7 Lost & Gone (But Not Forgotten) New England Restaurants
From their giant steaks to their tasty muffins, these now-closed New England restaurants live on in our memories (especially when our stomachs grumble).

Coffee By Design | Portland, Maine
Photo Credit : Katherine KeenanHere in New England, we develop pretty strong attachments to the places that serve us what, and how, we like best … and boy, do we miss them when they’re gone. We are lucky enough to still have many wonderful eateries from which to choose, from Kelly’s Roast Beef to Louis’ Lunch, and we appreciate them all. But we never let go of our past loves, so let’s step into the wayback machine and revisit a few of the now-closed New England restaurants that live on in our memory.
7 Lost & Gone (But Not Forgotten) New England Restaurants

Photo Credit : John Margolies/Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division
Hilltop Steak House | Saugus, MA
In the early decades of the car boom, Route 1 in Saugus, Massachusetts, was a bastion of kitschy restaurants, each of which wore its theme proudly and worked to out-do the others. From the Chinese palace Weylu’s to the giant (and rather unhappy-looking) bull at Full of Bull Roast Beef, restaurants and other attractions — including a mini-golf course that featured a 50-foot-tall orange dinosaur — competed for attention as vigorously as reality show contestants.
But even among those eye-catching neighbors, Hilltop Steak House stood out. There was no mistaking the type of experience that awaited after you drove past a pasture of fiberglass cows and turned in at the 68-foot-tall cactus sign. There were “Wanted” posters and bull horns on the walls. Dining rooms were named after places like Kansas City, Dodge City, and Sioux City. The rooms were big, the drinks were big, and the food was big (the standard-size sirloin was 18 ounces, but much larger cuts were available as well). And the profits? They were biggest of all. In its prime, Hilltop Steakhouse was regularly listed among the busiest restaurants in the world.
Hilltop Steak House was founded in 1961 by a butcher named Frank Giuffrida, and it was popular from the start. Despite the restaurant’s impressive size (at 20,000 square feet, it could accommodate up to 1,400 patrons), the porches were often lined with customers waiting to get in. In 1989, Hilltop grossed $60 million, serving more than 2 million hungry diners. But by then the end was in sight: Giuffrida had sold the business the previous year, and it did not fare well under later owners. There was a push to open Hilltop locations across New England, but tastes were changing, and the auxiliary restaurants never quite succeeded in capturing the appeal of the original. The downturn in public favor that doomed the new locations eventually caught up with the original as well, and in 2013, the Saugus Hilltop Steak House served its last meal and joined the ranks of now-closed New England restaurants.
Pewter Pot Muffin House | Boston, MA
This Boston-based chain was the creation of Cambridge native V.J. Catania. At its early-1970s zenith, Pewter Pot Muffin Houses could be found from Harvard Square to Cape Cod, about 40 of them in all. The lure? Muffins, of course — from standard varieties like blueberry and coffee cake to unusual creations like almond tea and fruit cocktail (there were even “mystery muffins” for daring diners.)
The Pewter Pot was also known for good coffee — served in pewter pots — and hearty chowders, sandwiches, and breakfast foods. (Its clam chowder recipe continues to circulate online, still in demand after all these years).
The interior of most locations had an old-Boston feel, with heavy wooden tables and dark-beamed ceilings. The walls featured murals of a traveling muffin man making his rounds.
Pewter Pot Muffin House did not have a long run. Catania opened his first restaurant in 1963 (belying the menu’s claim of “famous since 1831”), but 10 years later he had sold all the locations except the one in Falmouth. He repackaged it as the Hearth ‘n Kettle and eventually expanding that brand to five Cape Cod locations. He would also later own three other New England classics: the Cape Codder Resort and Residences in Hyannis, the Dan’l Webster Inn in Sandwich, and the John Carver Inn in Plymouth.

Photo Credit : Aimee Seavey
Durgin-Park | Boston, MA
New England has seen some long-serving restaurants, but there aren’t many that can say they lasted nearly two centuries. Durgin-Park, a staple in Boston’s Faneuil Hall since 1827, closed its doors on January 12, 2019. At the time of its closing, it was the second-oldest restaurant in Boston (behind Union Oyster House, 1826) and the fifth-oldest in the country.
Durgin-Park’s roots actually go back even further, since it grew out of a food hall that opened shortly after Faneuil Hall’s construction in 1742. John Durgin and Eldridge Park took that over in 1827 (a third partner, John Chandler, came aboard in 1840, but by then it was apparently too late to add his name). Following the 1877 deaths of Durgin and Park, Chandler and his heirs ran the restaurant until 1945. Two more owners saw the restaurant through its next 60 years, until it was finally sold in 2007 to Ark Restaurants, whose other holdings include Bryant Park Grill in New York City and Sequoia in Washington, D.C.
During its long run, Durgin-Park flirted with expansion, operating satellite locations at Copley Place and Logan Airport for a time. But it was hard to match the unique charm of the original, whose hallmarks included long waits, 20-seat communal tables, and sassy/surly waitstaff. The menu highlighted the restaurant’s deep roots, serving up traditional New England boiled dinners and pot roast, as well as steamed lobster, chowders, and broiled prime rib. And for dessert, you couldn’t go wrong with Durgin-Park’s Indian pudding.
Green Ridge Turkey Farm | Nashua, NH
In 1931, George and Grace Kimball purchased 200 acres of land in Nashua, New Hampshire, and turned the property into a turkey farm. It fronted onto Daniel Webster Highway, so that’s where they put their farm stand — and business was good. By 1938, the Kimballs had added turkey sandwiches and ice cream to its offerings, and after those were met with high demand, they opened a restaurant in 1940, serving their own turkeys and other fare.
But on November 27, 1950, just four days after Thanksgiving, a massive fire leveled the restaurant. Not having adequate insurance to rebuild, the Kimballs opted to sell. In March 1951, Howard Flanders and his family became the new owners of Green Ridge Turkey Farm, and a rebuilt restaurant reopened the following year. Victor and Anna Charpentier purchased the farm and restaurant in 1954, and they ran it until Victor died in 1966. At that point, ownership passed to Victor’s nephew, Luc Charpentier, who ran the restaurant until it closed in the mid-1990s.
Throughout its run, seafood remained a popular menu item and pies were the go-to desserts, but the star of the show never changed. Every day was Thanksgiving at Green Ridge Turkey Farm, and the roast turkey with stuffing and potatoes and cranberry sauce is what put it on the map. (Well, that and the giant turkey that overlooked it all from the restaurant’s iconic highway sign.)
Today, a mammoth Barnes & Noble bookstore occupies the space where the restaurant once stood.
Brigham’s | Massachusetts
Founded by Massachusetts native Edward Brigham in 1914, Brigham’s opened in the Boston suburb of Newton as a single shop, with the proprietor selling the ice cream and candy he made in the back room. It was a hit from the start, and before long the store’s popularity soared to the point that on some busy days the police had to be called on for crowd control. Among Brigham’s claims to fame was popularizing — or perhaps even creating — “jimmies” as an ice cream topping.
Brigham’s quickly outgrew its mom-and-pop roots. Dedicated production facilities were established, and more than 20 new Brigham’s locations opened in the 1930s and 1940s. Then when Star Market bought Brigham’s in 1961, it sparked a flurry of expansion that added another 40 restaurants to the mix. At its height, Brigham’s had 100 restaurants across Massachusetts. The food was fine (think burgers, tuna melts, and BLTs), but the ice cream was always the draw. They made a mean lime rickey too.
Following a return to private ownership in 1982, Brigham’s capitalized on its most popular offering and began selling packaged ice cream in supermarkets. When hard times descended in the 2000s, the company was split into two entities, with the restaurant business being sold to Deal Metrics, and the retail ice cream business, along with the Brigham’s name and trademark flavors, being sold to Hood, which continues to distribute them to stores under the Brigham’s name. The final Brigham’s-branded restaurant, located in Arlington, Massachusetts, retired the name in 2015.
Chadwick’s | Lexington, MA
Located on the town line between Lexington and Waltham, Massachusetts, Chadwick’s was best known for its ice cream sundaes, and most famously the “BellyBuster”: 20 (some say 30!) scoops of ice cream, carried to the table on a silver platter by multiple busboys, who would pretend to struggle with the weight. Supposedly, the BellyBuster was free to anyone who could eat it all in one go.
Equally memorable were the Chadwick’s birthday celebrations — and since the whole thing worked on the honor system, it was pretty much always someone’s birthday. Actress Amy Poehler worked at Chadwick’s as a teenager in the late 1980s, as did her future Saturday Night Live castmate Rachel Dratch. In a 2013 essay in The New Yorker, Poehler described the scene:
Chadwick’s was one of those fake old-timey restaurants. The menus were written in swoopy cursive. The staff wore Styrofoam boaters and ruffled white shirts with bow ties…. Every time a customer was celebrating a birthday, an employee had to bang a drum that hung from the ceiling, and play the kazoo, and encourage the entire restaurant to join him or her in a sing-along. Other employees would ring cowbells and blow noisemakers. I would stand on a chair and loudly announce, “Ladies and gentlemen, we are so happy to have you at Chadwick’s today, but we are especially happy to have Kevin! Because it’s Kevin’s birthday today! So, at the sound of the drum, please join me in singing Kevin a very happy birthday!”
