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Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
Postcards from Falmouth Zoom Program Transcript
Recorded: July 27, 2021
Presenter: Christopher Setterlund
Host: Sue Henken
Topic: Cape Cod Nights: Historic Bars, Clubs, and Drinks, and Iconic Hotels and Motels of
Cape Cod by Christopher Setterlund
Also mentioned: Historic Restaurants of Cape Cod, by Christopher Setterlund
All books available from CLAMS under CAPE COD 647.95 SET
Note: The right column references postcards by identifiers searchable in the Digital
Commonwealth online collection.
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[Music]
hello everyone I hope that a lot of you
were
here last week and you came back to see
part two
of my pair of events with the Falmouth
library so I wanted to start off so you
can see me but we're gonna dive right
into
the actual PowerPoint presentation
it's gonna be nightlife and hotels
Falmouth in the area around that so
let's go right into it I’m going to
open up my presentation
and we will start from there so
this presentation is going to combine my
fifth and sixth books Cape Cod Nights
and Iconic Hotels and Motels of Cape Cod
and so what we're doing
is basically for those of you that
weren't
here last week I am a 12th generation
Cape Codder
through the Doane family that helped to
settle Eastham
and I included this photo here this is
the
monument to my ninth great grandfather
Deacon John Doane
who helped to settle the town of Eastham
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#doane
#eastham
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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in 1644.
this is in the Cove Burying Ground in
Eastham on Route 6
if anyone's ever gone past there
and like Sue said I am author of
six books all dealing with Cape Cod and
the Islands
the first three were all titled In My
Footsteps I’ve kind of used that
title for a lot of projects
three books um a blog that I have
and a podcast so
after that I jumped into a second
trilogy
that included historic restaurants
historic nightlife
and bars and hotels and motels
so this trilogy essentially
tells you in history where Cape Codders
went to eat
where they went to drink and where they
went to then sleep off the damage they
did to themselves
from those previous two things and that
was actually how I pitched it to my
publisher
when I was pitching book six the hotels
and motels I said this
is a can't miss marketing opportunity
eating drinking sleeping
it's all part of life
so Cape Cod became a vacation
destination
in the years after the book Cape Cod was
released by Henry David Thoreau in 1865.
Thoreau’s connection to Cape Cod he did
four walking tours basically in the
years
leading up to the book's release and he
is actually
semi-responsible for one of the
original Cape Cod hospitality spots
the Highland House in Truro basically
during all four of his
walks on the Cape he stayed
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#1644
#coveburyingground
#route6
#henrydavidthoreau #1865
#highlandhouse #truro
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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with his friends the small family
in Truro they had the property that was
surrounding Highland Lighthouse
including the golf course that's there
and some of the cottages that are around
there
during one of his trips walking up there
he and the I think it was James Small
they talked about this farmhouse that he
had there that was basically
empty and they both kind of talked about
how it could make
a good boarding house basically that's
how it started
the Highland House is now a museum but
when it first started it
was a popular hotel and eventually hotel
and restaurant for about a hundred years
so bringing it back around to Falmouth
in the late 19th century that's when
Cape Cod
really started to cement itself as the
summer destination
and a lot of summer resorts popped up
this included the Terrace Gables which
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#highlandlighthouse
#terracegables
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so the Terrace Gables was originally
known as the Draper Cottage for a man
named Charles Draper
and it was a high-class resort in
1902 it was expanded after it was
renamed the Terrace Gables
the people that owned it they also
bought the nearby
Menauhant Hotel which they actually used
#drapercottage
#charlesdraper
#1902
#menauhanthotel
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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for overflow from the Terrace Gables it
got so big
that they bought their competitor to use
as overflow for their hotel which was
just fascinating
that was in 1912. at its peak it had 125
rooms but as you'll see as we go along
in this
during the 40s and 50s it was changing
times on Cape Cod
what ended up happening was in 1960
they tried to change with the times and
they created this
restaurant cocktail lounge called the
Club 46
which it didn't really make much of a
difference
the times changing with the highway
the Terrace Gables kind of went the way
of a lot of hotels from that time
and it became the Brothers Four
nightclub which was Cape Cod's largest
entertainment complex you'll see that
again
later but that was in 1971
and now it's condos a lot of these
places
I found that they had one of two ends
they either
burned down or they were turned into
condos a lot
of them in doing the especially the
hotels and motels book
the Hotel Attaquin on the right was on
Route 130 in Mashpee
that was opened by a Wampanoag Native
American named
Solomon Attaquin he opened it in 1840
and it was a smaller bed and breakfast
type of hotel with 17
rooms but it also there were amenities
surrounding it that made it a really fun
place to visit including going
fishing at the nearby Mashpee and Wakeby
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#club46
#brothersfour
#1971
#hotelattaquin
#route130 #mashpee
#wampanoag
#solomonattaquin #1840
#mashpeepond #wakebypond
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Ponds
and Solomon Attaquin became a big deal
in Mashpee in addition to his hotel
he was a selectman he was a town
treasurer
he was the first postmaster of Mashpee
when it was incorporated as a town
after he died in 1895 the hotel
continued on
for another 60 years
although they got into trouble in 1928
they were raided
during Prohibition for illegal
gambling and alcohol
they got more fame during the
early days of radio when they had
the Hotel Attaquin orchestra which would
be featured on
Station WOCB they would actually be part
of
some variety shows locally
the end came like I like I said it's
either condos or
a fire and in 1955 Christmas eve
there was a fire at the Hotel Attaquin
that
ended its reign as a hotel it's now
the site of the Mashpee Community
Gardens
on Route 130 so if you go by there
that's basically where it used to stand
and the rise of these resort hotels the
first the originals it continued into
the early part of the 20th century
on the left the Cape Codder not to be
#1895
#1928
#prohibition
#1955
#mashpeecommunitygardens
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confused with the Cape Codder that is in
Hyannis
it opened in 1900 originally known as
the Sippewissett Hotel
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#sippewissetthotel
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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the land that it was on overlooking the
ocean
was originally a sheep farm
owned by a man named Richard Swift 180
acres
before it became the Cape Codder after
it was the Sippewissett hotel it was then
the Mayflower Hotel
#richardswift
#mayflowerhotel
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before finally becoming the Cape Codder
in 1931.
