Sept. 22: Milford Drive-In Theater, Milford NH

It’s Day 265 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. With lots of twisty highways, it took an hour and a half to drive from Laconia NH to the Milford Drive-In Theater, in Milford NH of course.

According to its About Us page, the Milford Drive-In was built in 1958 and owned by “a local group of people. Several area contractors contributed labor and materials during construction hoping for a share of future profits.” The New Hampshire Union Leader wrote that Bob Goodrich built the Milford and owned it until he died in 1969. Then again, Sidney Goodridge’s 2014 obituary says that he was “the original owner and builder of the Milford”.

At any rate, the drive-in had a single 84 foot wooden frame screen when it opened. During the 1960’s the drive-in was leased to and managed by another couple. In 1969, Bob and Fay Scharmett purchased the Milford, and the Scharmetts have operated it continuously since then, except for three years during the 1970’s when the business was leased to Fall River Theater Corporation.

In 1984, the drive-in became a twin when additional acreage was cleared and a second screen was added. A second floor was constructed above the original building to provide room for a new projection room.

The Milford has been a leader in drive-in modernization. The Scharmetts replaced the original screen with a new steel screen, built a new marquee and box office, and was the first drive-in in New Hampshire to provide both AM and FM radio sound. In 2012, it was one of the first drive-ins to convert to digital projection. Barry Scharmett, who ran the theater with brother Steven at the time, told the Union Leader. “Everybody has a choice: Switch to digital this year, or next year. That’s it, because all of the companies we deal with are not going to be making film anymore.”

There’s another advance that I haven’t seen elsewhere – a track for radio-controlled toy vehicles, available to rent. That’s another great way to keep the kids busy and make enough to cover any extra expense.

The YouTube video of the day is one of a daily video series by Keller. The aerial views are terrific, though I can’t agree that “there were thousands more drive-ins in the 1960s” equates to “drive-ins aren’t making a comeback.”

With two active screens, the Milford gave me a choice on this Friday night, so I went with the new release. With a bucket of popcorn and a hot fudge sundae, I was ready to enjoy the show.

Miles Today / Total: 75 / 31107 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Lego Ninjago Movie / 167

Nearby Restaurant: For something different, I tried the Russian cuisine at My Sister’s Kitchen for lunch. The potato pierogis were amazing, and I passed the crepes (are those Russian?) in favor of the bread pudding. It’s so rare to find good bread pudding, and this made me happy I stopped by.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Google Maps said that the closest hotel to the Milford was the Hampton Inn in Nashua. Since TripAdvisor users voted it the best hotel in Nashua, and since I enjoy the predictable niceness of Hamptons, that’s where I stayed. There were cookies waiting for me at check-in. My room had the full set of modern amenities. And the breakfast was the standard, very nice Hampton spread.

Only in Milford: A piece of Milford is on US currency. According to Wikipedia, it was once home to numerous granite quarries, which produced a stone that was used, among other things, to make the pillars for the U.S. Treasury in Washington DC, as seen on the back of the $10 bill. Also, the downtown Milford Oval (live cam here), officially designated Union Square, is neither square nor oval in shape but triangular.

Next stop: Hathaway’s Drive-In Theatre, North Hoosick NY.

Sept. 21: Weirs Drive-In Theatre, Laconia NH

It’s Day 264 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. With lots of twisty highways, it took almost two hours to drive from The Saco Drive In in Saco ME to Weirs Drive-In Theatre at Weirs Beach in Laconia NH.

The Saco and Weirs are two very old drive-ins, but that’s where the comparison ends. The Saco is a single-screen that is poised for decades to come. The Weirs has four screens, and will probably be sold before the 2018 season begins. On the day I arrived, there was news about that, but first let’s go over its history.

The Weirs was opened as a single screen in 1948 by Harry and Yvonne Gaudet, according to a fine post on the Cinema Obscura blog. Then as now, it was located a stone’s throw from Lake Winnipesaukee, popular with tourists. The blog said that “other than a brief period,” the Weirs stayed in the Gaudet family until 1974, when they sold it to Lawrence and Patricia Baldi. The blog said the Baldis added a second screen “in the 80s” though it still appears as a single screen in the 1988 International Motion Picture Almanac. Two more screens came later, and that’s where we are now.

Lawrence passed away in 2011, and the big news came in 2015 when Patricia, now in her mid 70s, announced that she was putting the Weirs for sale with an asking price of $2.5 million. She told the New Hampshire Union Leader that she couldn’t keep up with the drive-in any longer. “It’s too much for me. I have mixed feelings, it’s time to move on,” she said. Despite the planned sale, the Weirs upgraded to digital projection later that year.

In August 2017, Ms. Baldi got that asking price from Al Mitchell, a developer who also owns a 1-acre parcel adjacent to the Weirs. He told The Laconia Daily Sun that he plans to build condominium units, an event center, a hotel and other businesses. The apparent final night for the drive-in was Labor Day, Sept. 4, commemorated in the Concord Monitor and elsewhere.

