The home of “Omaha’s Best Burger” may be the last remnant of the once rough-and-tumble, working-class Sheelytown neighborhood.

Dinker’s Bar & Grill proudly broadcasts that message to anyone passing it via Interstate 480. The story of Dinker’s doesn’t start at its familiar home, it started two doors down after the interstate severed the longtime Polish enclave.

In 1960, Anton Kurtz (Kurcz) moved his bar from the east side of 29th Street at 2367 S. 29th Street to the west side at 2364 S. 29th Street. It was the construction of the interstate that prompted the move for the longtime bar owner. The city bulldozed everything between 28th and 29th Street a year later. Kurtz transferred his liquor license to Frank “Dinker” Synowiecki five years later.

1967 photo of Dinkers at its original location with a false front to celebrate Nebraska’s Centennial. Courtesy Joyce Zagozda Synowiecki.

Like Kurtz, Frank was the son of Polish immigrants whose family settled in South Omaha. After serving in the Navy during World War II, he returned home to marry his bride Rosemary Slizoski. It wasn’t until after he started a family and got laid off from his job at a meatpacking plant that he opened his namesake bar in 1965.

Frank continued to operate Dinker’s Bar from its original location for 14 years, at which point he saw an opportunity to relocate and expand his establishment to its current home. Built in 1914, the brick building at 2368 S. 29th Street was originally home to the Hanscom Theater. With seating for 200, the theater only remained in business for a short time before closing. Afterward, Joseph Zagurski opened a neighborhood grocery which he converted to a bar called Hanscom Inn with the help of his son, Ted, in 1938.

1971 Durham Museum photo of a band playing in front of Dinker’s Bar along 29th St.

Once the war began, young men preparing for deployment often left their ties at Hanscom Inn, which accumulated more than 190. Fortunately, all 190 men returned home to reclaim them. After Joe passed away in 1956, the bar continued to operate until 1961.

In 1962, Omaha Police Sergeant Fred Bruning and his wife, Rose Cascio, opened Big Fred’s Bar. The Bruning family later relocated and opened Big Fred’s Pizza Garden and Lounge in West Omaha in 1965. Bill McDowell subsequently operated the Scheely Tavern from the building until it was destroyed by a fire in 1979. Following the fire, Frank gutted and renovated the space, adding a large bar and a full kitchen.

1971 Omaha World-Herald photograph as the building is being repaired after a storm damage.

Frank was deeply involved in the community’s Polish music scene and was named King of Nebraska Polka Days at Peony Park in 1972. He regularly booked polka bands to perform at Dinker’s and hosted Sheelytown street dances beginning in the early 1970s, shutting down 29th Street to accommodate the large crowds. The street dances came to an end as Polish residents largely moved away from the area.

1971 Durham Museum photo of couples dancing out front of Dinker’s Bar on 29th St during one its popular street dances.

The addition of a kitchen was Rosemary’s doing. She would make 10 pounds of hand-pressed hamburger patties before heading to work at Western Electric. Bartenders cooked the burgers on a small grill, along with Polish sausage and kraut on a steamer, feeding customers who sat around drinking and playing cards after their shifts at Falstaff or Kellogg’s.

1971 Durham Museum photograph of Scheely Tavern at 2368 S29th Street, the current home of Dinker’s Bar & Grill.

Frank was described as a shrewd businessman who was larger-than-life, loud, and a boisterous promoter. The devoted family man, along with being an active member of his church, also found time to coach the Lil’ Dinks softball and football teams in addition to hosting Easter egg hunts and hiring a Santa to hand out stockings each year. When Frank retired in 1993, he turned the family business over to his children.

1980 photograph Scheely Tavern after the fire. Dinker’s would move to this location after renovating the space. Courtesy of Joyce Zagozda Synoweicki.

Today, Dinker’s appeal extends all across the city. Always popular with the old-timers in the neighborhood, it also has its fans from 10th Street to 204th Street and beyond. It’s also a draw for Creighton University students, players, and fans alike. The menu even features a Bluejay burger, inspired by Creighton’s own Doug McDermott.

OE photo of Diner’s Bar & Grill at its current home at 2368 S 29th St.

It’s one of a dying breed of bar and grill where you seat yourself, order food from the back counter, and drinks from the bar. The cash-only establishment has an ATM on site for the unprepared. Served on Rotella’s buns, the burgers continue to follow Rosemary’s recipe and are made from one-third pound portions of unseasoned ground beef, formed using a seven-ounce ice cream scoop, and cooked on a griddle primed with bacon, which gives the meat its flavor.

The Husker Burger at Dinker’s Bar & Grill. Photo courtesy of Dinker’s Bar & Grill.

In 2016, a large mural depicting scenes from Omaha’s three original Polish neighborhoods, along with St. Stanislaus Church, St. Francis Church, and Sheelytown, was painted on the southern wall. It was one of a series of murals throughout South Omaha intended to capture the area’s rich immigrant history.

The Polish community mural painted on the south side of Dinker’s depicting a four-day neighborhood wedding. Artists Mike Girón, Richard Harrison, Quintin Slovek, Rhianna Girón and Gary Kastrick. Photo courtesy of South Omaha Mural Project.

Dinker’s has received numerous accolades over the years, including Favorite Burger Bar, Best Burger, Nebraska’s Most Iconic Bar by Thrillist, and one of the 38 Essential Omaha Restaurants by Eater in 2019.

It’s fitting that the establishment Dinker, the one-time King of Nebraska Polka Days, opened more than 60 years ago remains the most visible remnant of Sheelytown. The same man who shut down 29th Street for the community’s famous street dances saw those dances make a comeback in 2025 for Dinker’s 60th anniversary. Sheelytown could have no better representative.

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Recent photograph of Dinker’s original home at 2364 S 29th Street.

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5 responses to “Frank Synowiecki’s Dinker’s Bar & Grill”

  1. […] Barnes Preema Drive-Inn to Bronco’s Hamburgers Frank Synowiecki’s Dinker’s Bar & Grill From King’s Food Host to Don & Millie’s Dick Duda and Gene […]

  2. […] Barnes Preema Drive-Inn to Bronco’s Hamburgers Frank Synowiecki’s Dinker’s Bar & Grill From King’s Food Host to Don & Millie’s Dick Duda and Gene […]

  3. “In 2016 the large mural depicting scenes from Omaha’s three original Polish neighborhoods in addition to St. Stanislaus and St. Francis Churches and Sheelytown was painted on its southern wall. It was one of a series of murals painted through South Omaha intended to capture its rich history of immigration.” Oh, oh, if he finds out about that, won’t Trump demand that they be painted over, as in Chicago? There: “Even as BLM Plaza is dismantled, the reciprocal mirroring of these murals ensures their persistence,” Owen said, “now also reflecting the absence of spaces that have been removed.”

  4. […] Frank Synowiecki’s Dinker’s Bar & Grill […]

  5. […] Frank Synowiecki’s Dinker’s Bar & Grill […]

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