Andy's Handy Store
The first phone call between Yarmouth and Portland, Maine's largest city, was made from the premises.
History
In 1807, Nathaniel Baker's nail store stood at the corner of Main Street and what was then known as Mill Street (prior to the construction of today's Mill Street, located near to where the Forest Paper Company formerly stood).
In 1891, Nathaniel Foster's pottery was torn down, after about fifty years in existence, and a new building was constructed in its place.
The building was later the home of the hardware store of John Ambrose Griffin (1838–1905).
Between 1906 and 1935, Arthur and Harry Storer's hardware store, Storer Bros., occupied the premises, which included a bakery run by Freeland A. Knight. Other early owners included Lester and Orland Blake (of the Brown's Point family), who ran Blake Bros. Bakery.
Joe Arsenault's electrical shop occupied the premises for a short while thereafter.
It is believed Abbie Hines Maley briefly ran a luncheonette in the building between 1927 and 1929. This was followed by an equally short stint in the shape of Charlie Chase's Variety. His business was not a success, unlike its successor, another variety store run by Andrew Antonio, an African American. Antonio's business closed after a year, however.
Earle Hayes ran a drug store from the property, prior to moving to Gray. Phil Morrill's Variety Store moved into the vacated space.
In 1935, the property became Andy's Handy Store – named for proprietor, Leland "Andy" Anderson. In 1945, Anderson combined the two wooden buildings of Griffin's and an adjacent grocery store (which sold produce "at Portland prices"). Anderson sold the business in 1953.
When Yarmouth's post office moved from the Brickyard Hollow section of Main Street in the late 1990s, the then owners of Handy's, Glenn and Susan McAllister, signed a contract to provide postal services at their store. This "auxiliary mail station" status was removed in 2013, except for the sale of stamps.
It became occupied by OTTO Pizza in 2014, then a grocery store and café, called The Nook, with the building known collectively as Handy's.
Thoroughfare occupied the entire building between early 2022 and September 2024. Christian Hayes and Christine Hayes, who also own Dandelion Catering, named it Dandy's Handy Store (word play on the name of the latter business) prior to converting the premises to its current format.
See also
References
- ^ Images of America: Yarmouth, Alan M. Hall (Arcadia, 2002), p.31
- ^ Images of America: Yarmouth, Alan M. Hall (Arcadia, 2002), p.30
- ^ The Dennison Family of North Yarmouth and Freeport, Maine, Grace Millet Rogers (1906), p. 39
- ^ Yarmouth Revisited, Amy Aldredge (2013), p. 116 ISBN 0738599034
- ^ The Yarmouth History Center Newsletter, Spring 2016, Yarmouth Historical Society
- ^ "Postal services not-so-handy after Yarmouth store loses contract" – Portland Press Herald, October 23, 2013
- ^ "New owners plan to transform Andy's Handy Store in Yarmouth" - Portland Press Herald, December 16, 2014
- ^ "New eatery opens at Handy's Market in Yarmouth" – Portland Press Herald, April 2, 2019
- ^ About Us – Dandy's Handy Store official website
- ^ "Pandemic-born restaurant in Yarmouth was opened to save another eatery" – News Center Maine, March 30, 2021