Oct. 4: Northfield Drive-In Theatre, Hinsdale NH

It’s Day 277 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. With all the twisty, forested roads, it took me almost an hour and a half to drive from Leicester MA to the Northfield Drive-In Theatre, just barely across the border in Hinsdale NH.

The Northfield, the oldest New Hampshire drive-in that’s still active, was built in 1948 by Carl Nilman. According to Digital Commonwealth, Nilman was the son of Swedish immigrants who settled in East Buckland MA in the early 1900s, and he had a profitable career of owning and operating theaters. “A resourceful man who never married,” Nilman built a hefty estate, which he bequeathed to charities including a scholarship fund for needy students at Mohawk Trail Regional High School in his home town.

Many reference works of the period refer to Nilman’s theater as the Auto Drive-In, although I found one 1948 newspaper article that called it the Northfield Community Drive-In. The original screen was destroyed by a hurricane in 1951 (it must have been Hurricane How), but it was rebuilt, and that 80- by 54-foot screen is still used today.

The Shakour family bought the drive-in in 1967, which was around the time my references began calling it the Northfield Community. I couldn’t find the buyers’ first names directly, but they were probably Gabriel and Barbara Shakour, who founded The Keene Shopper (pdf) in 1959. That paper is now The Monadnock Shopper News, run by their son Mitchell Shakour, who also now owns the Northfield Drive-In.

Mitchell runs the drive-in on summer weekends and his veterinarian wife Carla runs the snack bar. In 2013, he briefly wondered whether the Northfield should convert to digital or shut down; community support convinced him to make the switch.

One odd thing about the drive-in – it’s just north of Northfield MA (hence the name), but the sign, parking lot, driveway and screen are all completely just barely across the border in NH. (I can’t help but think the resourceful Nilman did that on purpose.) Yet everything I read says the drive-in “straddles” the line and “sits partially” somehow in MA. My guess is the drive-in owns an adjoining chunk of MA, but I just don’t get it. I’ll come back and update this if I ever find a better explanation.

The Keene Sentinel noted another really great odd thing. Because the Shakours are vegetarians, there are plenty of veggie options available at the Northfield snack bar, including veggie burgers, veggie hot dogs and spring rolls. I’d definitely go for that!

But summer is long gone, and so is the Northfield’s season. I was left without a movie to watch on an unseasonably warm October night.

The YouTube video of the day is brief, but it was the best drone shot I could find to show the tree-lined Massachusetts border to the left. (Check out the Northfield Drive-In channel for more.) It was very nice video work to superimpose a movie on the screen in daylight, or is the digital projector just that powerful?

Miles Today / Total: 53 / 32443 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 174

Nearby Restaurant: Mim’s Market in Northfield features a little bit of everything. It looks like a two-story house plus an attic, but it’s a convenience store and delicatessen. Fresh coffee and muffins complement a fine deli sandwich built to order from the meats, cheeses and condiments available. Of course, they had me at coffee.

Where I Virtually Stayed: There aren’t any hotels close by, but there is one great bed and breakfast, the Centennial House. My King bedroom didn’t have a fridge or microwave, but it had a full bookcase and a view of the pines outside. Breakfast was great of course, and I was glad to find such a comfortable place close by.

Only in Hinsdale: According to Roadside America, there’s a house in Hinsdale that’s completely covered in old license plates. (Here’s the Google Street View.) In 2005, its creator’s daughter wrote, “This was my father’s project — Albert (Bob) Duso. It started as a garage. I was raised in this house. He ran an antique and flea market out of it for years. He LIVED for people to stop and ask him about it! He would be thrilled today to know he was listed here.”

Next stop: Pleasant Valley Drive-in, Barkhamsted CT.

Oct. 3: Leicester Triple Drive-In, Leicester MA

It’s Day 276 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I took me two and a half hours to drive from Wellfleet MA on Cape Cod to the Leicester Triple Drive-In in Leicester MA of course.

Lebanese immigrant Hanna Joseph was in his mid-30s when he embarked on what would become a career in real estate by building the Robin Hood Drive-in, a car-hop restaurant just west of Leicester in the early 1960s. Soon Joseph expanded to a second project on adjoining land, the Leicester Drive-In Theater, which opened with a single screen in 1967.

The Leicester stayed in the family from that point on. According to HistoricAerials.com, it added its second screen in the southeast corner of the main viewing area around 1996. The third screen required clearing a chunk of forest to the south for an additional viewing area; that was ready to go around 2002.

When the Leicester converted to digital projection for the start of the 2015 season, it only converted Screen One. The other two continue to use 35mm film when available. Over the past couple of years, many weekends have only seen one or two screens in operation, but the final show of the 2017 season included Dunkirk, Wonder Woman, Transformers: The Last Knight, and Baywatch on the film-only screens. I didn’t think there were that many 2017 movies still on film.

Meanwhile, the Robin Hood restaurant, which had closed decades earlier and had lived many different lives over the years, was being restored as Joe’s Drive-In, after the owner’s nickname. Sadly, Hanna passed away just a few weeks before it reopened. Daughter Maria Joseph handles both drive-ins now, and she told the Worcester Telegram, “Next year I’ll see if I can get enough help to manage the restaurant year ’round.” It ended its opening engagement a week ago Sunday.

And that brings me to my visit, with the theater and the restaurant both closed for the season. Here’s hoping that the Leicester can keep going for another 50 years.

