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Sarasota area waterfront restaurant closes after nearly 70 years, will be deeply missed
Sarasota area waterfront restaurant closes after nearly 70 years, will be deeply missed

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Sarasota area waterfront restaurant closes after nearly 70 years, will be deeply missed

One of the best restaurants in Sarasota and Bradenton for burgers, grouper sandwiches, and classic Old Florida waterfront charm has permanently closed. For two decades, I visited Annie's Bait & Tackle, a humble gem hugging the Intracoastal Waterway in the historic commercial fishing village of Cortez, which also borders north Sarasota Bay. Opened in 1955, Annie's was where boaters and fishermen stopped for fuel and bait — but it was the food served at its cozy tables, laid-back beer and wine bar, and breezy patio that kept me coming back. Alas, now it's gone — another victim of hurricanes Milton and Helene, and the relentless march of progress, as they say. Best waterfront restaurants 10 favorites I love to recommend in Sarasota-Manatee Ticket Newsletter: Sign up to receive restaurant news, reviews, and fun things to do every Friday The community's hopes of saving Annie's Bait & Tackle after hurricane flood damage left it battered were dashed when Manatee County officials opted to move forward with plans for a new marina on the property, my Herald-Tribune colleague Jesse Mendoza reported earlier this month. Annie's Bait & Tackle owner Bruce Shearer and his family pushed to rebuild, but he dismissed Manatee County's proposals as 'losing efforts.' County officials presented options at a public meeting, including a two-year rebuild to meet flood standards or a temporary setup costing up to $250,000 with food trailers and limited services. Shearer rejected the temporary option, arguing he could repair his shop for around $100,000 and that the county's plan wouldn't support a viable business. "That business is like 'Cheers' on TV — it's where people got together and had birthday parties and all that stuff — that won't happen in your proposal," Shearer said. "As you've proposed things right now, I'm done. It just won't work. Financially, it won't work. You'll lose $250,000, and I'll lose $100,000. It would be failed within two months, I guarantee ya." Longtime local resident Shearer bought Annie's Bait & Tackle, located at 4334 127th St. W., Cortez, in 1995, but its history dates back much earlier, with Shearer explaining to me in 2021 that the Cipriani family, who would later sell their nearby C&C Marine, purchased the property in 1945. 'They filled it all in, with construction of this building taking place in the early to mid-'50s, I'm guessing,' Shearer said from behind the counter at Annie's on a Friday afternoon in February four years ago. 'There were snacks and then those square sandwiches from a vending machine in the 1970s.' Shearer's memory aligns with that of Capt. Zach Zacharias, the Herald-Tribune's former outdoors correspondent. 'My first recollection of the proprietors was a salty old character by the name of Taylor,' Zacharias wrote of Annie's Bait & Tackle in 2014. 'He purveyed live shrimp primarily and also stocked rudimentary tackle items, drinks and snacks up until the late '70s, when Annie took over. Annie was a real breath of fresh air and the name has stuck despite a string of operators since.' As for the waterfront property on which Annie's sat, the Cipriani family sold it to the Berry family, which, according to Herald-Tribune archives, was known for operating 'the Miss Cortez Party boats.' They eventually sold the property to Hamlin Jones, who also owned the Seafood Shack next door. Shearer said he made a million-dollar offer to Jones for the Annie's property. Jones declined and sold the entire waterfront lot to the Canadian developer Vandyk Group in 2014. Aside from the dock being washed out in 2012 by Tropical Storm Debby, Annie's Bait & Tackle required only minor repairs for decades, with the exterior and interior looking much the same as it did in the 1950s — or at least the '70s, when Shearer recalled first setting foot in the place. 'We've been so damn lucky,' Shearer told me in 2021. 'I hope to hold onto it for at least a few more years. We'll see.' Manatee County purchased the property that includes the Seafood Shack restaurant and marina, as well as Annie's Bait & Tackle, for $13 million at the end of 2024. County commissioners now plan to build a public boat ramp there called Cortez Marina, designed to expand access to local waterways with boat ramps and other potential amenities on the property located at the base of the Cortez Bridge, right across the Intracoastal Waterway from Anna Maria Island and Bradenton Beach. While many local residents support the project, they have also voiced a clear desire for it to include Annie's Bait & Tackle. Annie's "has been a staple of this community since the doctor at Manatee Memorial Hospital patted me on my little rear end," Manatee County community activist Andrea Griffin said during the early March meeting. "It is the tackle shop that I got my first shrimp from to go fishing, and I know that those things are important to people in this community." "I hope that each and every one of you guys take your time before you say 'no' and look at all the good that this tackle shop has done," she said. "I'm 45 years old — 45 — and there's nothing but good memories from that place." Yeah, I also have nothing but fond memories of Annie's. Bottles of beer with fried grouper sandwiches or burgers — always with an order of thin-cut, salty fries — sitting with the water right at your feet, in the shadow of the bridge, watching folks fuel up their boats, buy more bait, or just grab a bite to eat and a cold one. I dined and drank there alone, with my wife, Kristin, and several of our dogs on the back patio over the years. We dined alongside strangers, too, who soon became friends, if only for one gorgeous afternoon. Like Shearer said, it was similar to "Cheers" — if the sitcom took place in a small Southern fishing village rather than a big city in the Northeast. I'll sure miss Annie's and wish the best for the Shearer family moving forward. Thank you for many cherished memories! Wade Tatangelo is Ticket Editor for the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, and Florida Regional Dining and Entertainment Editor for the USA TODAY Network. Follow him on Facebook, Instagram, and X. He can be reached by email at This article originally appeared on Sarasota Herald-Tribune: Sarasota area waterfront restaurant closes after nearly 70 years