it was a four-story resort hotel
and by the late 40s it was the largest
hotel under one roof meaning that there
were no cottages there were some
hotels on the Cape that had
a main building but then also cottages
and such that were
seen as part of it an example of that is
The Pines in Cotuit
which was a huge complex with a main
hotel
and the people that owned it would buy
nearby cottages and mansions and made it
all
part of The Pines but the Cape Codder was
the largest under one roof
and at one point their kitchen
could seat 1500 people a night they
could serve
and it was owned later on by the
Peterson family
all the way up until 1988
when it was knocked down to make way for
condos which still stand
on the right the Coonamessett Inn which is
#1931
#thepines #cotuit
#peterson
#1988
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still going strong now
but it's in a second location so
Coonamessett first opened in 1927
it was named for the pond by which it
stood
and it was the original Coonamessett was
based in the William
Chadwick farmhouse which was built in
1826
it became a really
well-known hotel and restaurant
especially after a woman named Edna
Harris
took it over in 1930
so the Coonamessett was owned by
uh William Chase the man that also owned
Great Island
in Yarmouth the Chase family still owns
most of it
but Edna Harris leased it she had
already become well known by running the
Megansett Tea Room
in North Falmouth and those of you that
saw my
presentation last week I had a picture
of the Megansett Tea Room
because I couldn't find an actual
picture of
the Hangar Tea Room
Edna Harris made this the place to be
and interestingly in 1953
after more than two decades of this
they had politicians there they had
military officials there
had all these the Falmouth Playhouse was
#1927
#1826
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and Edna Harris was very well known and
well regarded
and interestingly in 1953 she was told
that her lease on the property was not
going to be renewed
and this is where her story she became a
legend in my eyes when I was researching
this
because she had already done the Megansett
Tea Room
and she made the Coonamessett Inn the
place
to be
she actually also leased the Popponeset
Inn
and had her daughter Hilda Coppage run
it
so she had her fingers in a lot of pies
as far as Cape Cod
hospitality but what she did with the
Coonamessett was legendary
so the Coonamessett was going to become
a Treadway Inn which was kind of a small
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chain
in the 1950s what she did though
was Edna Harris owned the liquor license
so she bought property on Gifford Street
311 Gifford Street which was
a home originally owned by a man named
Robert Longier
and she bought that house had it
converted and got uh
the license to run it as an inn she took
her liquor license
with her and then because the old
Coonamessett
property
was going to be a Treadway Inn she took
the Coonamessett name
with her and the furniture
so she basically took the Coonamessett
and everything that made it great and
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reopened it
at the spot that it's located at now
and it's just fascinating I’m actually
working on
an article about Edna Harris in just her
life because
it's incredible to think the stuff that
she did in the early part of the 20th
century
but like I said in the early 20th
century
the automobile made travel easier now
that was a blessing and a curse because
people that were coming down to the cape
by a train
or I mean I guess some could come down
by horse and buggy but mostly train
they would stay in one place for many
weeks
long stays at the same place automobiles
made it where
people didn't have to stay in one place
for too long
so the stays became shorter and it put a
lot of pressure on
these hotels and resorts to capture
the imaginations and the attention of
these tourists because that's how they
made their money
and another thing that came up during
this early part of the 20th century was
Prohibition
and with the advent of the automobile it
was possible to drive to
nearby dancing and entertainment
complexes
and both of these were nearby in
Buzzards Bay
and ironically they were on the same
street so you could have gone to both
so the Bournehurst on the Canal
was at 320 Main Street right in the
shadow of the Bourne Bridge
interestingly its whole run
was basically during Prohibition it
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#bournehurstonthecanal
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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opened in 1920
and it was seen as as a large
entertainment complex because when you
can't serve alcohol you've got to have
some other ways to entertain people
so opening night at the Bournehurst was
July 10th of 1920 and there was more
than
2100 people there for that event
they had basketball games they had
boxing matches
they actually in 1922 they opened a
lunchroom
inside run by a man named Fred Lutz
it was well known for its clam cakes
it was also a spot in the late 20s where
young up-and-coming jazz musicians like
Duke Ellington and Cab
Calloway played at the Bournehurst
the biggest event
I suppose at the Bournehurst was July 26
1930 when Rudy Vallée and his orchestra
came and played there the Bournehurst
inside was packed
outside there were hundreds and hundreds
of people
waiting just to get a glimpse of Rudy
Vallée
State Police had to be called to try to
subdue the crowd which eventually they
did but that was
one of the last hurrahs for the
Bournehurst
October 18th 1933 a fire broke out
with eyewitnesses said it was the
hottest fire they'd ever seen
and unfortunately that it didn't end the
Bournehurst
but then there was another fire 10
months later
and that was really what did it so
in the summer of 1934 the burn
Bournehurst
burned to the ground and sadly it was
right
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#1920
#fredlutz
#dukeellington #cabcalloway
#rudyvallee
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then when Prohibition was repealed and
the new Bourne Bridge
was built so it's unbelievable to think
about
if it had only stuck around a few more
years what it could have done and could
have been
on the right the Blue Moon Dancing
Pavilion
was at 230 Main Street in Buzzards Bay
this opened in 1931 it was also a tea
room
it was mainly outside so
they had a blue neon sign
their dancing stage where you can see
all the people out here
had blue lights half-moon shaped stage
it was perfect for summer funny thing
was that they had midnight frolic
dances which would start at midnight
I’m sorry to 12:01 a.m on Mondays once
Prohibition was lifted
because liquor sales were not permitted
on Sundays
so literally the minute that it was
Monday
they opened up and had people out there
dancing and drinking
it was mainly seen as an outdoor dancing
pavilion
or some people also called it a summer
dance garden
it was owned originally by a man named
George Blakeslee
he owned it for the first decade it
changed hands a few times
before finally being bought by a man
named Alex
Byron in 1957
what happened there was that it became
part of the larger Buzzards Bay Summer
Theatre complex which was theater in the
round
essentially the same as what the Cape
Cod Melody Tent
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#georgeblakeslee
#alexbyron
#1957
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is with a stage in the middle and seats
all around it
so it stayed open I guess
through the mid-1960s before the Blue
Moon itself was closed
the property itself stayed
being used by Alex Byron it became part
of the Byron's Landing restaurant
until 1986. it's now a veterinarian's
office
so the building is still there the
outdoor dance pavilion is not
though
and then after Prohibition nightlife
boomed
and so the casino which someone last
week had brought up
I said you know what better way to read
from the book
the actual story of the casino
so in the 21st century the area known as
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Falmouth Heights
has become a very popular summer
destination
but in 1870 the beachfront neighborhood
was born from what was then known as
Great Hill
it was at that time that George Davis
sold the property
to the Falmouth Land and Wharf Company
which retained its rights
before it ultimately fell into the hands
of its president G.
Edward Smith over the first 50 years of
the Heights’ existence
land values increased more than 600
percent
around the turn of the 20th century a
Falmouth icon would be born
adding serious clout to the village of
the Heights
in 1901 the Casino at Falmouth Heights
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#byronslanding
#1986
Reading from Chapter 8 of Cape Cod
Nights begins here.
#1870
#greathill
#georgedavis
#falmouthheightslandandwharfcompany
#gedwardsmith
#casino #1901
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opened on Grand Avenue
nearly opposite the Terrace Gables hotel
the building 80 feet long by 32 feet
wide
with 184 feet of piazza
was run by Charles L. Hopson the building
was enlarged several times
eventually containing the Cottage Club
Falmouth Heights Post Office
a barbershop and general store
the casino was completely destroyed by
fire in
April 1909 with Hopson immediately
getting to work
starting on the rebuild the barber shop
was the first to reopen just over two
months later
the building was enlarged again in 1914
and became known as the Cottage Club
rather than the club simply being a part
of it
in January 1915 Charles Hopson died
and his waterfront property would be
owned by his wife
in 1937 a year after her death
Hopson's son Harry purchased the casino
it was here that the biggest changes
would begin
on July 19 1939 after extensive
remodeling
the Casino Bar at Falmouth Heights was
added to the property with
soon soon-to-be local legend Joe Miron
22:14 coming down from Dinty Moore’s in
Boston
22:16 to run the bar
22:18 donned in a striped pullover dungarees
22:20 and a beret
22:22 Miron gained notoriety locally as his
22:25 talent for caricatures became apparent
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#charleshopson
#cottageclub
#1909
#1937
#harryhopson
#1939
#casinobar
#joemiron
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#dintymoore #boston
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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the bartender served up the drinks his
customers desired
and then followed that by sketching
their likeness while they drank it
beyond caricatures had skill with
the brush when it came to landscapes and
watercolors
by his third season at the Casino Bar
his works were being showcased at local
art shows and galleries on the cape
he rightfully earned the nickname
Painting Bartender
in an attempt not to focus strictly on
the alcohol output
the kitchen was revamped in 1940 the
establishment was open until
1am and the bar could seat 150
so it was natural to try to incorporate
food to go with the drink
Hopson also tried to maintain the
entertainment complex
feel by adding an E.M. Loew motion picture
theater in 1941.
after trouble with erosion from
hurricanes in 1938 and 1944
Hopson sold the casino bar to Worcester
Massachusetts resident William McCann in
1945.