Décor included a large-wheeled 19th-century-style bicycle that hung on the wall, and for a while, a Superman cape could be found hanging in the phone booth in the back. But alas, all good things must come to an end. Despite its popularity, Chadwick’s closed in 1998. There is now a daycare center where it once stood, at the corner of Waltham Street and Concord Avenue.
Jordan Marsh Bakery | Boston, MA
Founded in Boston by Eben Jordan and Benjamin Marsh in 1851, Jordan Marsh & Company was a pioneering department store that expanded throughout New England and beyond, becoming a popular anchor store as mall shopping took off in the 1950s and 1960s. At its height, the Jordan Marsh flagship store at Downtown Crossing was Boston’s largest store, with 1.7 million square feet of retail space. Here, shoppers could not only find a wide range of clothing and items from “around the world,” but also be treated to fashion shows, concerts, holiday exhibits, art shows, and a bakery that soon became famous for its blueberry muffins.
Located on the ground floor, the Jordan Marsh Food Shop and Bakery would have shoppers following their noses toward those signature muffins and other baked goods; once there, they could also browse gourmet snacks and gift baskets. For many shoppers — and especially for any weary kids and spouses who accompanied them — the bakery was an essential part of a long day of shopping at Boston’s destination store.
In the mid-1990s, amid flagging sales, Jordan Marsh closed its doors for good, with the remaining stores being rebranded as Macy’s. But the man who had been behind those delicious muffins for more than 30 years, baker John Pupek, wasn’t ready to let go. So he opened his own shop, the Jordan Marsh Muffin Co., in Brockton, Massachusetts, in 1998. After a six-year run, Pupek retired on Christmas Eve of 2004. Luckily, the recipe has been preserved for those who would like to make those classic Jordan Marsh blueberry muffins at home.
Which now-closed New England restaurants do you miss most?
This post was first published in 2020 and has been updated.
I believe another should be added to this list. The General Glover House in Swampscott was a well attended and fabulous restaurant for many, many years and greatly missed by many New Englanders.
Yes!
The HobBob Restaurant on the Boston Post Road in Madison, Connecticut served the most amazing fried chicken and shaved ham grinders! My favorite place to eat while spending summers at the shore.
Berneice’s, Cello House, Captains Table. All quality seafood, shoreline of Guilford was a restaurant Mecca. Good call with “Hob Knob”????
You forgot Anthony’s Pier 4!
I never forgot Anthony’s !! Popovers !!!!!
No Name Restaurant. Yolken’s.
McIntyre’s in Rowley.
Always good, Always fun
Love that place. The clams were fantastic
Always went to. McIntyres when I came back home to Massachusetts Now the. The ClamBox has taken its place with my family.
Don’t forget the Toll House,home of the famous cookies.
I’m sorry to hear that Durgin Park closed, it was a landmark for Boston and you could not make reservation even if you were the President of the United States. Now with this pandemic so many more good places have closed.
What about Bailey’s Ice Cream shops
I’ve hit them all and have such fond memories. Thinking about Howard Johnson’s and The Red Coach Inn restaurants. Clown sundaes…yum. Bittersweet…thank you.
Red Coach Grill Wayland and Cambridge…
The Toll House in Whitman, MA
How about Dini’ s, a favorite seafood restaurant our family went to for celebrations. My dad always got fin’n’ Haddie we kids would pronounce it.
And if you were lucky after shopping Filene’s basement and were good a trip to Bailey’s ice cream for a Sunday . The marble counter and heart shaped backs on the chairs, the outstanding hot fudge dripping onto the saucer from the metal ice cream dish. Wicked yummy! There was a candy store in the front that something special for everyone.
And last, because it’s Christmas, Filene’s would have dinner with Santa which was the greatest treat of all. There was music and some of Santa’s elves would bring you a box of your own crayons and coloring pages while you waited for dinner. Santa and Mrs. Claus would make an appearance.
Afterwards you would go outside to see the decorated windows and across the street to Jordan’s Enchanted Village the to the toy floor. What was more exciting? Riding the elevator with the attendant sliding the metal door across or going to the toy floor where there were tables of toys to try out.
Thanks for the memories of all.
You are right about all!
Yokens “Thar She Blows” restaurant in Portsmouth NH
There was also a location on Route 1 in Danvers, MA
The Toll House in Whitman Ma home of the Toll House cookie was our place of family gatherings until it burned down in 1984.
Bailey’s. I loved going in for a cup of corn chowder on a cold day.
I have great memories of The Town Lyne House. Their homemade mayonnaise was to die for. My parents would take us there if we were going to Boston, and it was a special treat for us.
I lived on the corner of Broadway ( RT 1) and Lakeside about 4 doors down from the Towne Lyne House between 69-71 . We ate there a couple of times . Loved it. Was sad to hear Brigham’s closed. My go to place for Jimmies and a Lime Rickey. Had been to the Hearth and Kettle in Hyannis back in the 80’s while visiting my grandmother. Went to the one in West Yarmouth two years ago was not that impressed. Hoping someone takes an interest in Durgin Park and re-open it again A shame to see a legend fade away. My cousin’s husband Eric and his brothers Frank and Biddle Thompson owned Snow Inn and Thompson Brothers Clam Bar in Harwich Port. The brothers passed away fairly young, Edric Jr. carried the business for a number of years after. Never knew who might show up at the Clam Bar. The Clam Bar closed and the Inn is a private resort now. Great memories of that places. I now go to Brax Landing when am in Harwich Port
I was just wondering if anyone knows the name of the restaurant where Kelly’s on RT 1 is now. I tried googling it but doesn’t come up
That Rte 1 Kelly’s was a Red Coach Grille years ago
They used to have a giant cart outside on the corner of it with really big wheels….I remember Red Coach Grill, good food too
In the early 1960’s it was a Red Coach Grill. Then one of the first Mexican restaurants in the area – the name escapes me…
It was El Torito!!!
El Torito
I too miss The Town Lyne House. Their pecan rolls were to die for.
Yes!! The Town Lyne House. My parents and I would go there for special meals. Last meal there was with my dad in, I think, 1980 or 1981.
I know there are a few Friendly’s still struggling along, but it’s in name only. The classic stand-alone colonial style restaurants in places like downtown Plymouth and Orleans were a staple of my youth.
There is a Friendly’s on Rte. 1, Norwood, on the outbound side. Rte. 1 there is called Providence Hwy.
There is a Friendly’s on Rte. 1, Norwood, on the outbound side. Rte. 1 there is called Providence Hwy.
I loved the Pewter Pot. They had excellent muffins and a great breakfast. I used to go there before my evening shift. Also York Steak House!!
I miss Howard Johnson’s!
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/visiting-the-last-surviving-howard-johnsons
Greatly miss so many,this topic really stirs memories for a lot of us,..how about Dino’s Sea Grill on Tremont Street Boston?
The first time I had a Lobster “Out” was in Dini’s. I managed to puncture my hand with one of the claw spines, and had to use the napkin around my hand to finish the Lobster.
Dini’s Sea Grill!!
The Pillar House in Newton
Excellent, my mom and her friend Marge took me there when I was expecting my first baby, a special day!
Jack & Marion’s in Brookline and Fantasia’s in Cambridge.
Wonderful memories….
There have been sooo many great independent restaurants, especially in New England, it’s hard to name all that have gone. How about Sandy’s on the bridge to the Cape, Redwood in Mendon, Coney Island in Worcester, of course Anthony’s , The No Name, the Hilltop in Worcester, and the list goes on. Thanks for the memories to this boy from Uxbridge now in the AR Ozarks.
Coney Island in Worcester is still open and now also has a hot dog concession at Polar Park, the new home of Boston Red Sox AAA affiliate, the Worcester Red Sox (formerly the Pawtucket Red Sox).
Marconis, Ashland Mass. Best Italian
Oh, indeed the General Glover in Swampscott should be on this list. We lived around the corner back in the mid 70s and, as poor college students, it was so special when we could afford to treat ourselves. I remember seconds “on the house” of their fabulous prime rib, my first taste of marinated mushrooms (you bet I have the recipe) and the “to die for” popovers. That is one restaurant my husband and I really miss!
Pier four
Jimmy’s Harborside, Red Coach Grill, Commodore Restaurant…
I remember my mom and dad taking my sister and I to the Hilltop Steak House many times in my much younger years. The food was so yummy, whatever you ordered. I loved the menu! The lobster pie was absolutely filled with big chunks of buttery lobster and a buttery topping and it was my favorite. I also loved the different steaks. So sad it’s not there anymore! Maybe it’s just as well, as I have been living out West for 47 years now. Still…it I ever got back to Massachusetts, it would have been well worth going to several times!
