OUR MISSION

Lessing's... A Legacy of Remarkable Hospitality.

To continue our 130-year tradition of innovation and excellence - providing unique restaurant concepts, exclusive wedding venues, distinctive catering, and skillfully executed food service management.

OUR CORE VALUES

Growth: Learning sparked by curiosity drives our passion for continuous improvement.

Innovation: We challenge the status quo with forward-thinking, and constantly adapt to ever-changing demands.

Diversity: We seek, welcome, and respect diverse perceptions, backgrounds, and experiences.

Hospitality: Remarkable actions create memorable experiences.

Integrity: We are genuine people guided by morals.

Legacy: Honoring the traditions of our past, we build the legacy of our future.

OUR COMPANY

Lessing’s Hospitality Group is comprised of over 100 locations throughout the Northeast and Florida. Lessing’s operates 20 wedding and catering venues, 15 full-service restaurants, over 75 corporate and academic dining centers, a historic inn, and a presidential yacht. Steeped in over 130 years of tradition, Lessing’s Hospitality Group’s focus is on providing each guest and client with unique, personalized experiences and remarkable hospitality.

OUR PEOPLE

  • Stephen M Lessing

    Chairman

  • Michael Lessing

    Chief Executive Officer

  • John Lessing

    Senior Advisor

  • Scott McKelvey

    Chief Financial Officer

  • Lawrence Lessing

    Chief Operating Officer

  • Mark Lessing

    Executive Vice President
    Restaurants

  • John S. Lessing Jr.

    Executive Vice President
    Facilities & Maintenance

  • Kevin Lessing

    Executive Vice President
    LFSM Group

  • Ellen Barrett

    Executive Vice President
    of Human Resources

  • Patrick Smith

    Vice President of Marketing & Development

  • Grant Lieberman

    Vice President of Technology

  • Holly Lynch

    Controller

  • Peter Lessing

    Director of System Analytics

  • David Lessing

    Director of Business Development

  • Steve Kirschbaum

    Director of Catering

  • Guy Reuge

    Chef Emeritus Senior Advisor

  • William Muzio

    Executive Chef

OUR STORY

A FAMILY OF INNOVATORS (1890-1940)

The oldest family-owned, continuously operated, highly diverse food service company in the United States is Lessing’s Hospitality Group in Great River, New York. The company was founded by Maxwell Lessing in 1890 and is operated to this day by 15 family members representing six generations of Lessing's. This highly diversified company feeds more than 40,000 guests a day at over 120 corporate, educational, country club and manufacturing plant locations throughout the Northeast and Florida. Lessing’s Hospitality Group also operates 20 high-end wedding and catering venues, 1 nightclub, 14 full service restaurants, 3 virtual kitchens, and a historic inn. The Lessing family has provided food service to New Yorkers for over 130 years without interruption. Both the longevity and the success of this legacy company is unprecedented, especially in the food service and restaurant business.

"I decided to see if I could discover the secret to this family's success. What was it about the Lessing clan that set them apart from countless other restaurant companies that have come and gone from the food service scene? One hundred and thirty years in business is remarkable enough, but to have the same family operate the company the entire time is unheard of. My research into the company's history revealed the secret immediately."

— Written by Francis Bennett, freelance writer
 

THE LUNCH COUNTER

Maxwell Lessing was an innovator. He responded to the explosion of the urban worker population in the 1890's by opening the first convenient lunch counter in New York's Financial District. For the first time in American history, workers who lived in boarding houses that supplied meals left home to go to work, forsaking one of their free meals. They had little time and less money for lunch. In addition, women were joining the work force in droves during this era and began to patronize places they once dared not enter, climbing onto lunch counter stools and venturing into cafes in the evening without escorts.

By 1893 the country had slipped into a severe four-year recession, and the self-service lunches available in saloons on the honor system began to suffer an enormous amount of theft. One after another, saloon owners were forced to eliminate these lunches. Maxwell again saw their setback as his opportunity, and he responded by expanding his low-price, pay-as-you-go lunch counter operation to multiple locations in office buildings around Wall Street.

