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Lennie's on the Turnpike

by Jen Ratliff on 2023-03-28T08:44:22-04:00 | 0 Comments

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Lennie's on the Turnpike was a legendary jazz club on the North Shore. Proprietor Lennie Sogoloff managed to attract some of the best jazz talent in the country, along with non-jazz artists such as Bette Midler and Jay Leno.

Leonard Sogoloff was born in 1923, the last of six children of Russian immigrants Samuel and Sadie Sandler Sogoloff. After graduating from Peabody High School in 1941, Lennie was drafted into the Army. After the war, Lennie enrolled at the School of Practical Art on Newbury Street in Boston. In 1946, he began working for his friend Penny Abell at The Paddock Club in West Peabody. He met Art Litka, a pianist from Beverly, at the club and started to work for him as an independent record label distributor.

Lennie Sogoloff and Penny Abell opened The Turnpike Club on Rt. 1 in Peabody in 1951; it had a jukebox and seating for 56 people. In 1954, Lennie took over as the sole owner of The Turnpike Club. He married Barbara Raby in 1956 and they had three children: Leanne, Karen, and Adam. Lennie and Barbara decided to present live music at the club in 1958. Joe Bucci, an accordionist from Malden, was the first full-time house musician. Lennie booked his first nationally known artist, Roy Eldridge, in 1963.

In December 1964, Lennie moved the building back 150 feet from Route 1 to accommodate more parking. The club expanded and could seat 200 people; it was often packed as Lennie's attracted more nationally known bands such as Duke Ellington and Stan Getz. Lennie's on the Turnpike was destroyed by fire on May 30, 1971. It reopened three months later at the Village Green, which was about two miles north of the original club location. Lennie decided to close the club in 1972 to spend more time with his family. After the club closed, Lennie became the manager of Empire Clothing Co. in downtown Salem, where he worked for over 20 years. Lennie Sogoloff died on July 12, 2014.

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Digitized Archives
Lennie's on the Turnpike Finding Aid
Lennie's on the Turnpike Photographs and Ephemera


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