I also remember the Pewter Pot Muffin House. It had the absolute best muffins. All different kinds. So yummy! Also, their clam chowder was also delicious. Sorry it’s gone missing! I remember Anthony’s Pier 4, but didn’t go there very often. Too far from my home in Wakefield. I do remember that I enjoyed the food.
There was a Swedish Smorgasbord restaurant just off Washington St. in Downtown Boston and we went there alot in the 50’s
I have an old New England Travel guide,1951.. Under ‘=Boston Restaurants” are 2 Downtown Scandinavian ones; Ola’s,14 Carver St ,Park Square… and the one I think you are remembering.. The Viking ,422 Stuart Street..complete with smorgasbord!!
The Viking,423 Stuart Street
Thank you, terrific memories ~ add to ’em Locke-Ober Cafe, the Cafe Budapest, and Joseph’s of Dartmouth St.’s lobster savannah.
Yes The Cafe Budapest. My parents found the restaurant when my dad bought a slice of the Countess’s Dobos Tort. She always wore white with jet black hair and lots of gold jewellery, and had handsome young waiters! Great memories.
Bailey’s in Wolfeboro, NH. Great summer meal topped off with ice cream and a chocolate walnut brownie sundae!
Royal’s Hearthside, Rutland, VT
Our favorite when we lived in Rutland.
Wilma & Earnie Royal were such dear friends of the family.
I remember a few great, now gone restaurants as well. Jimmy’s Harborside was a great place to dine in Boston. Trader Vics was another fantastic restaurant, now gone. As far as now defunct chain restaurants that were always very good, Victoria’s Station ( all of their restaurants were built from converted Train Cars. Various train cars had different themes, Victorias Station always served great steaks and other American Fare. Always high quality. Out in Metrowest of Boston there was The Cock ‘N Kettle restaurant in uxbridge. They were famous for their huge slabs of the tastiest Prime Rib you could have. They were also famous for their homemade Hot Fresh Popovers which every table would get a basket of them. Many times we asked for more Popovers. Also in Franklin, Welicks Restaurant was famous for their Fresh Seafood. They would pride themselves on serving huge portions. Their Seafood Platter was stacked so high on the plate you thought it might tip over. There was easily enough for two people. We would routinely take doggie bags to go because we couldn’t eat all the food in one sitting. Great restaurants from a bygone era indeed. They sure do bring back many wonderful Family Celebration Memories.
The Cock n Kettle was epic! One of our family’s favorite restaurants. The prime rib was unbelievable and the popovers out of this world! On weekends, we’d get there a little early so that we could enjoy the live entertainment singing the standards. If only I could go back in time to those wonderful days!
Me and my husband miss the Cock & Kettle in Uxbridge Ma. We love the pop overs and their Delmonico potatoes and prime rib. Wish we could find the recipe for their delicious Delmonico potatoes . It is so sad that they closed.
Farm Shops based in Waterbury, CT A Friendly’s style restaurant good sandwiches and great ice cream!
All of these and more. One time my friend and I decided to grab dinner at Durgin Park and the mens Russian Chorus from Harvard was beautifully serenading the diners!
Pier 4 and their enormous Yard of Ale was a favourite of my parents when visitors came to stay. Hilltop was a firm favourite for its ridiculous extravagance with decorations, the herd of plastic cows. MIT students made a game of stealing them and placing them in bizarre locations- like the top of the dome on the main building on campus. Kon Tiki was also great! I remember when The No Name was literally a shack on the waterfront with fishermen bringing their latest catch of blue fish coming in the back door.
My friends and I used to hang out at The Pewter Pot AND Senior Pizza. The Pewter Pot chowder was excellent.
The Newbury Steak House was a firm favourite. Their roquefort dressing was the best. Sigh… plus c’est change
Anyone remember where in Boston Justin’s was? Saw Kenny Rogers there in 70s
Hilltop ! Great place.
Pewter Pot! My first solo car ride when I picked up.2 friends and drove to Salem. We felt so grown up!
also Warmuth’s…had a wonderful B deck salad. There were so many and I miss them all.
also Warmuth’s – they had a great B deck salad…there are so many that are gone and I miss them all.
In Hartford, CT; Honiss Oyster House and The Hearthstone
Hey folks…..The Toll House in Whitman,ma…you know, the cookie and great restaurant. A favorite of the Kennedy’s
Commodore, Noth Beverly Chinaland, Beverly, Green Barrel (at tbe bottome of Danvers State Hospital.
Fontains with the waving chicken on the VFW Pkwy, West Roxbury.
Valle’s Steak Houses, Bickford’s (late night, early morning breakfasts)
Vallees, Freds Seafood (Randolph) Friendly’s, Hilltop, The No-Name & the pewter pot, also Woolworths ………
Bickfahd’s
d’s after the bah’s closed
Bickfords is still open friends ????
There is still one in Woburn that I know of.
Ma Glockners in Bellingham
Yes!!
Topsy’s/Fontaines in West Roxbury, My all time favorite
How about ye old Wilton Diner, Wilton NH
Owned by Borghild Anderson. Fantastic home cooking. Wednesday smorgasbord, homemade pies. Great memories.
I was hoping someone would mention SANDY’S at the entrance to Buzzards Bay on Cape Cod. They made a gigantic plate of fresh fried golden brown mixed seafood. Does anyone else have memories to share of SANDY’S? Is there a similar place anywhere now? David K
I used to love Sandys! A summertime tradition to visit at least once while leaving the Cape. Have you ever been to Kream ‘n Kone in Dennis? It has my favorite fried seafood in the Cape.
Sandy’s had a location in Brockton, MA also. Learned to eat Fish & Chips there before I learned to like seafood.
No mention of Mildreds Chowder House?
I guess being purveyor of chowder to a president doesn’t carry the weight of having a former SNL actress serving ice cream.
Yes, Mildred’s and also Thompson’s Clam Bar.
Yay to Thompson’s. Worked there two summers during college. Fun times!
Bailey’s ice cream in Wellesley and Belmont. It was such a treat to go there!
Bailey’s sundae’s were the best ever. My go to was Harvard Sq, probably the first to go due to rent prices…
Fontaines in Dedham
Chicken Delight
With the neon chicken sign waving you in with his wing…..
Bishop’s in Lawrence was great. Excellent Syrian food, steaks and seafood. And their 3 lb back stuffed was great. The wait staff was great.
How about the Hearthside in Hanover! Got engaged there! They had the best seafood platter and a delicious filet mignon!
Jack & Marion’s in Brookline.
Lord’s at Wells Beach, Maine
Dinty Moore’s
Anthony’s Pier 4 in Boston and Saunders at Rye Harbor, NH. I have lovely memories of both of those!
All great memories, but we STILL miss, and long for, the Green Ridge Turkey Farm. From the terrific home made turkey soup to the home made pies, what a meal!
what about ‘The Lincoln’ at lake walden? It had the same owner from 1922 til it closed when the state ended Rt# 128. It started as a hot dog stand by my grandmother,Stefania Danosky. She started out with a12 x 12 stand, and by 1960 had a huge HOJo style stand which was forced to close. She was famous for her apple pies and fried chicken.
She ran the Elm Street market in Waltham with her husband who I believe got in trouble with the law. The stand was enlarged a couple of times and in 1949 she built a restaurant on the same site which she had bought in 1939. Before that the land was on the Higginson estate. It did quite well in the 50s but later on less well and she was becoming older and she had others running it for her. When the state took the land for the Walden Pond State Reservation in 1966 or 67 she was ready to sell. Site was a parking lot for the reservation until 1982. The Lincoln was not the name of the stand at first – it was the Hypolet Roadside Stand which was her husband’s name. Kids at the pond who went there in the 30s referred to it as “Danosky’s” though it may have been “The Lincoln by then. Certainly was by the end of the 30s. Across the street and a little bit south stood a competing stand by the name of “The Waltham” which did not last beyond I think 1936 and was pulled down a few years later.
Great details, never knew any of this!
I’d like to add the Wursthaus in Harvard Square in Cambridge run by the Cardullo family. I remember great times sitting there with my Dad and having a pint:) I have some similar memories of the Student Prince (aka The Fort) in Springfield MA. Both great black Forrest German restaurants with Bier Steins galore!!
The Wursthaus was one of the earliest restaurants in the area to offer a more extensive beer list – long before beer became hip and trendy. It was very dark and wonderful for socializing and I recall always finding something there to enjoy. Spent many wonderful hours hanging out with other couples in the booths upstairs. When it was not busy we could just sit up there for hours. Popular place to go after classical music concerts – we would come over from Boston. Customer from the mid 60s for about 20 happy years.
Swensons ice cream Faneuil Hall, The Dome Woods Hole. McMenamys Falmouth. Hugos Cohasset. Dineros Hull. Comments as wonderful as article. Thanks everyone.
I recall a place called JT’s on Route 20 near or in Weston in the 70’s and 80’s. They offered all the steak and lobstah you could eat for a vcery reasonable fixed price and made their money on the beer and desserts they sold separately. By 5PM every day there was a line a mile long to get in. Anybody remember anything more about it?
JT’s in Sudbury
My father would coach us not to even think about the salad or a potato, just go straight to the lobstah station….. We got our fill and our moneys worth.