from there the bar's popularity
skyrocketed
along with that of Captain Joe McCann
focused on creating a positive work
environment
including putting as first priority
feeding the kitchen staff McCann also
supra
supplied room and board to his employees
if it was needed
Joe Miron created a spot in the bar
called Amen Corner
it was named for the those patrons who
drank their
fill and sat in the corner to
philosophize
it was here that hung some of his
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#1940
#1938 #1944
#williammccann
#1945
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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favorite caricature sketches
the notoriety only grew when Miron was
featured in
the October 1943 issue of Click magazine
there he was referred to as Boston’s
bartender artist
the popularity of the Casino Bar led to
the need
for a staff of 27 people per shift
including
four bartenders the fun spot of the
Heights
added horseshoes in 1946 a new sun deck
in 1947
and another name change occurred in 1949
when the establishment became known as
the Casino by the Sea
the seasonal spots popularity continued
to grow
with 1940 1951 being reported
as its most successful year yet
throughout the 1950s and into the 1960s
Joe Miron continued to thrill guests
with his skill
as both a mixologist and his artistic
gifts
summer afternoons routinely saw Captain
Joe
proudly shout down to the casino's
private beach via megaphone
during cocktail hour cocktail spree
Cape Cod fishballs many guests heard it
as cocktails free
and they came running they were
disappointed
things changed again in 1966 when
William Sweeney Jr.
purchased the property and gave it more
of a nightclub feel
making it extremely attractive to
college students and young adults
during the summers of the late 1960s and
70s
the Casino by the Sea experienced
another swell of popularity
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#1949
#casinobythesea
#1966
#williamsweeneyjr
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during the golden age of Cape Cod
nightlife
however after spending nearly the
entirety
of the 20th century entertaining folks
at the Heights
time came for last call in 2000
the fading legend was purchased by
developer Frank Messina
the casino property was torn down in
November 2003
to make way for the upscale Casino Wharf
FX for those wondering what it
might have been to have a drink with
Captain Joe Miron pouring
it's possible to replicate it with a
popular drink from the 1940s called the
sidecar
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for those of you that have never read my
book
Cape Cod nights I put drink recipes
at the end of the chapter for each spot
in there
and I pick the decade that I see as when
it was
most popular and so the 1940s I picked
for the Casino
but after Prohibition
and with the rise in popularity of
nightclubs and bars there was a need for
more hotels and resorts
this included the Red Horse Inn which
for those of you who were here last week
you'll remember that the Red Horse Inn
started as The Bellows
#2000
#frankmessina
#2003
#casinowharffx
Reading from Cape Cod Nights ends
here.
#redhorseinn
#thebellows
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and it was a tea room slash lunch and
dinner spot
owned by a woman named Thekla Hedlund
opened in 1933 on Falmouth Heights Road
after Hedlund died in 1946 it was run
as a restaurant for two more years
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#theklahedlund
#1933 #falmouthheightsroad
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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the name was changed to the Red Horse
Grill and then to the Red Horse
Inn and it's been standing ever since
Popponesset Inn as I mentioned earlier with
Edna Harris
it's at 252 Shore Drive in Mashpee
right in the middle of New Seabury
in 1941 it opened as
an actual resort it was originally owned
by
Malcolm Chase of Great Island who bought
the property in 1929
interestingly before it became the
luxury resort
it was leased out by a nurse named Norma
Armstrong
and she ran it as um
a campsite where basically
people that were going there they had
the money to rent rooms at these
high-class resorts but they actually
preferred
staying in this trailer park slash
campground
that was affectionately known as tent
city
and it was 4 000 acres
then in 1941 when it became the
Popponesset
Inn then it took off where
it started with 10 rooms then quickly
added 15
more as I said Edna Harris took it over
in 1947
and put her daughter Hilda Coppage in
charge
once New Seabury was built and finished
in 1964
then it became a popular wedding
destination
and it was actually owned by the Chase
family until
1998. it's
known for its spectacular views fine
dining
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#redhorsegrill
#shoredrive
#newseabury
#malcolmchase
#1929
#normaarmstrong
#1964
#1998
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and relatively isolated location
especially back in the 40s and 50s when
it first got started
and as I said soon it was the golden age
of Cape Cod nightlife
and there you see the Brothers Four
which was previously the Terrace Gables
so the Brothers Four opened in 1971.
it was three clubs under one roof known
as Cape Cod's largest entertainment
complex
it was so big that it had sister clubs
in Somerville and Nashua New Hampshire
the Brothers Four they were the Robbat
brothers
George Russell Stephen and Allen
Brothers Four is also well known for
being the
finish line of the Falmouth Road Race
where
Falmouth Road Race creator Tommy
Leonard
created it when he ran from the Captain
Kidd in Woods Hole to
the Brothers Four which is why it has
such a unique
mile distance the Falmouth Road Race
because it was a run from
one bar to another
the problem with the Brothers Four was
the zoning
where being this huge nightclub it ran
into a lot of problems with the
locals that lived around there for
noise and drunken disorderly behavior
things like beat the clock happy hour
didn't help
and so basically from the late 1970s
up until it's ending in 1987
it was a constant battle between the
Robbat brothers
and the town of Falmouth to keep the
place going
they even created the Yesterdays
Bar inside there they were trying to
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#robbat
#falmouthroadrace
#tommyleonard
#captainkidd
#woodshole
#1987
#yesterdaysbar
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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make it
more upscale but Brothers Four was known
as
a really wild hangout
in 1987 it was torn down and like I said
with the Terrace Gables it is now
condos
but it was also the golden age of
hospitality
I had mentioned the Coonamessett Inn that
moved to
Gifford Street it is still well known
and highly regarded
for its food and its lodging
the Sea Crest is at 350 Quaker Road
#seacrest #quakerroad
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this one has a fascinating story also
where
the Sea Crest Hotel got its start as the
University Players’
summer theater and that was in 1928 it
opened and some
Hollywood heavyweights got their start
at this theater including Jimmy Stewart
and Henry Fonda
it was chained the name was changed to
the Beach Theater
and in 1936 there was a fire
naturally because fire and condos are a
running theme with these
places when it was reopened in 1937
it was named Neptune’s Tryst then it was
the Old Silver Beach Club then it was
the Latin
Quarter which was run by a man named
Lou
Walters
whose daughter Barbara Walters is pretty
well known
1948 it was finally renamed the Sea Crest
after being heavily renovated
and by that point there was 250 guests
could be accommodated with the
dining room holding 350 seats
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#universityplayers
#jimmystewart
#henryfonda
#beachtheater
#1936
#neptunestryst
#oldsilverbeachclub
#latinquarter
#louwalters
#barbarawalters
#1948
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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it got more of a shot in the arm with a
famous owner when Red Auerbach of the
Boston Celtics bought
a share in it in 1963
and currently it's 264 rooms
but whether you went out to drink at a
place like Smith's Olde Surrey Room
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which Smith's Olde Surrey Room got its
start as the Falmouth Bowling Alley
which was opened in 1939 by a man named
Lester Crane
in July 1946 the Surrey Room was
opened by Lester crane he saw more
value in an eating and drinking
establishment
over a bowling alley and the lead up to
the debut of the Surrey Room on July 1st
1946
and the Falmouth Enterprise there were
these ads that were just
question marks basically the mystery of
what
what was coming and it ended up being an
unusual nightclub
you'd walk in there and there were
actual surreys which were forms of
carriages
that were located in three corners of
the property
inside there was bright red trim
and yellow window recesses but they
stuck a little bit of
a throwback to how they started by
having
the bowling club lounge
in 1950 the property was sold to a man
named Daniel
Smith and that's where it got the name
Smith’s Olde Surrey Room
and there was another connection where
smith's chef was a man named Daniel
Bartolomei
he would go on to create Danny-Kay’s
#redauerbach
#bostonceltics
#smithsoldesurreyroom
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#lestercrane
#falmouthenterprise
#danielsmith
#danielbartolomei
#danny-kays
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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which I mentioned last week in the event
there were two big extensions to the
club they had to make it bigger and
bigger because of how popular it was
and their biggest shot in the arm came
when
they were mentioned in the Duncan Hines
Adventures in Good
Eating magazine in 1961
however now it is affordable apartments
at 704
Main Street
#duncanhines
#mainstreet
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but you could have gone to drink or
sleep off a great night
and that's the Gray Gables Inn which was
at
217 Presidents Road this was known as
the first
summer White House and it was
a home built for Grover Cleveland
and he lived there
and um until his basically
Grover Cleveland would come and stay at
the summer White House
and Joseph Jefferson who was a famous
actor of the very early motion picture
