacksonville, and Indianapolis, Dunkin’ Donuts remains king of New England. And we its ever-loyal subjects.

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Blue-collar roots
Dunkin’ Donuts was founded in Quincy by the late William Rosenberg in 1950 (the original location, at 495 Southern Artery, is still extant). The first of what would become those thousands of additional franchises opened its doors, in Dedham, in 1955.

In the beginning, says Gus Dettore, who worked at — and later owned — the third-ever Dunkin’ store (on North Beacon Street in Brighton, between 1960 and 1995), things were very simple: “Coffee and donuts. That’s all.” The joe was hot and fresh. There were more varieties of donuts than ever seen in one place before. But that was pretty much it. When Rosenberg started to expand, slowly, there were plenty of naysayers, Dettore recalls. “People said, ‘You are so crazy. Coffee and donuts? That’s a little Ma and Pa’s job! How you gonna get your money back?’ He was right, they were wrong.”

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  Topics: Lifestyle Features , Culture and Lifestyle, Beverages, Leopold Bloom,  More more >
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20 Comments / Add Comment

bostonmaggie

This was really funny and sooooo true. I don't drink coffee myself and according to one online quiz it made me less of a Bostonian/Massachusetts (ite?). Because I missed the coffee questions, I only scored 84%. 84% for a total native!
Posted: March 01 2007 at 8:49 AM

sisyphus00

Intersting story and pretty true. I'm from a middle class Boston family and I can't recall a time when we weren't tagging along with my mom or dad to hit a dunkies. Shit, 2 of my brothers worked at a store for awhile. I am the black sheep of the family however. I can barely gag down a dunkie regulah - all cream and sugar, blech. Do you even taste any coffee? And those dunkie girls and boys love pouring in milk and cream. Just try to get a dark, you practically have to yell at them and then 1/2 the time they still put in too much. Yes, I am a Starbuck's man now, but the rest of my Irish clan swear by Dunkie's and still question my sexuality because I order a vente americano when I get my coffee.
Posted: March 01 2007 at 12:00 PM

dave navarro

I remember a fairly recent photo with Bush Junior at Dunkin. You know, the common guy sort of crap. Come to find out Daddy Senior Bush had just bought into the company!
Posted: March 02 2007 at 7:24 PM

Patrick

I remember heading to the D&D on Hancock Street near Neponset after the paper route on Sundays back in the early seventies. That must have been one of the first ones. A couple dozen doughnuts provided breakfast for the whole family and whoever happened to straggle in. The Dunkin’ Doughnuts franchise has never been about health and fitness. As an adult I rarely drink it, though on a job a few years back, D&D trips were a big bonding activity, so I started enjoying a medium ‘regulahh’ and a bagel or doughnut each morning with the group. Needless to say, within 3 months I put on 15 lbs. The big difference I would guess between D&D and other franchises is the number of bolts required to hold up the chairs.
Posted: March 03 2007 at 2:50 PM

zarinasnow

I have to admit, this article irked me. I don't ascribe to the way the media in Boston loves to bash Starbucks and how evil it is. Is Dunkin' Donuts really for the working person? What kind of benifits do employees at the precious Dunkies get? Anything? Nothing at all. Starbucks, on the other hand, cares about their employees: everybody who works at least 20 hours a week is eligible for benefits. I've worked at Starbucks for almost 3 years, and I have no complaints. I feel respected as an employee, unlike the other customer service jobs I've had. And what about the customer service at Dunkin' Donuts? Most of the time when I go in there, they screw up my order. I have to taste it before I leave to make sure it's right. Is it that difficult to get a hazelnut coffee very light with no sugar correct? I understand that Dunkin Donuts is a New England institution, but it's not as glorified and wonderful as this article portrays it to be. And customers at Starbucks aren't all zombies staring into their computers: a lot of them do have real lives.
Posted: March 04 2007 at 12:43 PM

shatbox

Dunkin' Donuts is still strange to me. I was born and raised in Los Angles. Long Beach was spotlighted as having the second most doughnut shops per capita in Men's Heath Mag behind Fort Worth, so I don't have a emotional connection to doughnuts. I wonder what the equivalent would be. I guess Macdonald's would be the closest thing we have to a famous export with brand loyalty. Macdonald's has that working man's feel. Bill Clinton famously loves their fries. Now living in Philadelphia, I have to admit that the coffee at DD isn't that great. The coffee at Wendy's is better. You can't really compare Starbucks and DD. I remember my first visit to Dunkin' Donuts. She asked if I took it with cream and sugar. I said yes expecting her to leave room for the two. She should have asked if I wanted coffee with my cream and sugar.
Posted: March 04 2007 at 7:08 PM

snappa45

Sadly I moved from New England (big mistake) to Nevada, Las Vegas to be precise alas they have no Dunkin Donuts here. Instead they have Starbucks the most disgusting brew I have ever had. I WANT MY DUNKIN DONUTS BACK. I have a list of things I wish to do once I'm back on the home sod: 1: Kowloons 2: Jevelis 3: Dunkin Donuts Its true they have the BEST coffee I have ever tasted from Europe to America West nothing compares...
Posted: March 05 2007 at 2:10 AM

adamrobert12

Screw'em both. I wish there were more Honey Dews around.
Posted: March 05 2007 at 4:09 PM

fft

According to Joe Biden you have to have an Indian accent to work in a Dunkin Donuts.
Posted: March 05 2007 at 10:23 PM

Edso

Twenty five years ago, the only place you could get a bad cup of Dunkin coffee was in Lowell (because of the water). Unfortunately, thats no longer the case. As a life long client of DD (We would stop at the original location every Sunday after playing football as teenagers to get doughnuts while walking home), I have to say they have some issues. 1) The coffee is not as good as it used to be. Period. 2) The coffee is inconsistent from location to location. 3) Too many of the clerks do not understand enough english to serve the menu and/or have a hard time with basic math skills. 4) The doughnuts are no longer fresh. How could they be given that they are not made onsite. 5) DD's last couple of owners have changed focus from the coffee to sugary junk filled childrens drinks. 6) At most locations, they refuse to put cream cheese on a bagel when you ask them to. (not very convenient to try to spread the cream cheese while driving) I have had DD as far away as Chiang Mai Thailand. I want DD to be good (again). I want to support the company instead of the over roasted competitor. Please don't make it so hard to continue doing so.
Posted: March 06 2007 at 12:16 PM
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