I’ve been to a couple of these restaurants like the Hilltop Steakhouse remember going there with my grandparents when I was little and going into the butcher shop too. So sad it closed always wished it would open again. And Chadwick’s we always celebrated my kids birthdays there. They always loved hearing the drum then hearing their name being mentioned then getting their special ice cream. We were really sad they closed too. No one mentioned Vinny T’s they had restaurants in Worcester and Lexington. They were an Italian restaurant served huge plates of Italian food and their desserts were good too. It was also always a line to get into either locations. They too just closed for some reason. They are missed too.
Glad Dini’s and Too House were mentioned by others. What about Mug N Muffin. There were any weekend mornings having breakfast there and the muffins and coffee were great. No matter which one you went to you would always end up seeing someone you knew. And Sherry’s in Quincy along with Morey Pearl’s, 7 E’s and while the food might not be great, going to Howdy’s was quite the experience, especially Friday night’s when the cars would back into the spaces for show off time.
What memories! Going to the Pewter Pot in Brookline before my shift at the hospital. And the English Tea Room on Newbury Street! Great salads and sticky buns. Also the Magic Pan with their amazing crepes and Soups.
We love Brigham’s ice cream BUT, they did NOT invent “jimmies”. The chocolate loving Dutch have been eating them for breakfast on toast for decades. They call them muisjes. Lekker!
The European in the North End!!
Agree about Fontaine’s in West Roxbury. Best fried chicken evaah!! How can we forget Jacob Wirth on Stuart St. in town? Great German style food and huge beer selection.
As a kid until I moved away after 22 yrs, I lived up the street from Fontaine’s and never
ate there! My mom was not a fan of fried chicken.
Loved Fontaine’s-! I lived up the street as well- on spring street until I moved to NH in 1987
Ahh Brighams. When I lived in North Andover and got my first FT job at WT Grants, my mother and I used to go shopping at the Peabody Mall. We used to have lunch at Brighams. We always got a turkey club sandwich and iced tea. Miss that and my Mom a lot
The King’s Rook in Marblehead kept me in great French Cream Cheese cake, fruit Frappés and Classical Music.
Worked there in the 90’s. Was a fun place. Great coffee, wine & beer bar. And where I discovered that pesto is fantastic – especially on a toasted roll with turkey and cheese. Unfortunately its demise coincided with the owner’s – Frank – untimely death.
My father in law would take us to lokobers in Boston and we would get baked Alaska for dessert. I can’t seem to find the name of a restaurant in osterville MA that served 2 pound baked stuffed lobsters in the 1970’s. I think the name had the word oyster in it. It was really formal and they hosted weddings in the back yard. Any one know the name of this gem?
It was called East Bay Lodge!!
Ah I used to work there 60s through 80s. They did quite a function business so had need of live bands.
A little late maybe, but can’t forget Mama Leone’s in Boston {servicemen in uniform eat for free), the Kon-Tiki Room at the Sheraton-Prudential Center; The Commodore in North Beverly; The Junction for ice cream in Essex, MA ; Hojo’s all-you-can-eat clams (strips only)all across New England; Pilot’s Grill and Millers in Bangor, ME; The Sail inn near Bucksport, ME; The 95’er in Bangor, ME; and Vallee’s Steak House at Exit 8 in Portland, ME.
Wow, ,mention of some of these bring back the best memories.
A little late maybe, but can’t forget Mama Leone’s in Boston {servicemen in uniform eat for free), the Kon-Tiki Room at the Sheraton-Prudential Center; The Commodore in North Beverly; The Junction for ice cream in Essex, MA ; Hojo’s all-you-can-eat clams (strips only)all across New England; Pilot’s Grill and Millers in Bangor, ME; The Sail inn near Bucksport, ME; The 95’er in Bangor, ME; and Vallee’s Steak House at Exit 8 in Portland, ME; and McNamara’s in Winthrop, ME.
Many a last call at the South Pacific in Newton.
Pewter Pot, absolutely. Went with my grandparents to the one on Main Street in Falmouth, now an Indian restaurant. Bailey’s, both in Harvard Square and downtown, was a regular stop in my youth: grilled cheese, fish chowder, and cone-shaped scoops of ice cream in an old-style silver cup with handle. And I can never forget the Athens Olympia on Stuart St., a favorite of my parents and my introduction to Greek food—out-of-this-world taramasalata, kebabs, and unsweetened coffee jello with whipped cream for dessert. Great memories.
In the late 70’s the Athens Olympia was a mainstay for lunch for my co-workers & I. The best spinach pie & rice and huge Greek salads. Plus, being in the theatre district, you might see someone famous. I recall seeing Hans Conried (Fractured Fairytales) who was in a play at one of the neighboring theatres.
That was also my introduction to Greek food. We went there on a school trip with the Latin Club during high school. This was in the 70s. Everything in the restaurant was sparkling. There were starched linen tablecloths and napkins. The waiters were excellent and wore suits or tuxedoes. It was a high class restaurant. I got moussaka and vegetables. The food was delicious. This restaurant was a highlight of my teenage years.
I miss Anthony’s Pier 4 (popovers), Locke Ober (curried shrimp, and salads with their perfect roquefort dressing) and The English Room on Newbury St. (their signature salad dressing, warm sticky buns, and a seafood – or was it crabmeat -casserole).
I agree with all! Miss these wonderful old places; the new restaurants today can’t hold a candle…at least not for me.
How they used to flock to Anthony’s and stand in line waiting for an hour or more! Very excellent service there. He believed in giving immigrants a chance but he worked them very hard. I recall a several course wine dinner there around the mid 80s with a staff of about twenty waiters and waitresses who never missed a beat. Very smoothly regimented operation and quite impressive. My father took me to Locke-Ober while I was still in college in the 60s and as I recall the had one room for men and another for women and children. I seem to remember that, please correct me if I am wrong.
The Joyce Chen on the Charles River by MIT c. 1968 to 1974 – MIT then put buildings there. The old Park Square Deli. In Chinatown Yee Hong Guey. Polcari’s in Boston’s North End is still operating is it not? The Seventh Inn in Park Square which I believe was initially Sanae. For doughnuts Johnson’s Dairy Bar on Route 4 in New Hampshire – forget the town now but it was between Concord and Exeter.
Johnsons is still there in Northwood, NH! Dairy Bar along with great restaurant and craft brewery! I go every year when visiting Bow Lake!
There were a few great fun places south of Boston along Route 1. I miss The The Rome in North Attleboro-Joe Chilli was great to work for too! The old Lord Fox was “the” place for local kids to go after the prom! The Brook Manor! The most elegant, continental style, second Prime Rib if you finished the first- The Brook Manor – Super special dining for special occasions! I miss them all!
I have a couple Old Lord Fox glasses my mother some how came home with 🙂
The No Name was one of the most important restaurants in New England history! Why? Well,in their@100 year existence, this scenario played out again and again; a fisherman would come to the owner(Jimmy, Nick,Tony,etc.)and say”Boss,my sister’s boy(or brother in law,or whatever) is coming over from the old country,can you find him a job?”So,the new arrival would start at the bottom, maybe washing dishes,and over time would work his way up ,becoming a cook on the line. He would Fall in love,get married, start a family,buy a house in the suburbs..And with the skills he had learned,would open a diner or other restaurant there,sometimes a fish house,sometimes a full range of food.. And so on,spawning dozens,even hundreds of dining halls throughout New England..nobody knows how many for sure,a list was never kept.. But the NoName’s legacy can’t be understated,believe me..it served as a virtual Restaurant Academy, and chances are there is at least one establishment in your area that owes it’s existence to that chain of entrepreneurship that issued forth from the humble Fish Pier!
Just imagine a gigantic Family Tree of New England eating establishments,with The NoName as the trunk..the amount of branches past present & future would astound you.
Many of my favorites already mentioned but have to add Buttrick’s Ice Cream, Cottage Crest in Reading,the old Carroll’s Diner in Medford, Arnie’s Fireside in Dedham & Beef N’ Ale Boston – next to the Music Hall/Wang Theatre.
When I was an “usherette” at the Music hall/Wang center, I always took my break at the Beef N Ale… really nice owner
Manero’s Steakhouse in Greenwich CT
I couldn’t agree more……….Manero’s Steakhouse was THE BEST ! I wish someone would bring back another restaurant of the same caliber.
Weylu ‘s “palace” did not open until 1989 or so. The Kowloon was the big attration on Route One, and still is. Also very much missed is the Town Line
House.
I remember taking dates to Kowloon. But Weylu’s also had a satel;lite location – ‘Weylu’s Sure’ in Brockton, MA. I lived in Easton and loved being able to get the fine fare of Weylu’s close to home.
Jimmy’s Harborside in Boston (next door to Pier Four) and The Pillar House in Newton
Ahh, yes, the Pillar House ~ very much a special-occasion restaurant. It was also one of the first, if not THE first restaurant to ban smoking! This was supposed to be its death knell; instead, its popularity increased.