days of the
late 1890s he actually played Rip van
Winkle
in the 1896 version of the film
so he would come down he would fish
offshore that's why
Cleveland Ledge Lighthouse is named for
him and Grey Gables was
the name basically of the railroad
station where he would come in by his
train
it eventually became the name of the
whole village there
but once rumors got to be
out there that they were going to be
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#graygablesinn
#presidentsroad
#grovercleveland
#josephjefferson
#clevelandledgelighthouse
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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creating a Cape Cod Canal
Cleveland decided he really didn't want
to
be there while all this construction was
going on
so he stopped coming in 1908
and after his death his son sold it in
1920
basically the entire property because
they owned more than just
the actual house the whole property was
subdivided
and by 1926 there were 50 houses there
but they kept the actual Grey Gables
home
intact and it became a summer resort
owned by a man named John Stackpole
they had dining they had a cocktail
lounge it had a real nice
community feel and they even kept some
Grover Cleveland artifacts in there
including his desk that he used to write
at
and when Grover Cleveland’s grandson
came and visited he got a tour and he
was
very happy with how the owners had kept
it
close to what his grandfather would have
wanted
in 1961 a woman named Peggy Alden
took over and she was known for having
children come down for outings there
where they could come and stay
and do the fishing and things like that
to get in touch with nature
unfortunately December 10 1973 there was
a
suspicious fire that burned down the
Gray Gables Inn
and the property actually stayed
overgrown and
for almost 30 years at the turn of the
21st century
a couple came and they bought the
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#1920
#johnstackpole
#1961 #peggyalden
#1973
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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property
and they actually built an exact replica
of the Gray Gables in but it's a private
home
I have been told that they
expect people basically to come and take
photos of it so they don't
mind if you you know don't go on the
property but if you get to
the edge of their driveway you can take
photos I have not
gone and tried that yet but that's what
I’ve been told that they're very
warm and welcoming to people that are
at least respectful of the property
but all these icons deserve to be a part
of
Falmouth's rich history whether it was
the Casino
or the Cape Codder Hotel
and naturally I end it like I did last
week with
a nice throwback image of Main Street
and Falmouth
and thank you all for coming back
for the second presentation and
are there any questions and I will stop
sharing my screen
okay that was great we do have a couple
questions in the chat
so far you want to take a look
can you see those Chris or want me to
read them
let's see can you hear me
I can okay so there's one about where
were any of the hotels and venues
integrated
if so what years and then also how did
World War I and World War II
impact any of these venues and did Otis
impact any of these venues
well interestingly I’m not sure about
integrated I don't know anything about
that specifically
but I will tell you that world war
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#worldwarone #worldwartwo
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
40:15 Two was interesting as far as the
Coonamessett
40:18 because like I mentioned Edna Harris was
40:22 though well she didn't own it she leased
40:24 it
40:25 but Camp Edwards was right nearby
#campedwards
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so she got this huge influx of
military officers it kind of grew the
popularity of
the Coonamessett which made it all the
more
weird that the Crane family would then
decline her
lease in 1953
and then also surprisingly the
breakout of World War Two actually
spurred on the creation of the Popponesset
Inn
because what ended up happening was
Norma Armstrong
the nurse she was running the property
as the
kind of tourist summer camp and then
the military wanted to use it
basically for training the whole
property because it was
down before New Seabury and before all
that it was really isolated
and so they used it the late 1930s
but then really didn't have a need for
them to be out there training
when World War II happened so then the
property was
not abandoned but they were looking for
something to do with it and
it's like all right why not use it for a
hotel
so those are two I could think of yeah
and if anyone has any questions or just
wants to share any stories you can you
can unmute yourself
also and just raise your hand you know
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put your video on
so I have a question um can you tell me
a little bit more about how you've done
some of the research for these
books for these sure
so the nightlife one was actually a lot
of fun because
basically I asked my especially my
parents I said where did you used to go
when you were younger to go out drinking
and partying
and so that's how I got a lot of the
initial ones
then it was a matter of researching
the research is a lot of fun you kind of
find
broad terms nightclub bar and you look
up what places appear a lot
and a lot of them you growing up on Cape
Cod I could pick out a lot especially
from the 80s on
but then the real fun came with
putting out posts on social media and
getting folks that
may have remembered what it was like in
the 50s
and picking out places and you get a lot
of
varying opinions on who who like what
places
places like Brothers Four and Casino those
were easy
I had so many people in there's a
history group on Facebook for Falmouth
and I
I put a blast in there and I said where
did you like to go
to drink and party and Brothers Four
came up
so much it was Brothers Four and
Yesterdays and I didn't realize they
were the same
under the same roof I thought it was a
different place
yeah yeah those are pretty active groups
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definitely so
do you go into all these different
groups all over the Cape
or yes so
after social media I would then reach
out to
historical societies the Bourne
Historical Society was very helpful with
the Blue Moon Dancing Pavilion and the
Bournehurst
and even places that I didn't end up
using for the book like
Quintals they would send me photos
Falmouth I think Falmouth Library sent
me a bunch of
postcards of and it was essentially
just like these places might be ones
you'd be interested in and I would look
at the postcards and then I would start
researching from there and that's where
a place like
Smith's Olde Surrey Room came from I
didn't know it at all
and I saw a postcard of and I said that
looks interesting a big
carriage inside the bar so it was
so much of this was other people helping
me because my knowledge
of restaurants hotels and nightclubs is
very limited you're talking 1980s to now
and mainly Mid-Cape because that's where
I grew up
so I had to rely on a lot of people to
help
me put this together these three books
yeah so what made you decide you wanted
to write a book like this
about restaurants so the restaurants
one was actually pitched to me
so I have a friend of mine Bill DeSousaMauk
see this is what I like is I like when
other people share
what they know because my knowledge is
based on my research and
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#bournehistoricalsociety
#quintals
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very few when it came to the nightclubs
very few people had coherent memories of
them
basically what I would get was oh yeah
it was fun but I don't remember much
because I was drunk so like all right
well
I can say everyone had a good time but
that's about it
but the restaurants book was pitched to
me
by Arcadia Publishing and they actually
wanted
historic restaurants of Martha's
Vineyard and I told them I said I
couldn't even name you
five current restaurants let alone 40
that used to exist
so they came back to me and said we see
you've got a deep connection to Cape Cod
would you like to do that book I said
all right now you're talking
and it kind of went from there because
restaurants
naturally evolved into nightclubs and
bars
and then I pitched the hotels and motels
to go from there yeah
oh someone someone just typed something
in the chat too
Packet Landing in now where is Packet
Landing
in Orleans I don't know
I don't know if anyone who's there if
you went to
Smith’s Olde Surrey Room or I mean the
Coonamessett is still around and the Cape
Codder
see the hotels I think there'd be less
people in the chat that would have
stayed there because you're all
basically from here so why would you go
and stay at the Sea Crest
that's where the the bars and nightclubs
really come into play but even then it's
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like
places like the Bournehurst and the Blue
Moon that's
way back we're talking the 20s and 30s
so
that's kind of difficult yeah
Brothers Four in the Casino I would
think
you get some folks that would remember
that
yeah and by the way I want to recommend
these books because I I have looked at a
lot of these books they're great books
so
I encourage people to buy them or get
them out of the library and I’m not just
saying that because he's here
and the Casino part that you heard I
actually read
from the book I read it word for word
which
because someone last week had brought up
the casino and I had mentioned that I
would be talking about it this week and
I decided
we were talking this is behind the
scenes that
these events people that come to them
like to hear the authors read from their
books so I
picked a chapter that I thought would
fit and the Casino has got a
a great history Captain Joe Miron the
the painting bartender I did an article
about
his actual life so I do a deeper dive
and that I think is on capecod.com I did
a lot of writing for them
for several years and I stopped writing
for them a few years ago because I
I got to the point where i wanted to
write about
things I wanted to write about and so
you'd have to pitch ideas to the editor
and sometimes they wouldn't be on board
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so an article like Edna Harris who
