(MILFORD MILL – June 3, 2026) – There is a particular kind of ambition that doesn’t announce itself. It just works. It builds. It feeds people — literally and figuratively — and it never stops moving forward.
That is Donovan Murphy.
The owner and chief operator of seven Island Quizine restaurants and a thriving catering enterprise in Baltimore, Donovan Murphy has quietly become one of the most consequential figures in the city’s food and business landscape. And on June 4, 2026, he will be recognized as a Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards Woodlawn Honoree at 6665 Security Blvd in Woodlawn.
From Jamaica to Baltimore
Donovan was born and raised in a small district in St. Catherine, Jamaica. He came to the United States on scholarship, studying Environmental Sciences, Criminal Justice, and Criminology. He built a successful career as a fiber optic engineer — the kind of steady, technical work that most people would be content to retire from.
But Donovan Murphy is not most people.
His entrepreneurial spirit led him to purchase his first restaurant, and what happened next changed everything. That single investment revealed a passion he hadn’t fully known was there. The Island Quizine brand was born, and with it, a new chapter in Baltimore’s Caribbean dining scene.
Elevating Caribbean Cuisine Without Losing Its Soul
What separates Island Quizine from the competition isn’t just the food — though the food speaks for itself. It’s the intentionality behind the brand. Donovan has made it his mission to elevate the taste, presentation, and overall dining experience of Jamaican cuisine while preserving its authentic roots. Seven locations later, the brand has become a staple, a destination, and a source of pride for Baltimore’s Caribbean community and well beyond.
Now he’s expanding again. His new concept, IQ Bar and Grill, is set to redefine Caribbean-inspired dining and introduce the brand to an entirely new audience.
A Workplace Built on Family
Ask anyone who has worked for Donovan Murphy and they’ll tell you — Island Quizine isn’t just a job. It’s a culture. He has created countless employment opportunities across his locations, fostering an environment rooted in discipline, unity, and mutual respect. He hires with passion and without prejudice, and he means it. The result is a team that functions like family and a brand that reflects the values of its founder.
Community Is Not a Marketing Strategy — It’s a Way of Life
What truly sets Donovan apart is what he does when the restaurant doors close.
Every Christmas and Thanksgiving, he organizes banquet-style meals for the homeless in Baltimore. He has partnered with Baltimore Rescue Mission and Pen North Homelessness to provide meals, coats, and essential support to those who need it most. He has worked alongside Empowerment Temple, Mount Olive Baptist, and Greater Baltimore Tabernacle, offering mentorship and guidance to aspiring entrepreneurs through the church community.
His commitment to youth is equally serious. He has supported Windsor Mill Middle, Pikesville Middle, Milford Academy, Randallstown High, and Owings Mills High schools with sporting gear, uniforms, meals, and financial sponsorships. He mentors students at Franklin High School and has delivered business and leadership talks at Morgan State University and the University of Maryland.
When Hurricane Katrina devastated Louisiana and Mississippi, Donovan didn’t just write a check. He organized a team and went down to help. That’s who he is.
Today, he continues investing in local neighborhoods — helping restore playgrounds and recreational spaces so that children and families have safe places to simply be.
Black Wall Street WOODLAWN
The Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards, now in its 15th year, has honored more than 3,000 Black entrepreneurs across nine cities. The WOODLAWN event takes place June 4, 2026, at 6665 Security Blvd — hosted at Andre Boyd’s — and Donovan Murphy is exactly the kind of honoree this platform was built to celebrate.
His story is a reminder that the path to success rarely runs in a straight line. It runs through sacrifice, through service, through a willingness to bet on yourself even when no one is watching.
Donovan Murphy bet on himself. Baltimore is richer for it.
🎟️ RSVP at blackwallstreetwoodlawn.eventbrite.com.
Doni Glover is the founder and publisher of BMORENews.com, now in its 24th year of covering Black Baltimore, and the founder of the Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards, now in its 15th year. He is also the host of the Emmy-nominated Doni Glover podcast and The Doni Glover Show on WMAR-TV 2.