One of my favorite places was Ken’s at Copley. The deli food was out of this world and if you were a people watcher late in the evening was great for that. Not living in Boston, it was a place to go to if at 11 at night one got a hunger attact. Really a place to go.
Ken’s was THE place to go in the 60’s/70’s for late night fare as Boston students of that era will attest to.
In addition to all of these? I miss Souper Salad in Kenmore Sq something fierce, and The Arlington Diner on Mass Ave. It was a Greek diner, and they made my favorite Chicken/Broccoli/Ziti ever – super lemony, super garlicky. Also the best Grape Nut Pudding I ever had…
I was just craving Souper Salad earlier today. Souper Salad on Newbury Street was tops for a summer day. You go downstairs. The floor was covered in small white tiles, which added to the ambiance and also helped make the place cool. You get an all-you-can-eat salad bar for one reasonable price. You can get other food a-la-carte. I had so many times there with friends as part of a day spent shopping or at the movies.
Yoken’s, Hilltop, Valle’s, The Modern and Greenwich Turkey Farm in Nashua, and the Hanover House in Manchester and last but not least, the China Dragon in Hooksett.
glad I found this
What about LockeOber in Boston? Best special occasion restaurant ever!!! Amazing Baked Alaska!
The Arrow and Mario’s in Westport, CT. Mario’s was a favorite watering hole across from the Metro North train station.
Had our first date at Hilltop in 1983. Anyone remember “Custy’s” all you can eat lobster buffet in Rhode Island? I’m looking for the coconut macaroon recipe from Jordan Marsh or Filene’s???
I found this Jordan Marsh macaroon recipe online. Does it sound right to you?
https://www.tfrecipes.com/jordan-marsh-macaroon/
My family would go to Custy’s every year when my uncle came up from N.C. I would be bribed to bring back lobsters every trip to the buffet whether I wanted one or not, for my lobster eating competing uncles.
So…seven “New England” restaurants, and they’re all in Massachusetts except for one that was literally 2 minutes from Massachusetts. What about the Chateau in Manchester, NH, Cole’s in Gray, Maine, and many others?
How about the White Rabbit in Onset and Libbey’s Chowder House in Bass River?
When I was a kid, we had a summer cottage in Onset in the 40’s. We went to The White Rabbit every week for dinner. Is it my imagination or was the rolls that they put on the table exceptional?
Jacob Wirth’s in Downtown Boston, and Tecci’s in the North end….
Thank you for remembering Jake Wirth’s. Although I’d only been there once about 10 years ago, it has a special sentimental place in my heart. My mother’s favorite uncle, Henry Meyer (who died when I was 3 mo’s old), worked there as a bartender for many years back in the 40’s. Apparently he was quite the kidder. The story is someone would come up to the bar and order a hot dog, and he’d reply “We don’t have hot dogs”. After a pause, he’d smile and say “Do you want a Frankfurter?” There were 2 photos of him on the walls when we visited, which made both my mother and I very happy. I felt badly when I heard of their fire and subsequent closure.
Jacob Wirth’s was fabulous.
HOW CAN this list not include Howard Johnsons…They invented the CLAM ROLL, along w/help From NISSEN who invented the New England Hot Dog rolls…Also Heck Allens in Saugus GREAT SEAFOOD…
I agree, always looked forward to the one before you crossed the bridge to the cape.
I always thot Howard Johnson had the best ice cream, especially their unbeatable Mocha Chip! I would check every one of the restaurants I saw, looking for it. The last one I remember was off I-80 in central PA; I would pass it on the way to Bucknell U. to visit my daughter.
Mocha chip my all time favorite. Grew up in Stoneham MA now in FL. They don’t know what ice cream is down here. For ice cream Brown’s near Nuble Light ME
Have childhood memories of Howard Johnson’s from their Toasted Corn Muffins, Clam Roll to Ice Cream…was always a stop leaving Boston, heading to or leaving The Cape and anywhere in between along major roadways.
Certainly iconic. They were as good spot to actually rest while driving g long distances, Great ice cream, my favorites were the coffee flavor and the rum raisin. No one has equaled their coffee ice cream. The clam roll shave been equaled and surpassed bu t other both they were good.
I must agree Howard Johnson’s offered a variety of good food and accommodations. Really loved the ice cream and clams. I also remember Valley’s Steak House and the lobster specials they had. I miss them both.
WE always went their to Howard Johnson’s for the Clam Strip Special dinner and ice cream. New England classic and great restaurant all over…sad they are gone as are many of the oldies but goodies restaurants…like Valley on the way to Maine etc. We ate at the Portland one quite often.
My thoughts exactly. Although not a fine food restaurant, Howard Johnson’s (New Englanders do not call it ‘HoJos’) IS a New England classic, and deserves a spot on this list. So many memories.
So true…HoJo’s was the best and a classic.
I miss Ye Olde Mill Grille in Hingham (amazing fried clams) and Steve’s Ice Cream in Somerville (ah, for a large malted vanilla with Heath bars, M&Ms, and Reese’s Cups mixed in).
Steve’s is notable for launching the wave of new-style ice cream parlors. But their product has since been surpassed by others.
Week’s Dairy Bar in Laconia, New Hampshire
Home of the Sissy Split and The Mount Washington banana split that had six scoops of ice cream.
We used to live on the corner of Broadway (Route 1) walking distance to the Town Lyne House. We went there a couple of times. We went to the Hilltop, Yokums, Brigham’s ( the best Lime Rickeys), Kowloon was always fun with the boat in the pond. Good to know it’s still going strong. My parents and I came home to visit my grandparents on the Cape in the late 70s. When we came back
upto Boston they took me to Pier 4 for my birthday ( Baked Alaska out of this world). Never been to Durgin Park…sigh. Was so hoping someone would rescue the place or at least honor the age of the building and put an eatery that would compliment Durgin’s history
A little further up Rte 1 was “The Ship” shaped like a sailing ship. My parents used to take my sister and I there for special occasions.
Also there was a restaurant in NH that had trees growing through the building. I can’t remember the name. I think it was called “The Robin’s Nest”. There were road signs telling you it was coming up ahead.
I’m from the Worcester area. The Shiro in Berlin. Nice old Victorian run by a nice family. Best Japanese restaurant ever! I really miss the Negimaki! It was are go-to place for any occasion and my husband & I dated there for years.
Others that have disappeared are theCoach and Six in Worcester, El Morocco (popular special event restaurant), Eastmans in downtown Worcester, Green Hill Lodge in Sterling, the Webster House, the White House (yummy cheese cake) and Big Boys (great burgers). Miss them all.
I wonder why they left out the Shore Dining Hall at Rocky Point in RI? BEST seafood dinner in New England!
They closed ages ago… However a spinoff of it opened on Post Rd in Warwick RI – not too bad
Can’t believe no one mentioned an almost 60 year old establishment with an iconic neon whale! Yokens restaurant was just off the freeway in Portsmouth. Thar she blows!!!
There was a Yokens in Danvers , Mass in the early 70’s . It was an occasional outing from our family home in Burlington .
Yokens sign is still there on Lafayette even though restaurant is long gone.
The Green Barn in Salem,NH. Great German Food and atmosphere. I can still taste their saurbraten and those delicious fries.
Went to Yokens when I first moved to North Hampton in the early 1960s. Also recall the Dinnerhorn in Portsmouth—not too far from Yokens.
Larry’s Cedar Crest in Lawrence, Massachusetts was my favorite restaurant when visiting the area. Their pot roast was the best I have ever had as was there Grape Nut Custard. That meal alone was worth the sometimes hour-long wait. What a treasure it was!
I can remember the Lobster Pies that were worth waiting for. The counter was a famous meeting place, if you needed to see an alderman or obtain advice, that lobster pie and the diner’s side of Cedar Crest was well worth the wait…
The Yankee Silversmith in Wallingford, CT. Great popovers, great old New England atmosphere, and the best place for Choaties to go when their parents came to visit.
What about LockeOber in Boston? Best special occasion restaurant ever! Unbelievably, they were still making in
Baked Alaska in the 1980’s – a really special experience.
the best popovers!
Bobby Hackets in Pembroke, Ma on route 53, a great New England Fare from prime rib to Clams Casino, always a great stop
Bobby Hackett was a talented man,I remember a radio interview with him,and one of the jobs he had in a long career was setting up the franchises for The Red Coach Grill locations. Whenever a new one opened,he was in charge of setting it up,hiring staff,planning menus,etc.He said he would spend 6 months at each location, get it running smoothly and hand it over to permanent management. Then on to the next one. That gypsy lifestyle taught him a lot,but when he had experienced enough of it,he opened his own place,and had great success.
Sad to think of these iconic restaurants are no longer around. I remembered also the Weathervane (several locations), Bob Lee’s Islander , Boston, that was very popular back in the day.. Many good restaurants now but the ones you mentioned plus ones mentioned in the comments brought back good memories.
The Weathervane in Maine. Great memories.
Fantasia’s near Fresh Pond in Cambridge. The best veal parmigiana!