THE COMMISSARY

Then, he innovated again. With multiple locations to service, Maxwell established a commissary on Jones Lane close to his lunch counters in the Wall Street area. From the commissary he would prepare baked goods, sliced meats, salads, soups and hot foods to deliver to his locations and serve the long lines of office workers, who were rapidly running out of places to eat. Maxwell's commissary on Jones Lane was the first multi-unit restaurant commissary in the United States.

THE SANDWICH

The commissary concept was an innovation well before its time and led to another innovation that would become an American food staple - the sandwich. Maxwell didn't invent the sandwich, but Lessing’s Hospitality Group was the first company to serve sandwiches at lunch counters in New York City. Workers could either eat them at the lunch counters or take them away and enjoy them on a park bench or back in the quiet of their office.

THE COKE

Great innovators not only create innovative products, but also recognize innovation when they see it. Dr. Pemberton, perhaps one of the greatest innovators of all time, created Coca-Cola in 1886. In 1890, Asa G. Candler, the legendary President of the Coca-Cola Company, began to distribute coke syrup to soda fountains outside Atlanta. Maxwell Lessing was the first New York restaurateur to buy Coca-Cola syrup and serve Coke to his customers. The introduction of both the sandwich and the Coke by one small lunch counter operator in 1890's New York was an almost unimaginable great leap forward in food service.

According to a New York Public Library exhibit on New York culture,"of the three meals that mark the American day, lunch is the one that acquired its modern identity here on the streets of New York."

THE 1920'S

The 1920's is an important decade in Lessing history as it marked the birth of the modern restaurant industry. Maxwell had incorporated Lessing’s Hospitality Group in 1917 and was joined in the business by his son, Lawrence, in the 20's. The advent of national prohibition stripped away liquor profits, shifting emphasis to low-price, high volume food service. More people ate out than ever before. Famous pre-war restaurants closed, while cafeterias, luncheonettes and tearooms thrived.

THE LOCATION

By the late 1920's, Lessing’s Hospitality Group was serving meals to New York's workforce in as many as 20 locations, thanks to Lawrence's great innovation. He strategically acquired lunch counter space in the lobbies of newly constructed office buildings, among them the lunchrooms at 1 Broadway, 40 Wall Street, The Woolworth Building (at the time the tallest building in the world), the Equitable Building at 120 Broadway and The New York Stock Exchange. It was the fulfillment of the now famous restaurant chain mantra, LOCATION-LOCATION-LOCATION. Ray Kroc took the words right out of Lawrence's mouth.

CONTRACT FOOD SERVICE

In 1928, American Cable and Wireless decided to include an employee cafeteria in their new office building. Providing employees with a cafeteria was an innovation in itself in 1928, however Lawrence’s vision trumped even the cafeteria idea. Already operating a nascent multi-unit food service operation out of the Lessing’s Hospitality Group commissary on Jones Lane, he presented American Cable with a proposition. Rather than American Cable executives having to manage a large cafeteria with all the headaches inherent in such an operation, Lessing’s Hospitality Group would manage it for them on a contract basis. For a fee, Lawrence and his staff would take care of everything. With that one creative impulse, the contract food service industry was born in New York City. The Lessing innovation gene had struck again, and Lessing’s Hospitality Group was off and running in an entirely new industry.

RESTAURANT CHAIN

By the 1930's, retail stores saw the wisdom in the conveniently located lunch counter and decided to get into the act. The lunch counter business exploded in dense urban centers, giving rise to iconic restaurant chains such as Schrafft's, Childs, Horn & Hardart, Lofts' and Bickford's. It is worth noting that of all these famous restaurant chains, only Lessing’s Hospitality Group is still in business.

