MANDAN Historical Society

Working to Preserve & Promote Mandan's Heritage since 2004

Welcome

Membership

Activities

Mandan Museum

TR-Coe Exhibit

WWII Exhibit

Beanery Museum

Biographies A-D

J D Allen

Franklin Anders

Richard Baron

George Bingenheimer

William Block

Philip Blumenthal

Elijah Boley

Frank Briggs

Leo Broderick

William Broderick

Lyman Cary

James Clark

Henry Coe

Daniel Collins

Elizabeth Custer

George Custer

Alice Dahners

Henry Dahners

C E V (Charles) Draper

Esther Davis

Tony Dean

Joseph Devine

Biographies E-O

Ronald Erhardt

John Forbes

Palma Fristad

Gilbert Furness

Aloysius Galowitsch

Frederic Gerard

Zalmon Gilbert

Charles Grantier

James Hanley Jr

James Hanley Sr

Mary Harris

Michael Lang

William Langer

Albert Lanterman

William Lanterman

John Lockwood

Richard Longfellow

Rolland Lutz

Hiram Lyon

George Marback

Gary Miller

Lee Mohr

Margaret Naylor

John Newton

Anton Ness

John Osterhouse

Biographies P-Z

George Peoples

Arthur Peterson

Nels Romer

Hoy Russell

Antonie Rybnicek

Ervin Rybnicek

Hynek Rybnicek

Margaret Schaaf

George Shafer

Erica Schroeder

William Simpson

Anna Knox Stark

Mary Stark

J O Sullivan

John Sullivan

Era Bell Thompson

Andrew E. Thorberg

Ida Johnson Thorberg

George Toman

Earle Tostevin

Edwin A Tostevin Sr

Edwin D Tostevin Jr

Walter Tostevin

Felix Vinatieri

A B Welch

Levon West

Harry Wheeler

What's New

Area History

Mandan Rodeo / Fair

The 1880s

School Systems History

The 1890s

The 1900s

1901 Pan Am Expo

1903 TR Visit to NDak

The 1910s

1911 Fair & Airplane Demo

The 1920s

Prohibition in Mandan

The 1930s

FDR Visit August 1936

The 1940s

The 1950s

1958 Lincoln Stamp FDC

Custer Drama / Trail West

The 1960s

The 1970s

The 1980s

The 1990s

1st of the 21st

2010-Present

Area Landmarks

Cary Bldg - Mandan Drug

Christ the King Church

Collins Av Civic Bldg

First Lutheran Church

First National Bank Bldg

First Presbyterian Church

Lewis & Clark Hotel

Mandan Hill

Mandan Theatre

MV Produce Warehouse

Methodist Church

NP Beanery

NP "Colonial" RR Depot

NPRR Freighthouse

NP Rail High Bridge

Roughrider Statue

St Joseph Church

Great Plains Expermt Stn

WWar Memorial Bldg

Youth Correctional Center

Gone Forever

Collins Ave Courthouse

Cummins Building

Deaconess Hospital

Eielson Field

First St Federal Building

Havana Club

Hotel Nigey

InterOcean Hotel

Liberty Memorial Bridge

Mandan Creamery & Produce

NP "Queen Anne" Depot

Original Passenger Depot

Peoples' Hotel

Russell-Miller Mill

Rock Haven

Young's Tavern

Heritage Homes

Stuart Dunlap Home

Ellis-Uden Home

Freeburg-Esser Home

Lyon-Weigel Home

Olson-Brick Home

Parkins-Cooley Home

Stutsman-Wyatt Home

Swanson-Reichman Home

Welch-Ness Home

View Collections

Artifacts - Miscellanous

Newspapers

Pottery and Glass

Photos - Buildings

Photos - Downtown

Photos - Floods

Photos - People

Photos - Rail and Trains

Genealogy Links

Endowment Fund

Esther Elizabeth [Kubishta] Davis (b. 1937)
Esther Elizabeth Kubishta was born on March 28, 1937 in Dickinson, ND to parents Joseph and Elizabeth (Dassinger).  She was one of five children including Alfred; Rose (Raab); Helen (Meduna); and youngest brother Ed.  While much time was devoted to farm chores and schoolwork, activities also included ice skating on the river, riding horseback, skiing behind the horse, and neighborhood get-togethers butchering meat for the following winter.  Esther and her siblings played tag, hide & seek, and kick-the-can. "Family time" was spent playing cards and Chinese checkers. 
They had the first TV in the area, so neighbors came over to watch Friday night wrestling then play cards. Sundays were for church and getting together for big noon-time dinner with relatives. Occasionally they would stay "in town" after church and see a movie or go to a visiting carnival. Her father played cards with the men and her mother joined the the women to socialize at the German-Hungarian Hall.

