Altavista ice cream shop channels ‘50s charm

Altavista ice cream shop channels ‘50s charm

Jill Nance/The News & Advance

Sitting outside the Dairy Freeze in Altavista, Elizabeth Perrow and her daughter, Augusta, enjoy some ice cream on a hot summer afternoon. The roadside eatery, which has been serving customers for more than 50 years, is a tribute to good ice cream and loyal customers.

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ALTAVISTA — At the Dairy Freeze on Main Street, a white building with a gold-colored brick foundation, customers order ice cream or food at the walk-up window. They sit at one of eight tables on the outside patio until it’s ready.

Andy Mattox, the restaurant’s owner, said people ask him why he doesn’t enclose the space so people can eat inside.

He responds: “This has always worked for us. Why change it?”

Andy Mattox’s father, Herbert Mattox, founded Dairy Freeze in 1958. It was about its current size, and it only sold ice cream.

The company began selling food in March 1965, said longtime employee Tommy McKinney.

“It was on my 15th birthday,” he said.

Little has changed at the Dairy Freeze since then. Herbert Mattox’s son, Andy, took over the store in 1988, a year after he graduated from Virginia Tech.

After studying agricultural economy, Andy Mattox said, the best job he could find was with the chicken giant Perdue, which consisted of checking on chicken houses and administering shots.

“I got to doing a little research, found out how much they pay to work the grill here, and it was more than what Perdue was paying,” Andy Mattox said.

His first step was to recruit McKinney, who had worked for Herbert Mattox for three years before going into the military.

“I’ve been cooking all my life,” McKinney said. “I even cooked in the military.”

Since joining the Dairy Freeze, McKinney has never missed a day of work. Andy Mattox said he would consider it unusual if any of his “four faithful full-time employees” missed a day.

“Nobody down here calls in sick,” he said. “Nobody misses work.”

Andy Mattox believes the employees are part of what has made his business successful. The four full-timers have worked at the Dairy Freeze for more than 70 years combined.

“I think it’s amazing the place has stayed in business with all the fast foods,” Herbert Mattox said.

Andy Mattox attributes this to his customers.

“A key thing is we got a lot of loyal customers. Families have eaten down here for several generations,” he said.

Altavista’s mayor, Rudy Burgess, enjoys the Dairy Freeze, too.

“It’s a real asset to the community — people enjoy going down to get ice cream or a hot dog,” he said.

The Mattoxes would like the business to stay in the family.

“One of my grandsons, we always say that first he has to go to college before he takes over,” Herbert Mattox said.

Although Dairy Freeze’s food hasn’t changed much in the past decades, progress marches on.

Tuesday, Andy Mattox said, “we just put in a debit/credit card machine.”

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by redsman on July 13, 2009 at 8:04 am

As Arthur said as he was smoking his unfiltered Camel and drinking his morning “tonic”, be careful of the high fructose, etc., etc., etc. Get a life, you worry about the wrong things!

Flag Comment Posted by letstalk on July 13, 2009 at 5:05 am

There is nothing like the taste of a Tastee Freeze or a Dairy Freeze whether it it Ice Cream or the Burgers and Fries.

We were traveling thru Altavista a few years ago and came across the place here. I called a friend of mind that lives is Hurt and asked him about places to eat. I told him what we were near. He recommeneded the Dairy Freeze. Ever since when we travel thru Altavista we stop there to eat. Nothing like the good old day feeling.

Flag Comment Posted by Arthur Pewty on July 13, 2009 at 3:44 am

Nothing like some High fructose corn syrup, corn syrup, sugar, E330 citric acid, E405 propylene glycol alginate, E412 guar gum, E413 tragacanth, E414 acacia, E415 xanthan gum, modified corn starch, E296 malic acid, E211 sodium benzoate & E202 potassium sorbate and artificial flavors to provide the children with a fine nutritious treat.
  Do yourself a favor.  Buy some and let it melt and break down into its component parts.  LOOK AT IT!

Flag Comment Posted by BornintheBurg on July 13, 2009 at 1:23 am

On a recent visit from Colorado, my brother took me back to Altavista to show me the Dairy Freeze was still open and still much the same as it was in 1958 when my dad (Jack Lucas) used to walk us there at least once a week for a treat.  Thanks for staying the same and providing nostalgia!

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