Even though I’m living “away”, I’m sad at the fact that Cole Farms in Gray, Maine has closed. I remember their 15 cent coffee, great pies, and my favorite, their chicken strips, with fries smothered in brown gravy, and a salad. Lived in Buxton for years and made the trip to Coles on a weekly basis.
Was thinking of Coles when I came to your post. My family used to stop there every year on our trip to see relatives in New Gloucester. Always goy the fried shrimp and loved the salad dressing that you could buy bottles of. My relative had the recipe of that dressing. Must ask if one of their grandchildren have it now.
A restaurant I miss from my childhood is Sailor Tom’s who served the best onion rings I’ve ever had. Sailor Tom lived in a ship behind the restaurant.
I only got to Durgin-Park once, but it was great. Ditto the Hilltop Steak House. Food was meh, (it was toward the end) but you can not beat THE SIGN! For my part, I miss all the classic diners that have been closed or moved. Thankfully, many still survive throughout NE.
Buzzy’s Roast Beef for that late night bite with the underbelly of Boston, Charley’s Eating & Drinking Saloon on Newbury Street (the original), Fontaine’s Chicken in West Roxbury and the most recent disappointing loss, Doyle’s in JP 🙁
I grew up in west Roxbury and lived just down the street from Fontaine’s- such great memories of eating there with my family! The grilled and buttered rolls were delicious!! Couldn’t miss the huge waving chicken sign out front!
Anyone remember Honiss’s on State Street in Hartford? The waiters were all old men, and the pictures of movie stars who ate there were on the walls. Always packed, always outstanding.
Honiss’s was our “go to” restaurant for many years. I don’t think there was a waiter under 80! It seems to me I remember they had a punch card when they took your order
To this day, Honiss’s broiled halibut has been the best I have ever eaten!
Grew up on the Northshore. Been to all of them. My favorite was Hilltop Steak House for the Lobstah pie!
Brighams was up the street from.my house in Lynn, we’d go for our birthdays.
Commodore was great, as was the General Glover House in ? Swampscott .
I remember General Glover’s popovers!! Also the prime rib of course! Expensive but great for special occasions.
Great Article! When you were a regular to Durgin Park you had your own waitress! I had Nancy Greenwood! She was stellar and no matter how long between visits, she would come up to me and say “Whats it gonna be tonight the roast pork or the broiled halibut – thats how PRO all these waitresses were ! Brighams was great but you didn’t give mention to Bailey’s in Harvard Sq! Now that was a sundae , they were shown flowing over with sauce and they were made that way, you needed a shower after eating there! And one more treasured spot -The English Tea Room on Newbury – fantastic menu for starving students, and their sweet salad dressing was amazing! Oh and don’t forget Nadia’s you had to know about that place it was so buried deep in the South End! I can still make her salad!
My favorite restaurant on Cape Cod, having grown up there, was Mildred’s Chowder House in Hyannis! The clam chowder was phenomenal and made with quahogs. Potatoes were chopped very fine and the flavor was out of this world! Of all the restaurants that have closed over the years, this was the Best?
Mildred’s! My parents just loved it. I do recall it was ALWAYS mobbed. Seems all the good ones on the Cape went away.
Makris Seafood in Concord, New Hampshire. I now live in Fargo and miss this wonderful restaurant and all the staff tremendously. A terrific restaurant that you should visit if you have the opportunity!! Tell them all hello from me! 🙂
We enjoyed going there until the evening my wife got sick from the seafood.
Manchester, NH favorites Blakes restaurant and ice cream AND the Puritan Back Room
Bonanza Steakhouse in Pittsfield, Mass! The most affordable family restaurant. Great place to work. Largest salad EVVERR! This is where I spent my teens years in the 80’s. Still have my best friends for life from there. Very found memories.
Sablone’s Veal ‘n Vintage in Boston’s East End. Local sports celebs often spotted. Wonderful food and wine list. Everyone treated like family.
Bel-Aire Diner, Route One North, in Danvers, MA…. The gleaming stainless diner was a family stop on every trip to-and-fro Providence and Portland… Always a thrill to be the first to spot the big red DINER sign — Finding a table always toward the right, passing truckers straddling stools at the long pink counter. If Grandmother was with us, she’d pretend to read all the white lettered black menu boards, and finally order “Just a cup of coffee, dear” and then innocently inquire if they might have “a little bun or something on the side?” —- Always turned out to be a glazed cinnamon dome that she’d protest was too big for her but somehow managed to finish that last bite with her last sip of java. We kids loved stopping there, more for the ritual than the actual food, typical diner fare… Tho’ I do recall discovering BLTs there and 7-Up Floats with sherbet!! If you asked, they also sold their squat red-on-clear “Bel-Aire” water glasses that the waitress brought before taking our orders. I had a set of 4 that lasted 4 decades before I broke the last one, the red thoroughly faded, right before the turn of the millennium… kind of a sign that an era had truly come to an end. Closed early 2000s I think… hope someone had the foresight to rescue it… XOV
When I was a young art student, a treat was to go to one of Boston’s Bailey’s locations for corn chowder and a sandwich. They were old fashioned and comforting on a cold day. Ken’s in Copley Square was a late-night favorite.
The Seawitch Restaurant & Shop on Route 1 – Gone
A real trip down memory lane! Two more to add: Flagstones in Newington, NH and Els
Fried Clam stand on Route 1 in York (?), Me.
Yes I remember the fried clams in York ME. We always stopped there. So good!
The clam shack on Route 1 was called El’s, our all time favorite place for clams. Flagstones was our family’s choice for birthday dinners. Another local seafood mecca was Yoken’s on Route 1 in Portsmouth. The sign is still there, though the restaurant in gone.
What a nice trip down memory lane! I miss lots of those, like Fantasia, Durgin Park, Jimmy’s Haborside, Pewter Pots, Brighams, the China House in Boston (near Steinway), etc., but my all-time favorite was Stella’s, first in the North End (the great mystery was “where did the valet parkers put all those cars?), then at a new location near the Aquaruim.
Ma Glockners in Bellingham
One of my favorites that’s now gone, was Steve’s Greek on Newbury St. We ate there all the time in the 1990s and early 2000s. We even sat next to Mark Wahlberg there one day!
Yes!! I miss Steve’s soo much. It really was the best Greek food around. I think they are still at Faneuil Hall.
Ma Glockner’s was fabulous, especially their incredible cream pies! The dessert slices were huge; my mouth waters just thinking about it!
Agree Agree. So miss this restaurant. No one made/makes chicken like they did.
Oscar’s in Ipswich,General Edward’s Inn in Revere,Dale’s Swampscott,Clam Box, Revere. Black Angus, Boston.
Boston 1800, East Boston, Pind View, KingstonNH, All gone! They were Great, miss them
The Apolo dinner and Benjamins in Taunton MA, Tiny Jims in Buzzards Bay MA, and remember standing in line at York steak house chains around NE.
Had many special occasion dinners at Benjamin’s with the family. Miss those dress up dinner nights.
Does anyone remember the Cranberry Bog Restaurant on RT 184 ( Providence-New London Turnpike) in North Stonington, CT?
Does anyone remember the Cranberry Bog Restaurant in North Stonington, CT? It was on Hwy 184 (Providence-New London Turnpike), almost to the state border with Rhode Island.
Anyone remember the name of the restaurant on 3A in Plymouth, Ma. It was up a hill across from the public beach area. And, how about the Redwing in Foxboro !
Loved the fried clams at the Redwing! I grew up in Norfolk and my family enjoyed going there.
Ahhh, Red Wing Diner. We would go there from West Roxbury for their fried clams and bring their pizza home. I believe they are still open and that the address is in Walpole, just north of Foxborough. Actually, I just looked it up and, indeed, they are still open and have great reviews!
Don’t know about “up a hill”, but you could mean Bert’s Landing..just next to the beach access.
Was it the Inn For All Seasons?
Anyone remember the name of the restaurant up a hill on Rte 3A in Plymouth, Ma? It was across from the Plymouth public beach area. Also, the Red Wing in Foxboro ?
Do you mean Bert’s Landing?
The Red Wing is still there and is as wonderful as ever!
Heck Allen’s in Lynn, really good seafood and good prices too
We always enjoyed these places: Jack & Marion’s, The Town Lynne, and Fantasia’s.
We loved Heck Allen’s too. Went there many a Friday night with dear friends Helen and Gen Pelrine. God bless them for locating great places to eat, mostly from Yankee Magazine.
Saugus! Heck Allen’s is much missed, and even its replacement, Spuds, is now gone and my husband and I and several friends used to go there often. Great seafood and a good variety on the menu so everyone could find something no matter what their tastes. The parking lot had the best view – often there would be a heron or other wildlife in the marsh when you parked. KPub is now in the same building.
Fatted Calf in Kenmore Square.
I lived in Hyannis in the late sixties and early seventies and one of my favorites was The Mayflower Restaurant! There Baked Stuffed Shrimp was to die for and they had what they called The Hot Hamburger which was a hamburger in a bun with fries covered with gravy! After the bars closed we would go to The Egg and Eye! Both were on Main Street in Hyannis!