But on Sept. 21, just before I rolled in, the Daily Sun announced that the sale had fallen through “after an initial study showed it to be in an archeologically important area where the potential for Native American artifacts could increase the costs of development.” Mitchell said he was “beyond disappointed,” and the property went back on the market for $2.6 million. “If no buyer emerges, Baldi said there is even a chance she could re-open the drive-in next summer.” We’ll see.

The video of the day comes straight from NECN, New England’s News Leader, from May 2015 when the Weirs was put up for sale.

It’s weird to visit a drive-in when I’m not sure that it’ll be active next year. I’m sorry to have missed out on its last days, if that’s what they were. Here’s hoping it’ll return next spring.

Miles Today / Total: 74 / 31033 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 166

Nearby Restaurant: The Kellerhaus offers an ice cream smorgasbord. I didn’t even know that was a thing. That sounds a lot better than “make your own sundae,” and it’s closer to the feel of adding several flavors of homemade ice cream to a dish and carrying it through an amazing variety of toppings. I didn’t have time for the breakfast waffles, but I’ll bet they are just as good.

Where I Virtually Stayed: There are plenty of summer motels around here, looking a little quieter as the days cool off, and the one I chose was the Grand View Motel. The views really are nice, my room was clean and comfortable with the full set of modern amenities, and the price was very reasonable. Plus, the Kellerhaus is right next door.

Only in Laconia: Native Americans used Weirs Beach as a summer camp for hunting and fishing as long ago as 8000 BC, according to the Lake Winnipesaukee Museum. The native Abenaquis built a special type of basket, called a weir, to capture the abundant fish (shad) that migrated through the Weirs Channel on their way from Lake Winnipesaukee to the Merrimac River to the sea.

Next stop: Milford Drive-In Theater, Milford NH.

Sept. 20: The Saco Drive In, Saco ME

It’s Day 263 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It was another day in the suburbs of Portland ME, requiring less than half an hour to drive from the Prides Corner Drive-In in Westbrook to The Saco Drive In in Saco ME.

The Saco is the second-oldest drive-in still operating; only Shankweilers Drive-In Theatre in Orefield PA predates it. Based on the list in Kerry Segrave’s Drive-In Theaters, the Saco is probably one of the first couple dozen drive-ins ever built. It opened on July 15, 1939, a decade before in-car speakers came to town, so those first patrons must have been listening to the single loudspeaker with their windows open. Back then it was called the Saco Open Air Theatre.

According to Camille Smalley’s book The Saco Drive-In: Cinema Under the Maine Sky, Eugene Boragine and two partners were the Saco’s first owners. The drive-in closed for the duration of World War II, then reopened in July 1946. About 1950, Boragine bought out the partners and ran the place with his wife Helen Toth. In 1952, he changed its name to the Saco Motor-In Theatre, then again in 1954 to just the Saco Drive-In.

Smalley wrote that the Saco was resold “only a few times,” and Segrave’s book says it was put up for sale in 1987. An article in The Free Press of the University of Southern Maine said that Pat Roberge’s husband bought it in 1986, saying they had leased it to others during the next 25 years. As of 2014, it was still owned by Roberge Construction.

In 2011, Ry Russell and a couple of USM marketing classmates began leasing the Saco. They raised $20,000 to cover the start-up costs and were off to take a 21st-century approach to management. They built up a social media following which happened to pay off in 2013 when Project Honda offered a digital projectors to drive-ins that could garner the most votes. “You could say we were running for this contest before it even started,” Russell later told Portland Monthly (pdf).

For the YouTube video of the day, I picked the clip from WMTW, Portland’s News Leader, about the Saco’s victory in Project Honda.

This time of year, the Saco is still showing movies on Fridays and Saturdays. But not Wednesdays, giving me another night off.

Miles Today / Total: 14 / 30959 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 166

Nearby Restaurant: For the old-fashioned diner I wanted to substitute for missing out on the drive-in, I saw that the Auto Mile Diner even had a car in the name. The “diner” part was more authentic than retro-styled, and the superb biscuits and gravy made me glad I visited.

Where I Virtually Stayed: It had been so long since I stayed at a Hampton Inn that I jumped at the chance here in Saco. Modern, comfy room with a work desk, though no fridge. Hampton standard (good) breakfast with hot and cold options. Just a solid, reliable place.

Only in Saco: Just up US 1 from the drive-in is Scarborough’s Len Libby Candies, home of a life-sized chocolate moose. His name, of course, is Lenny, and he weighs 1700 pounds. They say he’s “the world’s largest chocolate animal sculpture,” which makes me wonder what larger animals there might be that would lend themselves to chocolate artistry.

Next stop: Weirs Drive-In Theatre, Laconia NH.