THE WAR YEARS

With the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, New York City was transformed into the metropolitan hub of America's massive war effort. Every inch of office space in the buildings around Wall Street, where the Lessing’s Hospitality Group chain of coffee shops was located, was given over to the war effort in one way or another. In a laboratory at Columbia University, Enrico Fermi began work on atomic particles that led to the top-secret development of the atomic bomb, called the Manhattan Project. This work on uranium enrichment took place in secret offices located in the Woolworth building above the Lessing’s Hospitality Group coffee shop. Across the Brooklyn Bridge, the Pfizer Company converted an enormous ice plant into history's first penicillin factory and began the wartime manufacture of their life-saving discovery. The Brooklyn Navy Yard quickly became the world's largest shipbuilding facility, employing more than 75,000 people by 1942. The port of New York became the primary point of embarkation for the millions of U.S. soldiers shipped overseas to the war zone. Between 1942 and 1945, 1.86 million New Yorkers themselves joined the armed forces.

Lawrence responded to New York's exploding demand to feed millions of non-combatant wartime support personnel by rapidly expanding the company's coffee shop locations to five additional buildings in lower Manhattan and doubling the commissary staff on Jones Lane. Like so many other iconic American companies who responded to wartime demand, Lessing’s Hospitality Group emerged from the war a more substantial and professional company prepared to thrive during the post war economic boom that would engulf the nation.

LAWRENCE LESSING JR.

The "Happy Days" of the 1950's were the perfect setting for Lawrence's innovative personality. Prior to the rise of American consumerism brought on by World War II, small businessmen saw themselves as humble shopkeepers. They were good at working hard tending to the nuts and bolts of their businesses. Small food service operators were usually good in the kitchen and rarely stepped out from behind the counter to embrace the bigger picture. Lawrence, however, saw the potential of making connections with the movers and shakers of the industries booming around him. He decided to leave the day to day operations to trusted employees while he told the Lessing story to decision makers who could use Lessing’s expertise but didn't know it yet. This innovative change in the role of the humble shopkeeper transformed Lessing from a little lunch counter operator into a highly regarded food service contractor. He called on every company executive who would listen, and before long Lessing’s Hospitality Group began to handle the food service for America's corporate giants like New York Trust, Chemical Bank, Reynolds & Co., Smith Barney, Goldman Sachs, Regis Paper and the New York Stock Exchange.

THE NEXT GENERATION

Because of Lawrence's success in making Lessing’s Hospitality Group a well-known name in food service management, the company was becoming a far more substantial and complex firm by the end of the 1950's. It was time for the next generation of Lessings to step up and guide the company into the modern age. Lawrence's son John, known as Jack, joined the company in 1958 and John's brother Lawrence III, known as Larry, followed a year later. Inspired by their father's love of the business, and with the Lessing gene working its particular magic, the brothers adopted very different roles in guiding Lessing’s Hospitality Group. Jack, like his father, was an expansive visionary who could connect with the wide variety of constituents that Lessing’s Hospitality Group now served, while Larry put his orderly logical mind to the task of managing the now highly complex, day-to-day business.

THE 1960'S AND 70'S

The 60's and 70's were very difficult for food service in the New York metropolitan area. For the first time in history, the population of New York City began to decline. Wartime industries either closed or moved to more economic locations. The New York City economic boom created by the war and the immediate post war period had created formidable competition. Companies such as Schrafft's, Child's, Savarin, Horn and Hardart and Stouffer's were all competing for both the coffee shop and the food service management dollar. The Wall Street banks would suffer two major recessions, and an industry reorganization moved most of the corporate headquarters' employees away from Wall Street. Culinary unions were ascendant during this period, and they eventually organized the Lessing bakers at 155 West 19th Street. The food service boom had ended, and the decades of the 60's and 70's would challenge the Lessing brothers to find new methods and new markets in which to do business.