ran the Coonamessett that would be one
where they might not be interested in it
but now I don't have to worry
it's a part of the In My Footsteps
Podcast Blog
that goes along with the podcast
yeah do you have any do you have any
other books about Cape Cod or the
Islands that you're
that you have in the works sir well
so I’m starting work on
a photography book now
the thing with that is I’m waiting for
contracts I guess you would say it's
basically been approved
and so it's going to be
Photographers’ America is the name of the
series that started
and the Arcadia Publishing they came to
me with three different
titles and they said you want to do
these and I said well I can't do all
three
I’ll pick one and so
I picked the photography one and I’m
waiting to get
official confirmation I’ve already
started taking photos it's going to be
beyond just the norm like I’ll have a
lot of places that are well known
but there's going to be some street
scenes I’ve got pictures I took in
Provincetown at the
Lobster Pot of people in line and
things to give people a feel of what the
heart and soul of Cape Cod is all about
beyond just what everyone goes to as a
tourist
so that's one I’ve got another one that
I’m
working on but it's more
tight-lipped I want to say it's
something
big and exciting but I don't have an
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#inmyfootsteps
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agent I don't have a publisher yet but
I’ll just say it's
true crime and it's working hand in hand
with a documentary film that's coming
out
so that's one where I’m really excited
about but I have to keep it kind of
hush just in case I don't ever like to
share things and then have it fall apart
yeah I know that you happen to take some
gorgeous scenery photos
of the Cape you know that oh thank you I
I post a lot on Instagram I
I believe I just passed my 10 year
anniversary on
Instagram and I have somewhere in the
neighborhood of
4 500 photos on there which I figured
out comes out to
basically 1.3 photos per day for 10
years
so I like Instagram yeah
so that's on the photography oh and
someone just said something the Casino
had a life-size
papier-mâché statue of Captain Joe that
was part of the flagpole
wow oh I would have loved to have seen
that
yeah yeah Captain Joe I’ve seen photos
of him
but he seemed like just a fascinating
guy
so I had to do a whole article about him
yeah if anyone does have any memories of
those places that they can remember yes
that's the big
catches do you actually remember going
to these places
yeah yeah the restaurants probably more
so
which was last week yes it was
interesting
when doing the research for the three
books
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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I had a lot of help with the restaurants
a lot of help with the hotels not as
much
with the nightlife because people didn't
remember
but I got a lot of names of places that
was about it no stories though
I think people are also fond of
restaurants because they grow you know
it's part of their childhood or their
summers they remember
going to these things absolutely
it's more family fun rather than
nightlife where it seems like you get in
a lot of trouble
yeah yeah and definitely yeah take
take a look at our postcard collection
on our website too because there are a
lot of
great historical postcards if you
haven't seen them if you go to
falmouthpubliclibrary.org we do have a
digital
page where they have a lot of these
great postcards that Chris has probably
seen
yes I highly recommend it that's I
always joke that
when it comes to obscure Cape Cod
history I always think it's
this might only interest me but I’ll
share
things that I find and that's why things
like the postcard collection I love it
no there's a lot of interest in in Cape
Cod history because I yeah of course I
work in the Reference Department we get
a lot of questions
a lot of those questions
yeah there's random things that I’ll
find interesting I was out for a run on
the
bike path down in Harwich last week and
there's a building
called Depot Storage and it's just a
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storage building
and I’d run by that hundreds of times
this time I went by there
and they had I guess removed shingles
and it revealed this old mural that was
I guess it used to be an
Ocean Spray cranberry warehouse
so now there's a painting of Ocean Spray
cranberries from the 20s
what was that that I did
oh someone said the Falmouth Enterprise
more is an interest is an amazing source
of photos and articles I’m not sure what
you mean by more do you know that
there is a ton of stuff in there though
well the Enterprise
I was just on the website this morning
doing my research for Edna Harris
oh and I I go down the rabbit holes
where I’ll find something else and I’ll
say okay
put a pin in that I’ll go look at that
later
that's the I find that interesting the
old newspaper archives I think are
fascinating
yeah they are and yet we do have the
Enterprise I don't remember the exact
date off the top of my head but we have
the Enterprise microfilm pretty far back
pretty far back yeah it's interesting to
even go
and just you start by researching
something you're interested in and then
you never know where it goes
oh and Kim just Kim just did a link to
the Joe Miron postcard
in our Digital Commonwealth that you
guys can
you can click on now or you can look
later
he's a very interesting character I wish
I could have met him
Kim is our cataloger by the way she
works here as well can do well
32
Hunt_Heights_Bldg_216
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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so she knows and she puts together much
of this all of it
so I encourage you guys to check out
Chris’s site chrissetterlund.com
because
you know this there's even more on that
site
oh [unintelligible] oh okay I’m okay
good to know yeah I was like I didn't
think I didn't think that was a mistake
but
more see that's I should know that
but I guess I didn't and by the way we
do have the Enterprise digitized but
only unfortunately up to 1962 so
if you want stuff from 62 to the present
you do have to go to the microfilm
sadly we hope to have it digitized all
the way up at some point so you don't
have to go through the mic oh I would
love that
see I didn't want to bother you about
that cause I was gonna say it only goes
up to like 62.
and by the way yeah we we will search
the microfilm the microfilm
you know for people within reason if
they have a date and a specific thing
if they come to us and say I think it
was 82 maybe it was 83
and that's a little harder but if
someone has a specific request
you know with some kind of pinpoint of
the day we can we're happy to look if
you can't get in here
and Kim said that he painted the mural
at Captain
Kidd in Woods Hole which is pretty cool
that would make sense
I’ve actually never been in the Captain
Kidd so
that might be a destination yeah Chris
lives Chris lives in Yarmouth by the way
so Falmouth isn't his regular
spot but he did a lot of digging to find
33
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out
you know specific found the things
because his books are about Cape Cod but
he looked
he's you know he did go beyond and find
some Falmouth information that isn't
even in his books for these talks
yes I wanted to make sure that it was
relevant to you who came
to actually check out this event
so that it wasn't just like oh there's
all these places in
Eastham and Provincetown and it's like
you may not have ever heard of them I’d
rather it be at least
relevant to the town you're in yeah that
was great
that was great all right and
just a reminder to everyone that we are
recording this and FCTV is recording it
they're going to edit it for us and
make it look nice and then I’m going to
post it on our social media and
what I try to do is I’ll try to email
you guys all the link to it it'll be a
YouTube it'll be up on YouTube and I’ll
give people the link because I know
sometimes people
you know didn't hear it well or they got
in late or something they want to hear
the whole thing
yeah that I’ll definitely share it all
around too
absolutely yeah it'll go light on our
promotion
yeah it'll go on our Falmouth YouTube
page and our Falmouth Library YouTube
page
and does anyone have any questions
before
we let Chris go
yeah if you think of any shoot me an
email and I can shoot him an email too I
think
he has his email on his website too oh
34
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yeah definitely I’m always
I get people that contact me about
places to stay I had someone
who listens to my podcast asking me
where he should bring his wife for their
anniversary they're not from here
so I was pitching in places to go I
don't know where he stayed but
I kind of ran the gamut from resorts
like Wequassett
down to little bed and breakfasts oh wow
well the Captain David Kelley you might
remember Sue
um oh I’m trying to think of the name of
the man he's he
would do spinning at Mid-Cape
and he he and his husband they own that
and so I always promote him so that's
where I’m hoping they win
oh wow David Kelley House in Centerville
he had his scones
oh he's I’ll have to ask Kailyn she
knows his name
wow yeah so if anyone needs a place to
stay in Centerville
yes who knows anyone who does okay
well I want to thank everyone for coming
and yeah
we're really glad that you came and we
want to thank Chris for coming too that
was a great presentation
thank you so much to everyone who came
out and took some time out to
listen to me talk about these books that
I took a lot of
pride in creating yeah no it was
wonderful
and have a good night everyone we will
see some of you guys
at the next event and we have a thank
you here well thank you so much
I really appreciate it
[Music]
35
#wequassetresort
#davidkelley
#centerville
�
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Transcript of Christopher Setterlund's Zoom Presentation on Historic Nightclubs and Hotels of Cape Cod
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Text
Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
Postcards from Falmouth Oral History Transcript
Recorded: June 30, 2021
Oral Historian: Nancy Eldridge, Camille Beale
Interviewer: Barbara Kanellopoulos
Topic: Falmouth Main Street in the 1900s
Note: The right column references postcards by identifiers searchable in the Digital
Commonwealth online collection.
