Encyclopedia Dubuque
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Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.
KEHL, Robert: Difference between revisions
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In 1988 Kehl began operating the West Virginia Belle between Huntington and South Charleston on the Ohio and Kanawha rivers. During the same year the Quad City Queen, Mississippi Belle and the Spirit of Dubuque carried an estimated 226,000 riders. | In 1988 Kehl began operating the West Virginia Belle between Huntington and South Charleston on the Ohio and Kanawha rivers. During the same year the Quad City Queen, Mississippi Belle and the Spirit of Dubuque carried an estimated 226,000 riders. | ||
With the passage of legislation permitting gambling boats on the Mississippi, Kehl unveiled the [[DUBUQUE CASINO BELLE]], the grandest ship in his fleet and | With the passage of legislation permitting gambling boats on the Mississippi, Kehl unveiled the [[DUBUQUE CASINO BELLE]], the grandest ship in his fleet. | ||
By 2013 Kehl’s family business operated five casinos in Iowa: the Riverside Casino and Golf Resort south of Iowa City; the Grand Falls Casino here in northwest Iowa; the Diamond Jo in Dubuque; the Mississippi Belle II in Clinton and Catfish Bend in Burlington. The Kehl business was also working on the opening of a new land-based casino in Davenport. (1) | |||
An inspiring philanthropist, Kehl lead the drive for improved health care for tri-state residents. The Kehl Diabetes Center of UnityPoint Health-Finley Hospital was one of his legacies along with the a major financial donation to [[CLARKE UNIVERSITY]] that led to the construction of the Robert and Ruth Kehl Center, the home of the school's sixteen athletic teams. Robert and Ruth Kehl donated the Burlington Northern Freight house in December of 1978 to help launch the Mississippi River Museum of the [[DUBUQUE COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY]]. | An inspiring philanthropist, Kehl lead the drive for improved health care for tri-state residents. The Kehl Diabetes Center of UnityPoint Health-Finley Hospital was one of his legacies along with the a major financial donation to [[CLARKE UNIVERSITY]] that led to the construction of the Robert and Ruth Kehl Center, the home of the school's sixteen athletic teams. Robert and Ruth Kehl donated the Burlington Northern Freight house in December of 1978 to help launch the Mississippi River Museum of the [[DUBUQUE COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY]]. | ||
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Winter, Jim. "River Gambling Pioneer Dies," Telegraph Herald, July 4, 2013, p. 1 and 2 | 1. http://kiwaradio.com/local-news/riverboat-gambling-pioneer-robert-kehl-dies-at-78/ | ||
2. Winter, Jim. "River Gambling Pioneer Dies," Telegraph Herald, July 4, 2013, p. 1 and 2 | |||
[[Category: Business Leader]] | [[Category: Business Leader]] |
Revision as of 02:09, 6 July 2013
KEHL, Robert (Dubuque, IA, Sept. 10, 1934--Dubuque, IA, July 3, 2013). Entrepreneur. Named, with his wife Ruth, as the 1984 National Small Business Persons of the Year, Kehl operated a popular river cruise and cruise/dinner operation. His business was a primary reason for the development of Dubuque as a tourist center of the Midwest.
Kehl, listed in city directories as being a salesman and driver for TRAUSCH BAKING COMPANY during most of the 1950s, began his food service business in Dubuque between 1952 and 1956 with Bob's Place, a 24-hour diner and gas station located on U.S. 52 north of 32nd Street.
In October 1960, Kehl and his wife Ruth, purchased TONY'S CAFE from Tony Helling. In 1967 this was renamed ROBERTS SMORGASTABLE. With his wife, he also ran a catering business for an excursion boat named the JULIE N. DUBUQUE. When Art Bull, the owner of the boat, decided to move his operation south of Dubuque, Kehl used savings to purchase a l50-passenger paddle-wheeler which was renamed the River Rogue."
Kehl's boat used the Hawthorne Street ramp for one year before moving to the ICE HARBOR in 1974. With business booming, Kehl sold the River Rogue when its size limited its use to serving one hundred passengers for dinner.
In 1977 the Kehls launched the Spirit of Dubuque, a $350,000, 377-passenger paddle-wheeler. Christened on May 14 by Governor Robert Ray, the boat was built in Morgan City, Louisiana, by the Scully Brothers Boat Builders. Using this boat, Kehl began offering his famous prime-rib dinner cruises once each week. By 1979 the dinners were served nightly; it was apparent that a larger boat was needed.
The growth of business led the Kehls to spruce up the Ice Harbor and convert it from a railroad and industrial center to a tourist mecca. Gravel for a parking lot was laid as the appearance of the area was improved with the planting of some trees and a general cleanup. The Kehls purchased the abandoned Burlington Northern freight house in 1978 and donated it to the DUBUQUE COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY. This building became the FRED W. WOODWARD RIVERBOAT MUSEUM in 1982. The same year the Kehls opened The Barge, a two-story combination office, gift shop, and lounge.
In 1984 Kehl unveiled the Mississippi Belle, a $2 million, 800-passenger paddle wheeler built for daylong cruises. To give more time to the prosperous river business, Roberts Smorgastable was closed.
In 1986 with increasing numbers of passengers, Kehl bought a second 800-passenger boat, the Mississippi Belle II. Roberts River Rides then offered several cruise options including all-day trips between Dubuque and the Quad Cities (with a return trip by bus), all-day round trips between Dubuque and McGregor, half-day trips between Clinton and the Quad Cities, and 1.5 to 3.5 hour sightseeing trips around the Quad Cities and Dubuque areas. The original Mississippi Belle was renamed the Quad City Queen and was permanently docked in Bettendorf.
In 1988 Kehl began operating the West Virginia Belle between Huntington and South Charleston on the Ohio and Kanawha rivers. During the same year the Quad City Queen, Mississippi Belle and the Spirit of Dubuque carried an estimated 226,000 riders.
With the passage of legislation permitting gambling boats on the Mississippi, Kehl unveiled the DUBUQUE CASINO BELLE, the grandest ship in his fleet.
By 2013 Kehl’s family business operated five casinos in Iowa: the Riverside Casino and Golf Resort south of Iowa City; the Grand Falls Casino here in northwest Iowa; the Diamond Jo in Dubuque; the Mississippi Belle II in Clinton and Catfish Bend in Burlington. The Kehl business was also working on the opening of a new land-based casino in Davenport. (1)
An inspiring philanthropist, Kehl lead the drive for improved health care for tri-state residents. The Kehl Diabetes Center of UnityPoint Health-Finley Hospital was one of his legacies along with the a major financial donation to CLARKE UNIVERSITY that led to the construction of the Robert and Ruth Kehl Center, the home of the school's sixteen athletic teams. Robert and Ruth Kehl donated the Burlington Northern Freight house in December of 1978 to help launch the Mississippi River Museum of the DUBUQUE COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY.
Kehl was a director of DUBUQUE BANK AND TRUST COMPANY from 1986 until 2005 and a director of the Savanna-Thomson State Bank in Savanna, Illinois.
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Source:
1. http://kiwaradio.com/local-news/riverboat-gambling-pioneer-robert-kehl-dies-at-78/
2. Winter, Jim. "River Gambling Pioneer Dies," Telegraph Herald, July 4, 2013, p. 1 and 2