CITY MOUSE - COUNTRY MOUSE

Millions of Americans followed Abraham Levitt's lead and moved to the suburbs in the 1950's. Living in Islip, Long Island, the Lessings were no strangers to the suburbs. Therefore, it was natural for them to expand their business beyond their Wall Street operations. They signed food service management contracts to feed Maxson Electronics, American Airlines, Michelin Tire and Great American Insurance Co. These strategic moves would change the face of their business and prove to be the salvation of the company. Jack and Larry successfully combined strategic thinking, aggressive marketing and careful management of detail to guide Lessing’s Hospitality Group through the two most difficult economic decades in modern food service history. As Manhattan became a more competitive market, the brothers expanded the company to the suburbs and continued the transformation of their company from a local chain of office building lunch counters to a regional food service management powerhouse. Another instinctive choice by the next generation of Lessings kept the company growing and thriving when others had failed.

DIVERSIFICATION (1980 - PRESENT)

Tight-knit Irish clans are often guided by an invisible hand. When I asked Jack, the Chairman of Lessing’s Hospitality Group, when the family first got into the retail restaurant business he answered, "It wasn't until 1977. My mother, a devout Irish Catholic, never wanted the family to sell liquor."

But in 1977, a friend of Jack's told him that the only bar in Breezy Point (the now world-famous New York Irish police and fireman's community destroyed in Hurricane Sandy) was for sale. The Bay Terrace Bar was the only pub in a community of 3,800 homes occupied by New York's firefighters and policemen. "It was a gold mine," Jack said. "We used to sell 250 cases of beer on a Saturday night. That was a lot of beer in 1977." He was hooked. The family began to diversify beyond contract food service into the retail restaurant business at just the right time.

Contract food service, a business that Lessing’s Hospitality Group had originated and built for 40 years, was becoming a commodity business by the late 1970s. Once the industry saw the food service market niche that Lessing’s Hospitality Group had created, everyone got into the business. Big corporations like Servomation and the Canteen Corporation joined hundreds of small independent contractors in increasing competition, until there were 8 or 9 bids submitted on every account. "Our B&I business was still strong because our customers were loyal, but it became harder and harder to make a profit in contract food service," Jack said. He saw how the cash flow from the Bay Terrace Bar could supplement the reliable but slim margins in contract food service, so he began to diversify into retail restaurants.

THE MAIN STREET INNOVATION

Prior to the 1980s, restaurant chains were not well received on Long Island, so few national chains bothered to open units in one of the nation's most densely populated suburbs. Long Islanders seemed to gravitate more towards local restaurants. The Lessings knew that any restaurant they opened must feel like a "local joint". They watched the success of the Bay Terrace Bar and waited for the Lessing innovation impulse to kick in. Eventually, they decided to open cafes that would serve the local clientele along Montauk Highway, the road that had become the Main Street of Long Island's South Shore villages. They would locate them in historic town buildings that the long-time residents were familiar with. In 1978, the Lessings opened their first Main Street restaurant in the historic post office building that had served the town of Babylon for many years. The Post Office Café quickly came to be considered a local place Babylon customers felt comfortable and at home in, and it has been going strong ever since.

EXPANSION

By the 1980s, the Main Streets along Long Island's South Shore were becoming gentrified by the growth of more modern shopping centers opening on Sunrise Highway.

With the Post Office Café booming, the Lessings migrated east along Montauk Highway to the little town of Bay Shore and opened their second Main Street Restaurant in the town's original fire house. The youth of Suffolk County instantly made the Firehouse the most popular young club on all of Long Island. Thirty years later the Lessings purchased the historic Southside Hotel, Bay Shore's original "local joint" across the street from the Firehouse.

History will record that Lessing’s Hospitality Group’s “Main Street restaurant” concept ignited a revival movement that has brought these historic Long Island Main Streets back to life.

When the original library closed in Farmingdale, Long Island, the Lessings bought the building and opened another Main Street restaurant, the Library Café. Each restaurant's success drove the Lessings along the same strategic path – find and purchase historic Long Island buildings that were icons to the local clientele. They opened Maxwell's on Main Street in Islip and bought the Huntington landmark, Finnegan's, perhaps the most "local" of all their Main Street pubs and cafés.