00:00
[Music]
00:44
welcome to the Falmouth Public Library's
00:47
oral history project I’m Barbara
00:50
Kanellopoulos and with me are our oral
00:54
historians Nancy Eldridge and Cam Beale
00:58
who are going to tell us stories that
01:01
along with the historic postcards will
01:04
give us an idea of what Main Street in
#mainstreet
Gunning_Village_Sts_0017 through
0041
01:07
Falmouth looked like in the mid-1900s
01:12
Cam
01:13
Cam you arrived here in Falmouth in the
01:16
mid 50s and and married Falmouth
01:19
resident
01:21
Barry Beale whose parents owned
01:24
the Beale’s Shoe Store on Main Street and
01:27
Nancy you came to Falmouth
01:30
around 1940 as a child and you lived on
01:34
Main Street in fact Main Street was your
01:37
playground
1
#bealesshoestore
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
01:39
so I’ll turn to Cam first to tell us how
01:42
has uh how has Main Street changed over
01:45
the years well surprisingly Barbara it
01:47
really hasn't changed very much
01:50
from the mid-1900s the
01:53
buildings around the village green and
01:55
the center of Falmouth really
01:59
you would recognize them if you
02:01
looked at those postcards they look
02:02
pretty much the same as they do in the
02:05
postcards so the buildings have not
02:07
changed very much some of them have been
02:10
expanded some have been downsized for
02:13
them for
02:15
mostly
02:16
the town is the same
02:18
the town hall was
02:21
in the center of town and it was
02:24
on the Noonan Park site
02:27
that we use today
02:29
and it was
02:32
and behind it was the police station
02:35
and the police station overlooked
02:37
Shiverick’s Pond
#falmouthvillagegreen
#townhall
#pegnoonanpark
#shiverickspond
Gunning_Village_Pnd_0120
through 146
Hunt_Village_Pnd_128 through 135
02:39
and of course Katharine Lee Bates Road
2
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
02:40
wasn't there at that time
02:43
and
02:44
so the Shiverick’s kind of
02:47
really came up behind those buildings
02:49
fairly close
02:52
the story goes that
02:56
Shiverick’s used to freeze over in the
02:58
winter time and they used it to skate on
03:01
like three to five weeks during the
03:03
winter
03:05
and
03:06
there was a policeman named White
03:09
and he was
03:11
quite a big man and he would go out onto
03:13
the pond and stand on the middle
03:16
of the ice and
03:18
deem it safe or not safe to
03:21
to skate on
03:23
and
03:24
one day my husband Barry
03:26
eight or nine years old went out onto
03:29
the pond
03:30
unbeknownst to anyone
03:32
hadn't been checked out
03:34
and
03:35
a policeman coming back from being on
03:37
duty saw him and went down got him off
3
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
03:40
the ice called his dad at the shoe store
03:43
his dad arrived at the police station
03:46
and they
03:47
read the riot act to Barry Beale yes yes
03:50
it was a personal time people took care
03:53
of each other yes and uh I see Nancy you
03:56
certainly were very aware of the
04:00
visibility of the police on Main Street
04:04
yes indeed I was and everyone in town
04:09
kind of knew everyone else and
04:13
I
04:14
um
04:16
when I first
04:17
know when I first learned how to drive
04:21
I learned
04:22
how to drive
04:23
and I was driving very well by the time
04:25
I was 15.
04:27
and one day for some reason I was sent
04:30
to do an errand while
04:34
using the car
04:35
at the age of 15 and I drove out on Main
04:39
Street and
04:41
there was the traffic policeman standing
04:44
as they used to in a circle in the
04:46
middle of the
04:47
Main Street
4
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
04:49
that
04:51
and of course as I
04:53
tootled on by driving my car at 15
04:58
uh the policeman
05:00
was it uh Elmer Wright by any chance now
05:03
Elmer White that was what I thank you
05:06
for reminding me that was it Elmer White
05:08
yelled
05:09
hey what are you doing driving that car
05:12
you're only 15 of course he knew
05:14
exactly how old I was he knew who I was
05:19
yes
05:20
but that was as far as it went I waved
05:23
and smiled and
05:25
yes yes
05:26
and
05:27
so and the high school was right there I
05:30
understand and that was the high school
05:32
you went to
05:33
I did indeed the red wood shingled
05:37
building with the belfry in the top was
05:39
my high school
05:41
we were
05:43
supposed to be the first class to
05:47
graduate from the new high school which
05:49
was being built across Shiverick’s Pond
05:52
which is now the middle school
#lawrenceschool
5
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
05:55
but the truth
05:57
like all buildings it didn't get
05:59
finished in time so we were the last
06:01
class
06:02
to graduate from the old wood shingle
06:05
building on
06:07
right on Main Street and it was
06:11
it was an
06:12
interesting building yes I understand
06:15
there's a plaque on Main Street next to
06:18
a stone that commemorates that that's
06:21
where the old high school was
06:23
and um
06:25
and so Main Street then um
06:28
had had
06:30
markets markets for food shops
06:32
yeah they did there were three markets
06:34
that I remember when I came to town one
06:37
of them was the A&P
06:39
that was in the center of town
06:41
the other was the First National and
06:43
that was across the street from what is
06:46
now Barbo’s but it was W.C. Davis at that
06:49
time it was furniture store
06:52
and the third one was a specialty shop
06:56
it was
06:58
called Ten Acre
#tenacre
6
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
06:59
and it catered to the summer people oh
07:02
yes yeah
07:03
Hollis Lovell owned it
07:05
and he hired a number of high school and
07:08
college students to work summers
07:10
and they have I’m sure
07:12
a lot of happy memories doing that
07:14
um also my memory is of the donut
07:17
machine in the window or in the front I
07:20
can't remember whether it was in the
07:21
window or the front of the store but
07:23
anyway every they wheeled it out every
07:26
uh Saturday
07:27
and it made those you know plain greasy
07:30
donuts
07:32
they put the mixture in it would plop
07:34
the donuts down into the grease they'd
07:36
bob around and turn around when they
07:39
were cooked it would automatically lift
07:41
them out and drain the grease from them
07:43
and then somebody would pick them up
07:45
through the donut holes and put them
07:47
into a bag yummy plain donuts
07:51
greasy yes delicious it sounds like
07:54
just watching this machine must have
07:56
been entertainment for the town yeah
07:59
right line up right
7
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
08:01
and
08:03
entertainment
08:05
makes me think of
08:06
Nancy you remember a movie house on
Main
08:10
Street oh I certainly do I remember both
08:12
of them but the there was a
08:15
um the Elizabeth Theater which was right
#elizabeththeater
Gunning_Village_Sts_0025
08:18
on Main Street and is now the
08:20
location from I believe Maxwells
08:23
department store or
08:25
clothing store
08:27
and
08:29
they ran movies every single day and
08:32
evening
08:34
and I lived right next door to it so I
08:36
always knew what movie was playing and I
08:39
saw many of them but
08:42
they always had a cowboy movie on
08:45
Saturdays
08:47
and
08:48
good first run movies that ran on
08:51
Sundays and Mondays and double features
08:54
on Tuesday Wednesday Thursday
08:57
don't remember what was on Friday but
08:59
always a cowboy movie on Saturday yes
09:02
and do you remember how much
8
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
09:04
admission
09:06
well as a child up till 12
09:10
and actually I got past 12 because I
09:12
wasn't very tall and didn't look 12.