The video of the day, from the Leicester’s Facebook page, is barely 10 seconds long. But where else can you watch the breeze at a tree-lined drive-in?

Miles Today / Total: 141 / 32390 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 174

Nearby Restaurant: Since I couldn’t eat at Joe’s, I went over to Annie’s. Hot Dog Annie’s, that is. Hot Dog Annie’s has been around since 1949 serving up wieners with their special barbecue sauce. And the price is right!

Where I Virtually Stayed: The closest hotels to the drive-in are in Worcester. Since there’s a Hampton Inn there, I was definitely okay with that. There were fresh-baked cookies when I arrived, my room had all the modern amenities, and the breakfast was standard Hampton, and a very good standard that is.

Only in Leicester: Directly across Highway 9 from the drive-in is Milestone 56 of the Upper Post Road. It’s one of the milestones erected in 1767 by Paul Dudley marking what was originally called the Pequot Path and had been in use by Native Americans long before Europeans arrived. The colonists first used this trail to deliver the mail using post riders. The first ride to lay out the Upper Post Road started in 1673.

Next stop: Northfield Drive-In Theatre, Hinsdale NH.

Oct. 2: Wellfleet Drive-In Theatre, Wellfleet MA

It’s Day 275 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I had postponed my visit to the Wellfleet Drive-In Theatre in Wellfleet MA by a day to catch a drive-in that was still showing movies on a Sunday night. Now I paid the price for that change, driving four and a half hours from Poughkeepsie NY to the only drive-in on Cape Cod.

According to his obituary, John Macdonald “Don” Jentz received a business degree at Harvard University in 1952, and a master’s degree in building engineering and construction at MIT in 1956. Put those two together and you’ve got all the ingredients necessary to start a drive-in. He formed Spring Brook Center Inc. with Charles Zehnder to build the Wellfleet, and it opened on July 3, 1957. From almost all accounts, the corporation has owned and operated the drive-in ever since.

In a 2008 Cape Cod Times article, captured on a South Wellfleet blog, Ben Zehnder, Charlie’s son, remembered his dad’s story about opening night. “The asphalt wasn’t quite dry, so the cars all sank in with their tires,” he said. Jentz had designed the pavement to rise in such a way that every car had a good view, but in the final weeks of preparation didn’t get the drying time right.

Eleanor Hazen managed the Wellfleet for quite a while, and was during her tenure that a mini-golf course was added and so was a four-screen indoor theater, built because film distribution companies began withholding first-run movies from drive-ins. Hazen may have also been the person who added the popular daytime flea market there, credited with helping to keep the place going during the tough times of the late 1980s.

In 1997 John Vincent bought in to the Wellfleet, the subject of a Cape Cod Times article marking the 2001 season opener. “The drive-in started to make a comeback around 1993, and business has continued to get better,” Vincent told the Times. The drive-in added FM sound in 1994 but kept some of the in-car speakers. They also still had the original carbon arc projectors, of which projectionist Dave Mead said, ““I’d say about 90 percent of it is still original parts.”

The Vimeo video of the day, shot in 2005 but released in 2014, also features Mead. It makes a nice time capsule for those battleship-looking projectors.

In 2006, Vincent had some prescient remarks to the Cape Cod Times. ″The entire industry will be converting (to digital projection) over the next 10 years,″ he said. At the time, he said the Wellfleet was three to seven years away from converting. Right again; the drive-in actually made the switch in 2012.

In a friendly profile in Film Journal last year, Vincent said that cell phones were a new reason for drive-ins’ success. “People can sit in their cars and text, talk and share while not interfering with other patrons. Studies also show that Millennials like watching movies in groups sitting on a blanket and spreading out, which gives the drive-in another distinct advantage over indoor cinemas.”

When I was mapping out this part of my odyssey, I saw that the Wellfleet was still showing movies on Sunday nights. Then a few days ago, I saw on its Facebook page that the last Sunday in September was its final night of the season. At least I got a chance to experience Cape Cod on a fairly warm afternoon.

Miles Today / Total: 282 / 32249 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 174

Nearby Restaurant: Here in the heart of seafood country, I thought it was ironic to search out the best fried chicken in Massachusetts, according to one of the awards given to the Marconi Beach Restaurant. The half-chicken dinner came with barbecue beans (this is also a BBQ place), a cornbread muffin, a baked potato, and a salad that I requested as a substitute for cole slaw, which is sometimes tolerable but never my first choice. With Cape Cod beer on the side, I was all set for a fine dining experience.

Where I Virtually Stayed: I was forced to break away from the chain hotels, since there aren’t any in Wellfleet. Fortunately, there are some great independent motels, especially the Southfleet Motor Inn. The fire pit was welcome on this cool evening. My room had a large fridge, a coffee maker, and free wifi. A bit of fruit made the continental breakfast even healthier in the morning. What a nice place!

Only in Wellfleet: Over at the Cape Cod National Seashore is the Marconi Wireless Station Site, where the first US to Europe radio message was sent on January 18, 1903. Guglielmo Marconi erected a large antenna array on four 210-foot wooden towers, and established a transmitting station powered by kerosene engines that produced the 25,000 volts of electricity needed to send signals to a similar station in Cornwall in the UK. Almost nothing is left of the original site, but National Park Service information placards describe what it was like.

Next stop: Leicester Triple Drive-In, Leicester MA.