Manatee County family hoping to save Cortez Village bait shop from demolition after hurricane damage
Manatee County family hoping to save Cortez Village bait shop from demolition after hurricane damage

Yahoo

time28-01-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Manatee County family hoping to save Cortez Village bait shop from demolition after hurricane damage

The Brief The hurricanes have put the future of Manatee County's bait and tackle shop, which has been in the community for decades, in jeopardy. Manatee County has taken control of the property. Many, including the owner of the business and his family, are organizing a group to keep the business in the community in the future. CORTEZ, Fla. - A Manatee County family hopes to save a long-standing Cortez Village bait shop from demolition after it received extensive damage from the hurricanes. Annie's Bait & Tackle has been a community staple since 1957. Bruce Shearer has owned it since 1996. What they're saying "This is how I ran the place, 'it doesn't matter if you've got $5 or $50 million, if you can afford that beer, you're equal. That's it," Shearer said. His daughter Anna Gaffey said it was beloved. "We were a full-service bait and tackle shop, frozen and live every day. We had a full kitchen, bar, and fuel station. We had a lot of dockside parking [and] patio seating," Gaffey said. Many knew Annie's as a slice of Olde Florida on the Anna Maria sound. "We had signs everywhere. We had Christmas lights as our lighting. There was no AC. It was strictly fans and the sea breeze," Gaffey said. The backstory Last Fall, as Manatee County was in the process of acquiring the property and its docks, Hurricanes Helene and Milton devastated the area. "The first storm, we had a piece of dock come through, and it took out some siding. We had some flooding, about 30 inches of water come in," Gaffey said. "Then Milton came through with all of that strong wind because we lost all of that base [and] the windows blew out." Manatee County has since successfully acquired the property. But Shearer's and Gaffey's fate is in limbo. "We've offered to repair the building ourselves and give it the love that it needs to get it back up and running," Gaffey said. "We don't want to do anything until we can get a lease. We don't want to put the money into it for them to say, 'Okay, you can leave now.'" What's next Gaffey is working to gather a group to attend Tuesday morning's Manatee County Commission meeting to voice their concerns during public comment. "I just want to tell them how much Annie's means to the people and the community here in Manatee County," Gaffey said. "It's been a staple for so many years, and a lot of people rely on us for a lot of different things." The other side FOX 13 reached out to each Manatee County commissioner for a comment. District 3 Commissioner Tal Siddique shared this statement: "At a previous county commission meeting I mentioned the need to keep Annie's in its current form on the county property even though the prior owner had terminated all leases. Since then, I was informed that we cannot save the building in its current form due to the extent of the damages. FEMA regulations require the building be up to code in a floodplain, which the current structure will not be. It hurts to say that, since my family have been going to Annie's for decades. I am committed to incorporating a bait and tackle shop into the new design and public workshops to identify what the community wants to see. I expect to see a new ferry stop to address traffic along the Cortez corridor from developments including SeaFlower and Aqua by the Bay." For more information about Annie's Bait & Tackle, click here. The Source FOX 13's Jennifer Kveglis collected the information in this story. STAY CONNECTED WITH FOX 13 TAMPA: Download the FOX Local app for your smart TV Download FOX Local mobile app: Apple | Android Download the FOX 13 News app for breaking news alerts, latest headlines Download the SkyTower Radar app Sign up for FOX 13's daily newsletter

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