09:15
I paid 10 cents plus 2 cents tax and I
09:20
think the the adult
09:22
um
09:23
charge was under a dollar
09:26
it must have been a place where all the
09:29
children went uh while their parents
09:31
were shopping on me
09:33
I would go shopping at the First
09:35
National and then I would come back and
09:38
say to the ticket lady I’m going to go
09:39
in and check on my children and she'd
09:41
say oh go ahead and tell the usher and
09:44
he'd let you go down talk to the kids
09:46
are you doing okay yeah fine all right
09:48
see you at the end and uh yeah for sure
09:51
it was yes yes yes it seems uh
09:54
that Main Street was just so homey it
09:58
seems at that at that time
10:00
and uh
10:02
of course there was um sometimes
10:04
entertainment even in the businesses how
10:07
about uh
10:09
the place called Harvey’s
#harveyshardware
9
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
10:11
somebody asked me about Harvey’s the
10:13
other day
10:15
we were at a I don't know where we were
10:17
but she said do you remember Harvey’s and
10:19
the animals and I said oh yes
10:22
Harvey had a monkey there he had that
10:24
monkey there all year long and it was
10:26
inside
10:28
and he had a Christmas time for at least
10:31
a couple of years I don't know how long
10:33
it went on but he had reindeer and sheep
10:36
now I can't remember whether they were
10:38
penned inside or whether they were
10:40
penned outside but it was a whole
10:42
different time it was an innocent time
10:44
and people and he used it crowds came
10:47
look at the reindeer it was yes and in
10:50
addition to looking it was a hardware
10:52
store it was a hardware store and Harvey
10:55
Martin owned it and he'd bring some of
10:57
his farm animals in from Hatchville
11:00
right and off and on throughout the year
11:02
but the one I remember the most is the
11:04
reindeer and Christmas yes yes
11:07
and
11:08
Nancy I understand that we had a five and
11:11
dime that you're quite familiar with
10
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
11:14
um yes well it was almost across the
11:18
street from where I lived
11:21
and
11:22
it was called Newberry’s and
#jjnewberrys
Gunning_Village_Sts_0025
11:25
it really did have things that were
11:29
5 and 10 cents um
11:32
if you can imagine it most of them were
11:34
a dollar or under
11:36
and actually when I was a teenager at
11:39
Christmas time
11:42
I actually got a job working there for a
11:45
couple of weeks to earn Christmas money
11:48
which was a treat for me and one of my
11:51
first jobs
11:53
now as I recall five and dimes used to
11:57
have lunch counters too it did have a
12:00
lunch counter and um
12:03
I think that a lot of people would come
12:06
in to have their lunch there are
12:08
merchants who were working on Main
12:11
Street
12:12
and that was consisted of
12:14
maybe a hot dog or something exactly
12:17
they were very
12:20
uh you know lunches under a dollar right
12:24
I see I see
11
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
12:26
can I just tell you about one store that
12:28
was kind of interesting yes yes on the
12:31
corner of Walker
12:33
there were you know where the ice cream
12:35
place is now
12:36
there was a store called the Store of
12:38
Three Wonders
12:39
and if you go to those postcards you'll
12:42
see that store
12:44
and you will see white sheets of paper
12:46
in the window because he used to put the
12:48
sale items
12:49
on the
12:51
white sheets of paper and post them I
12:53
see sort of handwritten signs
12:55
and it the three wonders were “you wonder
12:58
if I have it
13:00
I wonder where it is
13:02
and everybody wonders how I found it”
13:06
and it was kind of a precursor to Job
13:08
Lot I think because he had kind of
13:11
you know the tail end of inventories
13:14
that he had purchased I suspected
13:16
anything you needed in a hurry you could
13:18
probably find there yes yes yeah right
13:21
that that's that's charming then they
13:23
were also um
#storeofthreewonders
12
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
13:26
what did people do about clothing uh
13:29
well there were no malls no no no no
13:32
malls and there were clothing stores
13:34
where you could buy adult clothing
13:37
Malchman’s was mostly women's clothes
13:40
they did have some men but mostly women
13:42
Isaacson’s
13:45
was a clothing store for mostly men's
13:48
clothing
13:49
and Butner’s carried clothing they
13:52
carried
13:53
all kinds of things curtains they were
13:55
more of a department store they had
13:58
collectibles
13:59
but
14:00
a lot of people who wanted to buy
14:02
clothing for their youngsters
14:04
would get the ferry
14:06
in Woods Hole and go over to New Bedford
14:10
and they would purchase their
14:12
maybe school clothing for September yes
14:15
from
14:16
Cherry & Webb
14:18
and the story goes that Mrs. Beale Ruth
14:22
took Barry over one day
14:24
got the ferry went to New Bedford picked
14:27
out school clothing he wasn't feeling so
#ferry
13
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
14:30
great they got back on the ferry to come
14:32
home and by the time he got off he had
14:35
chickenpox and of course two days later
14:38
he was an item in the Enterprise
14:41
you know that he had gotten the
14:42
chickenpox on his his trip to New
14:45
Bedford for school clothing
14:47
I remember making that school that was
14:50
school shopping
14:52
yes
14:54
and perhaps Cherry & Webb was a bit
14:56
more economical indeed it was yes
14:59
and had a greater selection yes yes yes
15:02
that's true
15:04
and um
15:05
and so we have um
15:08
interesting that
15:10
that the stores reflected what people
15:12
needed and what people were doing at the
15:14
time for example the you spoke of a
15:18
linen store that had embroidery
15:21
and
15:22
the kinds of things that women who were
15:24
doing handcrafts
15:26
could go to for supplies exactly and my
15:30
mother was one of their best customers
15:32
because she was never without needlework
14
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
15:36
she
15:36
knitted and crocheted constantly
15:40
had did it so well that she could
15:43
read a book while doing it and
15:47
that so as I say she was Jane Russell’s
15:50
best customer yes yes I remember buying
15:53
my gloves there for when I was married
15:58
and I went in and she had all these
16:00
boxes with gloves in it and then she
16:03
took out one short long medium which one
16:06
do you want
16:07
took them out I got the short ones she
16:09
put them out on the counter
16:11
you know laid them out lovely and I
16:14
purchased my gloves I wore the short
16:16
gloves so that's so interesting because
16:19
there was a time when gloves were
16:22
important items in a woman's wardrobe
16:24
and hats and hats as well right gloves
16:27
and hats you always had to have a pair
16:29
of white gloves
16:31
wear to church yes yes interesting
16:33
interesting and then there was um your
16:37
uh
16:38
in-laws shoe store right at the Beale Shoe
16:42
Store right Granny Beale
16:44
Granny right he was called Granny
#granvillebeale
15
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
16:46
because his name was Granville and
16:48
everybody in town called him Granny
16:50
Beale
16:51
he was on the Board of Trade which is
16:54
now the Chamber of Commerce
16:56
he was
16:57
on the board of the Salvation Army and
16:59
he was quite active in town and
17:02
and in politics yes um he
17:06
is however the shoe store is really
17:08
quite well known for
17:10
the x-ray machine an x-ray machine oh
17:13
yes
17:14
it was uh
17:16
considered really a babysitter of the
17:19
day because people would go into Mrs.
