ST. PETERSBURG – Peach walls are painted with jazz murals that come to life beside an outdoor courtyard with the background music of a flowing fountain. Just a tuba and a saxophone away is the Carter G. Woodson African American History Museum.
Chief’s Creole Café is run by both Elihu and Carolyn Brayboy, but if you look around you’ll see Mrs. Brayboy pounding nails and painting walls and doors. They do a role reversal: he shops and manages relationships while she reupholsters and goes to Home Depot. That’s how they run this mom and pop restaurant with 10 employees.
Chief’s just celebrated its third year on 22nd Street South on Nov.1, and the Brayboys are now opening up a meeting room and a new barbeque place, Chief’s Smokehouse, adjacent to the courtyard.

John “Geech” Black


Besides hard work and education, the employees are not just your waiter, they are your friends. Chief’s restaurant gives you a New Orleans feeling—and you really do feel like you are away from hard times and from the world when you are at Chief’s—you feel happy and relaxed on their patio!



Mr & Mrs B they never meet a stranger,they accepted me with open arms,they never disrespected me,no one at Chief’s has ever called me outside of my name! Mrs.B she can not sit still