While Esther graduated from Dickinson Central High School in 1955, she spent the last 3 months at North Dakota's tuberculosis sanitarium at San Haven.  She had tested positive for tuberculosis (TB) in her senior year.  Fortunately, she was retested shortly after her arrival and conculded she did not have the disease.  Infected patients were commonly isolated from the rest of the population; expected to live out their lives in sanitariums until new drugs provided new treatment options.  Esther credits this experience encouraging her to "grab life by the horns and go for everything life had to offer!"  

Now free, she attended Dickinson Teachers College (now Dickinson State University) on a "rural scholarship" which provided $300 per students to attend classes one year but commit to teach rural school for at least one year.  She taught for 2 years at the rural school she attended as a child.  Upon saving enough money to return to Dickinson State for another year, she graduated in 1958 with an associate degree.  She was the local TV personality hosting nationally syndicated children’s TV show "Romper Room" and worked at the "Vanity Shop" clothing store.

Esther married Barry Davis in 1960.  Barry was from Toronto, Canada and came to Dickinson with a trio who played at the Esquire Club.  When his fellow band members moved on, he stayed in Dickinson.  Leo Guon of Mandan's Havana Club convinced Barry to move the family to Mandan in 1962, playing as part of a musical trio at Jerry's Supper Club.  Esther supplemented the family's income by selling Avon products door-to-door.
 

They bought their first home in 1963 on Third Avenue.  Esther and Barry had three children; daughter Nancy Elizabeth (Langford) and sons Bob and Doug Davis.
Photo Courtesy of Esther Davis

Havana Club, a basement nightclub for years, staged the location to close many political, business (legal and maybe otherwise) deals.   After the Havana Club closed in the summer of 1964 due to financial problems, the Davises bought it, remodeled it, developed a new theme and renamed it "The Seven Seas." 

The hottest item on their menu was the South American steak, spiced with a sauce provided by a Los Angeles company that eventually went out of business. 
Faced with the prospect of missing a key ingredient to the top menu item, Esther replicated the flavor of the original sauce. “We got the list of ingredients off the label,” said Davis. “For six weeks, we spent every Saturday in a kitchen mixing things together, changing proportions, trying to get the flavor just right.”


Essie's South American Sauce, described as part barbecue, part teriyaki, and part Cajun, followed Davis after the Havana Club was destroyed by fire in 1970. The couple opened the Seven Seas Motor Inn, Restaurant and Lounge in north Mandan. Customers, hooked on the flavor of the sauce, followed.  Some patrons even brought their own jars to pack for home samples of the sauce.  Persuaded by the practice, Davis introduced the product commercially. It was described in a January 1988 Field and Stream Magazine article as “the best prepared sauce [the author] had ever tasted.”  Today the sauce is distributed regionally and available nationwide by mail order.
Esther was named Outstanding Small Business Owner by the GNDA in the early 1980s and later served on its executive committee.  She also served on the Mandan Zoning and Planning Commission and worked for the ND Legislature.  Esther retired from her job in 2005 as a sales manager for Best Western International, Inc. – a position she held for 17 years.

She maintains a large yard and garden focusing on raising roses and various perennials.  She travels world-wide, including destinations in all 50 states, Canada, Europe, South America, Central America, Southeast Asia and Africa.  She is a member of both a book club and a walking club. From her current residence in Seattle, WA, she also assists with the AARP Fraud Prevention Program to help seniors avoid scam investments.
 

The MHSoc's museum and office is located at 411 W Main St, Mandan, ND 58554
Contact us at info@mandanhistory.org or leave message at 
(701) 751-2983


Last Updated 05/04
/12    ©  2006-2012  Mandan Historical Society  All rights reserved