Items from Dante's Down the Hatch, the iconic Atlanta restaurant and jazz club, will be auctioned Sept. 21

  • ATLANTA, Georgia
  • /
  • August 19, 2013

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Dante's many nautical-themed items, like this authentic ship's maiden, will be sold Sept. 21st.
Ahlers & Ogletree, Inc.

 (ATLANTA, Ga.) - Items and equipment from Dante’s Down the Hatch – the iconic Atlanta restaurant and nightclub that stood for more than 30 years in the fashionable Buckhead section of town – will be sold on-site, at 3380 Peachtree Road, on Saturday, Sept. 21, starting at 9 a.m. (EST). Dante’s recently closed its doors, having fought unsuccessfully to have a huge property tax bill lowered.

The auction – which will feature a wide range of antiques, props, architectural items, vintage cars and restaurant equipment – will be conducted by Ahlers & Ogletree, Inc., the Atlanta-based auction firm. A preview party will be held Friday, Sept. 20, also on-site. For those unable to attend the sale in person, online bidding will be available via LiveAuctioneers.com.

For a cost of $95, people can register to bid on the premises and be a part of Dante’s closing events. The price includes registration, a catalog of auction items, food and drink for the entire weekend and great music by Dante's long-time in-house jazz band, the John Robertson Trio. More information can be found at the Ahlers & Ogletree website -- aandoauctions.com.

Dante’s Down the Hatch was as colorful and eclectic an establishment as its octogenarian owner, Dante Stephensen, a former Navy SEAL who opened the original Dante’s restaurant in Underground Atlanta in 1970. When business declined in 1981, he moved the operation uptown, to Buckhead. It was an instant success, with its fondue menu, nightly jazz, turtles and crocodiles.

Turtles and crocodiles? Yes, Mr. Stephensen envisioned Dante’s as much a tribute to his worldwide travels as a place to wine and dine. The place featured a replica of a 19th century ship as a centerpiece, one that included a “moat” filled with turtles and crocodiles. The ship was a replica of the 18th century vessel the Bounty, as featured in the movie Mutiny on the Bounty. The mast and sails were authentic, the mast a massive barkantine piece off the Georgian ship the Barba Negra. Other touches included a genuine ship's telegraph and a ship's binnacle.

Nearly everything will come up for bid, to include striking architectural elements such as Baptist pews, a Spanish Catholic confessional and an 18th century Orthodox Presbyterian hand carved pulpit, all brought over from churches in Europe; a pair of 11-foot-tall exterior doors from the Land Bank in London; fabulous stained glass pieces, including windows from England that tell the story of the Industrial Revolution; and hand-crafted beveled glass windows framed in nickel.

Also sold will be a two-story bar with glass-paneled ceiling, two large clocks originally from the 1890 Lloyd’s of London building in England, three vintage elevators, a Steinway piano, antique masts and sails and a large ship’s wheel, brass light fixtures, nautical-themed props, wax figures from Madame Tussaud’s, vintage advertising signs and antique cars. These include:

a 1928 Whippet four-door sedan

a 1930 Ford A Huckster, fully restored

a 1933 Rolls Royce touring sedan

a 1935 Packard 7-seat salon

a 1939 Cadillac limousine

Two other vintage automobiles from another consignor (not part of Dante's) have also been added to the sale. They are a 1958 MGA 1500, bright red with wire wheels and black interior, fully restored with a rebuilt motor and transmission; and a 1949 Cadillac Series 62 maroon red four-door sedan, fully restored with a rebuilt engine, in excellent running condition.

Dante’s Down the Hatch was a huge success story in an industry where more than 30 percent of restaurants fail within their first year. That success can be attributed in large measure to Dante himself, who was part restaurateur, part raconteur and completely hands-on when it came to his clientele and staff (nearly all of whom returned to work for him after a fire in 2001).

Stephensen is still as charismatic and energetic as ever, but it was the tax man who eventually became his undoing. His property taxes amount to $98,000 per year, mainly because the restaurant and night club are on a choice 1.9-acre tract of property in Buckhead, across from Lenox Mall and near a score of upscale hotels and other trendy eateries. He just couldn’t pay it.

“I’m being taxed like a 40-story building,” he was quoted as saying, a rate of more than $74 per square foot. When Atlantic Realty Partners came along with a bid to buy the land from Stephenson, to knock down Dante’s and put up a 10-story luxury apartment tower in its place, he couldn’t turn it down. But he hasn’t ruled out re-opening Dante’s somewhere else in Atlanta.

Ahlers & Ogletree, Inc., is a multi-faceted, family-owned business that spans the antiques, estate sale, wholesale, liquidation, auction and related industries. The firm is always accepting quality consignments for future auctions. To consign an item, an estate or a collection, you may call them at (404) 869-2478; or, you can send them an e-mail at info@aandoauctions.com.

To learn more about Ahlers & Ogletree, Inc., and the upcoming Sept. 21 on-site liquidation of Dante’s Down the Hatch in Atlanta, please log on to www.AandOauctions.com.

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Ahlers & Ogletree
715 Miami Circle / Ste. 210
Atlanta, Georgia
robert@aandoauctions.com
(404) 869-2478
http://www.aandoauctions.com

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