17:22
Weeks’ shop which was next door and send
17:24
their children in to gaze down through
17:27
the x-ray machine to see the bones in
17:29
their feet
17:30
I’m not sure that that would be
17:32
appropriate today no
17:35
uh so that was uh
17:38
the interesting part of that and Nancy
17:40
you have a really interesting story
17:42
about uh Granny yeah yes um yes I
17:47
lived
16
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
17:48
in an old apartment building that is no
17:51
longer there now right behind the shoe
17:54
store
17:56
by the back entrance of the shoe store
17:59
I’m sure you used to have fun
18:01
with the x-ray machine
18:04
I did but it didn't come along until I
18:07
was older it wasn't there when I was a
18:10
young child it was more like when I was
18:12
a teenager but I did use it a lot and
18:15
play with it nevertheless what it
18:18
faceted fascinated me as a teenager so
18:21
yes um so I’m sure that I had my
18:25
good dose of x-ray
18:28
and
18:29
but I
18:30
was
18:32
very fortunate in
18:35
Granny Beale was a very kind and gentle
18:37
and wonderful man and and I would bop in
18:41
and out the back door of the shoe store
18:45
often I bopped in and out of
18:48
many of the Main Street stores because I
18:51
lived right there
18:53
near them or by them or behind them
18:55
right next to them
18:57
and
17
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
19:00
he
19:04
I
19:06
my mother was a single parent and I my I
19:10
was rough on shoes and so my shoes
19:13
didn't always
19:14
look so good even though she tried to
19:17
keep they always fit
19:19
but they didn't always look pretty
19:22
and
19:22
um
19:24
every
19:25
now and then at least once a year
19:29
um
19:30
we would get a note
19:32
or a message from Granny Beale
19:35
that there was a an old gentleman who
19:39
would like
19:40
me to have a new pair of shoes
19:44
and so I was to come in and choose a
19:46
pair
19:47
and it was always an old kind old
19:51
gentleman
19:52
he might we might have assumed he was
19:55
rich
19:56
or maybe
19:58
that was part of his description but I
20:00
always went in and picked out
18
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
20:03
any pair of shoes in the store that I
20:05
wanted from of course it
20:08
took
20:09
I was out of college before I figured
20:11
out it was Granny Beale who was the kind
20:14
old man no no mysterious benefactor it
20:18
was Granny Beale yeah it was um
20:21
um yes that um
20:24
the people it was more personal once
20:25
it's much more personal the smaller
20:27
population people tend to
20:29
yes
20:31
yes
20:32
and then I um have heard mention of
20:36
an exciting place in town called the
20:38
Smith Surrey Room yeah that was quite
#smithsoldesurreyroom
Gunning_Village_Bldg_0384
20:40
active during the war actually and after
20:42
the war too and we used to go from ‘53 on
20:47
but they he Dan Smith owned it
20:50
and he would have a
20:53
what they called the annual venison
20:57
dinner
20:58
and he would invite all his hunting
21:01
buddies and some dignitaries from the
21:03
town but mostly people from Main Street
21:07
and they would go down there and have a
#danielsmith
19
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
21:09
night out and enjoy
21:11
their catch 10 more minutes
21:15
so I just remember that and I remember
21:18
the special
21:20
that
21:21
that um
21:23
that
21:24
he they had there and it was baked
21:26
potato
21:27
filet
21:28
mignon
21:30
I’m looking
21:34
Barbara
21:35
yes
21:37
yes
21:38
and a uh
21:39
and canned peas
21:41
and a free drink and an alcoholic drink
21:45
like an alcoholic drink and it was music
21:49
there was lots of music
21:51
uh
21:52
it was townies all showed up so you
21:55
always knew someone yeah it was
21:57
gathering place yes yes yes you're right
22:01
one of the postcards so it's so
22:03
interesting because it's just a plethora
22:06
of signs
20
Gunning_Village_Sts_0032
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
22:08
large small neon painted and
22:12
the um
22:13
a rifle uh showing
22:16
guns for sale right yeah and uh tell us
22:19
so tell us about it well I think that's
22:21
interesting because there was
22:24
it was an Eastman’s block that that gun
22:27
shows up as an advertisement and uh I
22:31
think that there was upstairs there was
22:34
Mr. Harvey who
22:37
did
22:38
have a
22:39
a buy and sell antique guns
22:42
and so that could have been from him or
22:45
it could have been from Eastman who sold
22:48
guns and ammunition
22:51
and it was interesting because there's
22:53
so much signage in that one picture that
22:57
one postcard that you you know there was
23:00
no signage law as there is today yes
23:02
exactly you know and nobody questioned
23:05
you know in fact this
23:07
question the fact that there was a gun
23:09
as an advertisement
23:11
also there was a
23:14
speaking of things that would
23:16
would bring into thought today was there
21
#eastmanshardware
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
23:19
was a restaurant called the Wigwam and
23:22
nobody questioned that at that time yes
23:25
it was a
23:27
a casual a more casual a more innocent
23:30
time yes exactly now and the
23:33
Eastman’s block um
23:36
is isn't there something about
23:39
how they got their supplies well that's
23:41
an interesting thing I was talking to
23:43
Chucky Eastman young Chuck and he was
23:47
telling me that the train brought
23:51
a lot of their supplies and left them at
23:53
the grain mill
23:55
and then people from Eastman’s would go
23:57
up and pick them up from the early 1900s
24:00
to the 50s right that a lot of their
24:02
supplies came in through train right and
24:05
the train would then continue down to
24:08
Woods Hole where they'd unload and then it
24:11
would go on the supplies would go on the
24:13
ferry and go over to the island
24:16
so the train was an important part we
24:18
didn't have the the trucks the
24:21
you know the 16 wheelers or whatever
24:24
they call them that we have today and so
24:27
the train was the way to get supplies to
24:29
the merchants
22
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
24:31
and then the merchants on Main Street
24:35
always had their promotions Nancy I
24:37
think as a child you remember taking
24:40
part in one of those promotions
24:43
on that the Eastman’s Hardware store
24:46
carried
24:48
oh yes um
24:50
there was a
24:52
it was a it was a special day that
24:54
Falmouth used to have to I think to
24:56
promote the businesses all up and down
24:59
Main Street and every business would
25:01
have
25:01
something special to draw people in
25:05
um
25:06
over
25:07
you know from maybe
25:10
uh four to
25:12
seven in in the evening or
25:16
whatever I what I remember is that
25:20
Eastman’s um
25:22
had a
25:24
display in their
25:26
window and
25:28
they had a sign that said that in the
25:31
display there were 20
25:34
mistakes
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
25:35
or
25:36
anomalies that
25:38
needed to be found and it was a contest
25:41
and if you
25:42
found them all you or you
25:45
found the most you would get
25:47
ten dollars or twenty dollars I can't it
25:49
might have been 20. okay
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um
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and
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uh so I spent a lot of time right
25:57
writing them all down
25:59
and um I won it you won you won the ten
26:02
dollars I did yes
26:05
and um I think you were also the
26:08
Enterprise picked up on lots of stories
26:10
like that and was reported in the paper
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that
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you won the contest
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I won the contest yes and as a matter of
26:20
fact I found one more than 20.
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I see I see
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it was um an interesting time Main
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Street was a
26:31
pretty busy camp well during the war it
26:34
was a beehive of activity yes
26:37
and uh of course Camp Edwards brought in
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#campedwards
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
Gunning_Hatchville_Miltry_0557
through 0561
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a lot of service people and their
26:40
families
26:41
oh yes and of course we rose to the
26:43
occasion with entertainment for them
26:45
right and it went on quite late into the
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evenings most nights yes but after the
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war it
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Main Street still was the center of
26:54
business and social life
26:56
and
26:57
those stores were owned by mostly local
27:00
people
27:01
and people seemed to know each other
27:04
if they didn't know each other they at
27:06
least knew each other when they passed
27:08
each other on the street yes they
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recognized each other so it was a small
27:14
town still back then yes right and
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things have changed over a period of
27:19
time and we have to adjust I guess yes
27:22
exactly in fact you never went to the
27:24
store without meeting someone you knew
27:26
that's correct
27:27
well I want to thank you so much for
27:29
being here and telling us these stories
27:33
and I want to thank viewers for tuning
25
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
27:35
in
27:36
and for
27:38
learning about these stories about Main
27:40
Street that are
27:42
along with the
27:43
historic postcards I remind us to all of
27:47
us that
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places everywhere Falmouth and every
27:51
place are always constantly changing
27:55
thank you
27:56
[Music]
26
�
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Transcript of Nancy Eldridge and Camille Beale's Oral History on Falmouth Main Street
Barbara Kanellopoulos
Beale's Shoe Store
Camille Beale
Camp Edwards
Daniel Smith
Eastman's Hardware
Elizabeth Theater
Falmouth Main Street
Falmouth Town Hall
Falmouth Village Green
ferry
Granville Beale
Harvey's Hardware
jj newberry's
lawrence school
nancy eldridge
oral history
peg noonan park
Postcards from Falmouth
shiverick's pond
smith's olde surrey room
store of three wonders
ten acre
transcript