Mocha chip my all time favorite. Grew up in Stoneham MA now in FL. They don’t know what ice cream is down here. For ice cream Brown’s near Nuble Light ME
What was the RedSnapper restaurant called before it was the Red Snapper? I think the owner was named Armando.
The mini-golf course (plus batting cages and other amusements) that the orange dinosaur was part of is now condos, but they preserved the dinosaur; it’s easily visible from route 1. But it’s nowhere near 50 feet tall; I’d guess 15-20 from driving by there recently.
Ah, yes, I remember it so well. My family would dine there occasionally and it was always a special treat. In the early sixties, I worked just up Route 1 at what was once known as Ship’s Haven, which became, The Ship. John Zappala created it into a brigantine, two-masted sailing vessel with elegant dining on two levels. The food was exceptional and very popular place. I learned proper table service, including boning fish and carving beef properly, as well as making flaming desserts thrilling the customers.
Lord’s in Wells Maine unbelievable stuffed lobster, had an extra tail inside and the dessert in the pastry with ice cream was delicious. Still miss my favorite restaurant. They have a restaurant in Sanford Maine now , unfortunately no stuffed obstetrics or dessert but still good.
Art Johnson’s in Norwood.
Lord’s in Wells Maine unbelievable stuffed lobster, had an extra tail inside and the dessert in the pastry with ice cream was delicious. Still miss my favorite restaurant. They have a restaurant in Sanford Maine now , unfortunately no stuffed lobster or dessert but still good.
Fred’s Turkey house& Hills in Hyannis had garden outside they grew their own veggies & served food family style Sorely missed.Good times!
“The Three Judges” on the border of New Haven and Woodbridge, CT. The “Big Judge” had two hamburger patties!
We use to meet at the Judges as right off parkway.
We always use to go there after a movie or dance or just to eat…so easy to get too as right off the exit.
I remember having lunch at Warmuth’s and seeing on the news that night that it closed its doors for good. They had the best prune rolls.
Our wedding cake came from Jordan Marsh’s bakery! We loved going to Durgin Park – for the food and to interact with the “tourists” who were invariably nice, interesting, and often clueless about what made Boston, well, Boston.
Honiss’s was our “go to” restaurant for many years. I don’t think there was a waiter under 80! It seems to me I remember they had a punch card when they took your order
Anyone remember “The Skipper’ right over the bridge in Fairhaven,Ma
Blacksmith shop in Whitman/North River House in ?Pembroke/Isaac’s & Burt’s in Plymouth, MA
i WENT TO THE EUROPEAN IN THE NORTH END YEARS AND YEARS AGO, WIth A LOCAL…BRUNO DIBICARI , HIS BROTHER , ADDIO WAS well a known sculptor …the restaurant across the street had their kitchen exhaust fan blow down , into the sidewalk, one whiff…and you were in the door….brilliant !!!
Mario’s or Manero’ across from Westport Ct train station was my dad’s haunt after commuting beck from NYC on the 5:25 or 6:10 evening train. We moved and after 37 years gone, dad moved in with me in NJ for last 12 years of life. On the way to Cape cod to see how Eastham had faired over the deçà des we stopped in Westport. A guy working at that restaurant for decades recognized dad !!! 3 hours later, we headed from there to the Cape !! Not much changed in Eastham either !! At HoJo’s, mom always had Orange Pineapple ice-cream !!
Good steaks.
Really miss Top of the Hub. Wonderful staff and so many special nights there with those spectacular views. Also Bailey’s ice cream near Downtown Crossing — oh for those days of warm chocolate sauce dripped over the edge of those silver serving cups! And the Wurst House in Harvard Square. And Dini’s on Boston Common! The Dini family made that place renowned for delicious seafood and a warm welcome. Miss them all!
Loved going to Cafe Budapest for an elegant meal and great ambience.
Yes, indeed ! Wonderful memories!
Elisha’s and also the White Horse Tavern, both were in Milford NH. Loved them both in the 70s-90s.
Also the Fin and Fern it was on route 101 going from Amherst to Bedford NH
The Modern Hotel and restaurant Nashua NH
Oh their onion rings! Worth the drive “all the way from” Bellingham MA just to have them for dinner
How about maybe one of the oldest restaurants in MA. The Layette House on Rte 1 Foxboro. Great food and hideaway bar. Areas of the building date back to the 1700’s
That’s Lafayette
Anyone remember La Picolla Venezia in the North End when it was on Salem Street? It moved over to Hanover and changed completely. I miss their cold garlic broccoli salad and chilled red wine in pitchers. The owners were the nicest.
My family loved Hill’s Restaurant in Hyannis, MA. They grew their own vegetables in a garden outside near a shuffleboard court. There was always a line outside waiting to go inside for a wonderful dinner. The restaurant was sol around 1983- it was never the same. I remember the delicious meals, breads, and desserts……..Another gem was Pop Hanson’s Deli around Harwichport on the Cape. We would order big sandwiches and homemade Swedish desserts to bring back to our cottage.
Willow Pond Kitchen on Rte 2A in Concord, MA. They had the best hamburger rolls I have ever eaten.
The Wurst Haus in Harvard Square.
Dog Team, in New Haven, VT
All but 1 of these restaurants were in MA, yet this is titled “7 Lost & Gone (But Not Forgotten) New England Restaurants”
Last I checked New England comprised more than 2 states. SMH
The Yankee Silversmith in Wallingford, CT. The popovers were stellar.
Amen popovers and sticky buns were stellar!!
Remember the train cocktail car on the side and their roast beef was delicious.
Their food and the sidecar/caboose was great.
Mitchell’s Steak And Rib House, Hyannis…. demolished 2017 after years of eyesore status..but in it’s glory days,it boasted of charbroiled meats and steaming lobster ,in bold neon ,to the passing hordes..
The Steaming Kettle in Government Center – the BEST clam chowder EVAH!!! As a recent college grad, in the early 1970s, I worked in a nearby law firm and was on a tight budget and usually brought a sandwich from home. But once a month in the cold weather I would treat myself. How I looked forward to that! Have been trying to run down the recipe. Anyone know? And, the landmark kettle which actually “steamed”!
Lobster in the Rough, Route 28, Cape Cod.
Blue Ship Tea Room on a dock in Boston. Only place I have visited where you could order a whale steak.
a whale steak
Ever notice how many businesses, even very old well established ones, close after being sold to new owners? There’s probably some Harvard Business School study on why that is, but it’s often really disappointing for the customers.
There used to be a fried clam shack in what is now called the Pavilion at Saybrook Point, right across the parking lot from the Fort Saybrook Monument Park in Old Saybrook, CT. It was named the Sand Bar and was associated with a miniature golf course. The owner was a daughter of the people who owned Dock and Dine next door.
Anyway, it was just outstanding. Long gone, now, of course. The town purchased the property and still runs the miniature golf course.
I remember Elise’s went I attended MIT. The best hamburgers and roast beef sandwiches.
Elsie’s. please.
in Harvard Square when I attended MIT
One of the best fast food places near MGH. Buzzy’s Roast Beef is gone and the Liberty hotel now occupies it’s place. Late hours with great fries and roast beef sandwiches.
Vallee’s Braintree, MA, and other locations throughout New England.
Rocco’s Pizza Powe St. Ansonia CT
My husband and I miss Ma Glochner’s in Bellingham – only one choice but the best cinnamon rolls and broasted chicken. Welick’s in Franklin for their fried seafood – and they were open year round, not like the roadside stands. The one we miss the most – Fontaine’s win West Roxbury…their fried chicken Alabama with the snowflake rolls, butternut squash and mashed potatoes with gravy is to die for!! BTW – Lafayette House and Red wing are still operational.
Dantes” Inferno always a stop when leaving Thunder Mountain through Spring field Mass
Bids tavern in Norwich Connecticut fabulous place for sandwiches dollar beers the supreme grand slam I especially liked their cheeseburgers.
I worked at Honiss’ Oyster House in downtown Hartford right after the employees succeeded in unionizing the restaurant. Around early 80s, the owner was a real fisherman and we’d often see an enormous catch in the walk-in frig. At that time most of us were in our twenties and had worked at a few other local places like The Last National Bank, the White Pillar, the Brownstone and fun bars like The Russian Lady and Mad Murphy’s, all great memories, still have best friends from those crazy years of youth! I became a serious seafood lover and cook after my year at Honiss’. Also in the early sixties my parents would take us out for fried chicken at the Chicken Coop, we loved it as kids. They used to give us old-fashioned finger bowls with every meal and there were cute photos of babies on the wall.
Fontaine’s in West Roxbury.
Topsy’s.
Does anyone remember the Scottish lion in Portsmouth NH? Also Newport Creamery and there was a restaurant I used to go with in New London CT with my grandma that is now a bank. I can’t remember the name but it was right off 95 and Colman st.
The Chart Room. On the other side of 95 was The 95 House.
We were stationed at Hanscom Field in the late 1960’s & would drive to the Willow Pond Kitchen just for the fried clams.
Fatted Calf in Kenmore Square.
