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  • No more pressing business

    Manteca Bulletin, CA
    July 24 2005

    No more pressing business


    Bobson Cleaners closing after 79 years

    Bobson Cleaners, one of Manteca's oldest-running family-owned
    business institutions, is closing its doors after serving the
    community for nearly eight decades. Seventy-nine years to be exact.
    "It was just time. I've been there for over 50 years; it's a long
    time," said Vi Bobson who has been at the helm of Bobson Cleaners for
    about as long as she and husband Ernie have been married.

    The business will remain open until Aug. 24 to allow customers to
    come and pick up their dry-cleaned items; however, they are not
    accepting any more work orders.

    Bobson Cleaners' history goes back to 1926 when a young immigrant
    from Armenia named Mihran Bobson moved to Manteca and opened a
    tailoring shop on the block of West Yosemite Avenue where Yosemite
    Cafe is located today. A master tailor, Mihran came to California via
    Chicago where he had a brother. But he also had another brother in
    San Francisco who moved there the year of the great 1906 earthquake,
    and a sister living in Los Angeles, and eventually left the Windy
    City and followed those two siblings to the Golden State.

    Mihran settled in Fresno where he had three flourishing tailor shops
    for a number of years before he decided to make the move to Manteca,
    not for any particular reason except for the fact it was near the
    coast.


    As Vi Bobson explained it, "He liked the idea of only 60 miles away
    from the coast."

    Manteca was just a small and newly incorporated city when Mihran
    opened his tailoring shop on West Yosemite Avenue. In 1930, he
    "developed" the dry-cleaning business, as his youngest son Ernie put
    it.

    Ernie came into the business in 1950 after he graduated from the
    University of the Pacific, then College of the Pacific, in Stockton
    where he majored in business on a sports scholarship. He played
    football for four years. Before that, an older brother managed the
    business.

    In the last 50 years, Bobson Cleaners grew into one big operation.
    "At one time, we had 21 locations up and down the valley. We went all
    the way down to Merced. We had three or four in Modesto. We had six
    plants in Stockton. We had shops all the way to Walnut Creek, Castro
    Valley as well as in Escalon and Oakdale," recalled Vi who took over
    the management of the business while her husband worked in real
    estate development, commuting to his office in Sacramento for 20
    years.

    Managing the family business was originally not in Vi's plans. A
    science major at the University of the Pacific, she had planned to
    work at a laboratory, which she did briefly. She worked for Manteca
    chemist, Dr. Claire Weast. She also worked in national advertising at
    the Stockton Record.

    But the family business simply fell on her lap. "We do what we have
    to do, don't we?" she simply stated.

    Fifteen years ago, Bobson Cleaners took a quantum leap when the
    Bobsons tore down the old plant on the corner of their property at
    North Main and Edison Street. They built the new building farther
    back from North Main Street complete with state-of-the-art,
    computerized equipment. The Bobsons' property used to be larger, but
    they later sold part of the land to Bank of Stockton.

    Vi Bobson recalled that when they built the new facility, she said
    she'd give the business two more years and then retire, but somehow
    those two years turned to 15 years, she recalled with a laugh.

    While the business flourished for many years, the Bobsons said they
    have had their ups and downs like any other in the industry.

    "Dry cleaning won't make you rich but it's a good bread and butter.
    It sent four children to college," Vi Bobson pointed out.

    The youngest of the Bobsons' four children is Dr. Craig Bobson of
    Manteca, a family practitioner. Son Rancy is an engineer in San
    Mateo, and oldest son Mark is an appraiser in Linden. Only daughter
    Nimi Thackerson, a Sacramento State University graduate and an
    artist, gave up her career as a buyer for major store chains 20 years
    ago to come and help her parents manage the business in Manteca. She
    is now helping her parents go through the process of closing the
    business.

    Thackerson said the family was fortunate to have had employees who
    were "a big part of why this business worked" and became a success.

    "They took pride in their work. They really took care of our business
    like it was their business. We were very fortunate with the team that
    we had. We have lots of loyalty here," said Thackerson of Bobsons'
    employees, many of whom have been with the company for many years.

    Her assistant manager, Frances Rivera, for example, had been with
    them for 10 years.

    "Fran has done a great job in customer service. Everybody just loved
    her; she's the best," said Thackerson who calls her mother "the
    matriarch of the business for 50 years."

    Through the years, they have also met wonderful people in the
    community who patronized their business, the Bobsons said. One
    particular customer that they singled out was Joan Kauffman.

    "She'd bring all the girls baked treats every week. She's been such a
    great inspiration to them; she gave us lots of support as customer,"
    Thackerson enthused.

    But helping people look good in their business suits and former wear
    was not the only thing that Bobson Cleaners has given to the
    community.

    "My parents are great people who have done so much for this
    community. I really admire them. My mother is a real humanitarian and
    a philanthropist," Thackerson said of her parents who, together, have
    been involved in many civic organizations and projects. Ernie was a
    charter member of one of the Kiwanis clubs in Manteca and is still
    active in SIRS in Stockton, a club of retired professionals. Vi, for
    her part, has been a member of the Manteca Federated Club for nearly
    as long as she has been involved in the business. She continues to
    remain active in the club. Both husband and wife also are currently
    active in the Symphony Comes to Manteca Committee.

    While running the business has been hectic and time-consuming, the
    Bobsons managed to squeeze in some down time to pursue their
    individual hobbies. Both golfed at one time. Ernie still does, but
    since Vi's stroke six years ago, she has given up the hobby. She was
    active with a golfing group at Spring Creek Golf Course in Ripon
    where she still continues to meet with fellow Federated Women for a
    game of bridge regularly.

    Vi Bobson said retirement will definitely be just as busy for her.

    "I have a lot of things I'm involved in," she said, as well as many
    hobbies. One of them is upholstery and gardening.

    "I'm a plain dirt farmer. I love to garden. I spend most of my time
    in the back yard," she said.

    As for her husband, she said, "his avocation has always been his
    vocation."

    Before they can start pursuing their avocations though, at least for
    Vi Bobson there's still plenty of things to keep her busy for the
    next two months.

    "I still have to do the bookkeeping. I have to dissolve a
    corporation. It's a lot of work," she said.
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