CONCESSIONS

During the 1970s and 80s, Lessing’s Hospitality Group was also operating over 100 concession locations at state, county and town parks from Montauk to Long Beach. They were the biggest picnic caterers in the state, at times feeding as many as 10,000 people. They operated the concessions at the now legendary Hecksher State Park, Eisenhower Park, Bethpage State Park, Sunken Meadow and Tobay Beach.

FINE DINING

In the 90s, the Lessings made another strategic decision when they purchased the most historic and iconic building of all, the Three Village Inn in Stony Brook, Long Island. Built in 1751, the Three Village Inn had served as a summerhouse, a Women's Exchange, a simple tearoom and a fine country inn. In this historic location, the Lessings expanded beyond their pub and cafe style Main Street restaurants to enter the fine dining segment with their now famous Mirabelle Restaurant & Tavern.

COMBINING INNOVATIONS

The Saxon Arms restaurant in Oakdale enjoyed the best waterfront view of the Great South Bay anywhere on Long Island. Lessing’s Hospitality Group bought this local favorite, changed the name to (what else?) View, refurbished the building and the menu and now operates the most popular dockside restaurant on Long Island's South Shore.

CATERING

The insight to appeal to local tastes by instantly becoming part of the local cultural heritage was a brilliant innovation. During the 1990s, the Lessings began a rapid expansion into the catering business by utilizing the same innovative instinct that served them so well in retail restaurants.

Long Island was comprised of rural farms and small seaport villages until the turn of the 20th century, when the great family fortunes created by the industrial revolution built vast estates on Long Island. More than 1,200 grand estates were built along the North Shore's "Gold Coast" of Great Gatsby fame. Many of these mansions remain in existence throughout Long Island to this day.

By the 1950s, grand-estate living was going out of style, and many of the mansions were turned over to colleges, charities and religious orders. Knowing that these estates were considered the best addresses in many local towns and villages, the Lessings decided to lease, license, or buy them for catering locations. What local bride would not want to be married in the grandest estate house in her village?

Lessing’s Hospitality Group now offers Long Island brides the opportunity to hold their wedding reception at Bourne Mansion, Whitby Castle, Chateau at Coindre Hall, Mansion at Timber Point, Mansion at West Sayville, The Vineyards in Aquebogue and Estate at Three Village Inn, to name just a few. These iconic locations have become so popular that Lessing’s Hospitality Group now caters more than 1,000 weddings a year.

IN THE PRESENT

From the beginning, Maxwell Lessing set out to be a trailblazer in the food and beverage industry. Today Lessing’s Hospitality Group continues to be an industry leader, and the company is still managed by the present generation of Lessings, who carry out Maxwell’s legacy every day. Most recently, Lessing's has expanded their portfolio to Florida, with the Crane Club at Tesoro, Charlie & Joe's at Love Street and now, New York City with Ellen's Stardust Diner & The Iridium.

AUTHOR'S NOTE

In this history I have attempted to reveal the secrets of longevity and consistency that enabled Lessing’s Hospitality Group to survive and thrive for over 130 years in the world's most competitive food service market. How did each generation attract the next generation into the business? How did they survive ever-changing tastes, a volatile commodity market, two world wars, the Great Depression and the Great Recession, inevitable family squabbles, an increasingly contentious legal environment and stiff competition from well-financed public companies? What was the magic?

Each Lessing generation, from Maxwell to the present, never took survival for granted. They responded to changing market conditions with CREATIVE INNOVATION.

Author, Francis Bennett, freelance writer

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CONTACT US

Corporate Headquarters

3500 Sunrise Highway
Bldg 100, Suite 100
Great River, NY 11739
631.567.8200
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New York City Office

40 West 57th Street
29th Floor
New York, NY 10019
212.764.3450
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Florida Office

825 S US Highway 1
2nd Floor, Suite 230
Jupiter, FL 33477
561.768.9118
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