Felicia’s in the North End! The site of many birthday dinners! And a graduation dinner! If you had your elders with you, Felicia came around to your table to greet and talk with your elders, in her inimitable Italian way. She also had framed photos on the wall of her with all the famous people who ate there. I miss her and her restaurant. So many wonderful memories.
I had friends from LA visit in 1977 and we had dinner at Felicia’s. It was the night of the 1977 Stanley Cup finals. Bruins vs Montreal Canadians. We ended up in the kitchen with the staff and Felicia to watch the final winning goal by the Canadians. A disappointment for sure but a most memorable evening and of course the food was superb!
Does anyone recall The Buttery or Senior’s Pizza in Kenmore Square? I worked at Senior Pizza in the late 1960s—a poor hippy girl—the manager was an angel. He let each of his employees make a pizza to take home with them at closing shift.
Anyone remember The Newbury Steak House on Massachusetts Ave.? In the late 1960s, I’d always go there after giving blood to reconstitute my supply of red cells.
Morey Pearl’s in Quincy, Jacob Wirth and Locke Ober in Boston, the Ashmont Grill in Dorchester are all missed.
Augustine’s Restaurant in Saugus, MA. Best Italian Food and beautiful atmosphere, but years later they turned it into a cafeteria style with all you can eat buffet and it went rapidly downhill (probably new owners)
Emerson’s Steak House in Lawrence, MA. Great steaks and their booths were surrounded by curtains; great “dating” place. The curtain idea would have been perfect for covid…who knew? They also served a 32 ounce cocktail called a Grog. When you got one it came with a pin that said “I got grogged at Emersons”
Bob Lee’s in Boston. Very unique and fancy Chinese Food in a spectacular Cave-Like atmosphere…AMAZING.
The 57 Restaurant in Boston – Very elegant with a huge fountain in the middle of the huge restaurant. Their Athenian Shrimp was out of this world.
The Ship Restaurant, I believe it was in Lynnfield on Route 1. An actual ship that was so luxurious inside and the food was excellent. They had a LARGE cheese bar and appetizers (free) while you waited to be seated.
Finally, BEST RESTAURANT EVER was Jimmy’s in Methuen, MA. Went their about 30 times and waitresses were the very best, all of the food was fantastic and ALWAYS cooked to perfection. Had a river view (The Merrimack River), luxury decor and a grand piano that was played during dinner.
IT IS SO SAD THAT SO MANY UNIQUE, FAMILY OWNED RESTAURANTS HAVE BEEN REPLACED BY LOUSY CHAIN RESTAURANTS WITH CHEAP MEDIOCRE FOOD!
Guilford, CT
Bernice’s
Maple Shade
Chello’s There was always a seagull atop the giant pile of shells out back!
Don’t forget The Little Stone House and Captain’s Table
Those were good too.
All those are gone even Schooner’s , Guilford Tavern, Chowder Pot in Branford and the restaurant that was called Oakdale Tavern in Wallingford. Now the Moorings is closed in Guilford, CT and remember Beefsteak Charlie’s?
Remember those place…loved Chello’s.
Great places all!
Pier 4 on the Harbor. Great popovers. Fine dining. Rich atmosphere.
The Ship…Rte 1 Saugus. Grandmother took us there for special occasions. I think the Christmas Tree Shop is there now?
Town Lyne House…Lynnfield. Fabulous fancy place for special dinners. Escargot, whole river trout on a platter, wonderful pecan rolls.
Like Karen, I have great memories of Newbury Steak House; it was the standard place for dinner when my partner and I came into town for a concert. But there was also a shorter-lived small chain right next door (also in the restaurant/club district west of BU) called Frank’n’Stein’s; good beer and hotdogs for good prices, and good movies running on a screen at the back.
AFAIK, Bailey’s never spread outside 128 — but I’ve always lived in or next to Boston, so I was a regular there. I thought they had better ice cream than Brighams (they were right around the corner of Harvard Square from each other, so comparisons were easy), and the sandwiches and furniture (chairs of wire twisted in heart shapes!) were unique — real old-fashioned as opposed to what Chadwick’s did.
Beer Works is a more recent regretted loss; they opened in the 1980’s, spread haphazardly (I remember eating at their Fenway, Boston Garden, Framingham, and Salem locations), and gave up the ghost during the COVID shutdown. Good food, and great beers brewed in-house.
“Legal Sea Foods” still exists in name, but not in style; I remember chalkboard menus (so they could quickly take off anything they ran out of) that had ?30? ?40? different kinds of fish, almost all of them available baked, broiled, or fried. They kept this model even when they started expanding (I remember out-of-town visitors goggling at the choices at Chestnut Hill) but it faded as new generations of Berkowitzes spread beyond greater Boston and sort-of-upscaled.
I think Bugaboo Creek and Victoria Station weren’t locally based, but they both had multiple restaurants around Boston; their steaks and sides were better than Hilltop’s (“famous” chopped salad?!?) and IIRC their prices were similar.
Bailey’s was in Wellesley which is outside 128. Bailey was bought by Joey Crugnale who invested ice cream places before he began his Italian restaurant businesses. He kept Bailey’s as it was until it was gone. I often wonder where the hot fudge recipe went. Rancatore’s hot fudge seems the same. Also where did those elegant silver metal pedestal dishes go and the saucer beneath them? Such a simple elegant touch. It is a shame when something disappears that is good and is never replaced with something at the very least at its level. The consumer is then lead to believe the quality no longer exists. Next, the best thing to do is NOT accept inferior quality and seek a place you can truly enjoy and substantiate spending money at. Or best said….eat at home!
I’ll second TJ’s vote for The Hearthstone in Hartford. That was our family treat restaurant. I still remember the popovers and the London broil. See HEARTHSTONE RESTAURANT CALLS IT AN ERA in the Hartford Courant’s archives.
I went there when I worked in Hartford. Always a good meal and cozy atmosphere.
Christo’s in Brockton, the baked lamb was excellent, as kids we thought the Gold Room was so fancy. The Barnside Tavern in Hanover. Finian’s in Quincy.
Durgin Park was never in Faneuil Hall. It was a restaurant serving the produce, meat, and fish vendors, that was located in Quincy Market’s North Market building. Faneuil Hall is one building on the National Register of Historic Places while Quincy Market has three separate budlings to the east.
Many do not understand the Faneuil Hall is a specific historic place. I know because I have been involved in politics. Many a debate has occurred there. As for Quincy Market North, or other buildings east, the public has been less educated as to how that set ups by it’s developers. Scollay Square right across the street is now The Bostonian Hotel. So some landmarks swell identified and still standing and others flattened. I believe the same assemblage of developers were involved in both Faneuil Hall’ improvements as well as Quincy Market Buildings, North & East, as well as the Bostonian Hotel.
In addition to the two satellite locations of Durgin-Park that were mentioned in the article, they also had one in Braintree near where the Sheraton-Tara was. There is a Hyatt Place hotel there now.
I am looking for photos or memories of Doug’s Tap once located in Wallingford where the BOA parking lot now is. I was told it was next to Ken’s.
WWII took it’s toll on my family. Doug’s came to my mom’s rescue. She worked there. She was a single mom, with me. My subsequent dad took me there all the time in 1952(?).
Can anyone direct me where I can find photos etc? I still remember the layout, and how nice the owners were to me. Thanks, everyone.
Try posting on the Growing Up in Wallingford Facebook page
A couple of long shots:
Carol Ann Doughnut Shop
and
South Shore Seafoods
both in Whitman, MA
What about Bishops in Lawrence?
That was a great restaurant!
Joe I love your list, it is spot on! And I have been to and eaten in every one of the restaurant’s you mention. Your list reminds me of my family, Sunday dinner at Green Ridge Turkey farm, and other great meals we shared together. Jordan Marsh Company’s blueberry muffins was a stop we made every Friday, as we picked up our muffins for the weekend. I worked at the Pewter Pot in Lexington, Ma. in the late sixties. Great place to work, always busy. Lived in Lexington many years enjoyed Chadwick’s with my friends and neighbor’s many a day and evening! Birthday’s were a.must! Chadwick’s was good food and fun! I guess your list is a list of restaurants who had their moments in time. The Continental in Saugus could be amongst your list of restaurants I believe. It too just closed after many years of being in business. Today with food so costly, rents to house restaurants higher than ever, restaurants like those on your list should be developed. Simple small,menus with excellent food serving the community they are in. All these high priced,endless food choices with endless cocktails, are not the average consumer’s typical restaurant choice. Nor should it be! Less is better! “Keeping it simple”, may be an old cliche, but better quality, a little less of it, and better choices in meals’ selections, focus is on attracting regular customers and keeping them. I go to Mistral Restaurant in Boston because it is always consistent. Can be pricey, but depends on what you order. I recently noticed a “mature” couple at the bar having ordered a tenderloin pizza and drinks figuring out their bill together and being delighted to take home what is left for another meal at a fair price. So in most exceptionally run restaurants there should be something, and generally is for everyone with the quality and cost
In mind. I will continue looking forward to reading your articles, posts, and more!.
How about Jack and Marion’s in Brighton, Allston area. They were open late and had a load of sandwiches.