Main Street Restaurant Closes Doors

By Jen ThomasiBerkshires Staff
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Milan at Fifty-Five on Main Street in North Adams.
NORTH ADAMS - Yet another downtown eatery has closed its doors in the city, after chef and owner John "Jack" F. Carlow III vacated his Milan at Fifty-Five Main Restaurant and Bar last month.

"I don't know much but I can say that I received a letter from the owner, informing me that he was terminating his operation, at the end of January," David Carver, managing partner of Scarafoni Associates, which owns the property at 55 Main St., said Wednesday. Milan's lease with Scarafoni ran through this May.

Milan at 55 specialized in high-end Italian fare in a contemporary setting and, in the summer, was popular with actors at the Williamstown Theatre Festival.

Milan is the latest in the long list of restaurant closings within recent years in the city. Gideon's Fine Dining and its smaller sibling, Gideon's Nightery (later EGL), Hickory Bill's BBQ, Breda's Italian Restaurant and Sugar Llama all called it quits in 2007, and other North County establishments like the Taconic Restaurant in Williamstown and Christina's in Cheshire have been shuttered over the last few years for various reasons.

Last month, calls to Milan, which had operated on Main Street since 2002, were answered by a voice recording that said the restaurant was closed but did not say why or for how long. This week, both the phone line and Web site were discontinued.

Carlow, contacted on Wednesday, said he was not ready to comment.


Carver said the restaurant's abrupt closing is an opportunity to return an old favorite to the area.

"We're actively searching for a new restaurant owner. What we want to do is bring a first-class diner operation back to Main Street," he said.

The Milan location is better known to area residents as the site of the Capitol Restaurant, a longtime favorite that offered diner and American favorites like macaroni and cheese and meat loaf.

It wasn't unusual to see lines out the door of the Capitol in the 1970s and '80s when the former Sprague Electric would spill hundreds of workers into the downtown at noon. The restaurant closed in the 1990s.

It was replaced by another eatery, Milan, which Carlow purchased. The Schenectady, N.Y., resident had worked at the former Il Tesoro on Holden Street. There have been a succession of resturants in that location, including Gideon's, which closed last year. It now houses Taylor's Fine Dining.
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Sanford, Maine, Edges SteepleCats in Season Opener

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com Sports
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. – The SteepleCats Sunday started their 2026 season the way they ended their 2025 campaign: with a narrow loss to the Sanford Mainers.
 
Sanford, which won a best-of-three playoff series against North Adams last August, scored four runs on 14 hits to earn a 4-2 win at Joe Wolfe Field.
 
The Mainers broke a 1-1 tie with a two-run rally in the third inning, and four Sanford pitchers combined to collect 11 strikeouts as the visitors improved to 2-1 this summer.
 
North Adams, which saw its planned road opener rained out on Saturday, got to open the season in front of its home fans.
 
And those fans saw a strong performance from the North Adams pitching staff, which, despite allowing 14 hits, including five doubles, gave up just three earned runs.
 
“I like the grit,” SteepleCats coach Mike Gladu said of his team’s Game 1 performance. “I thought the pitchers performed pretty well. We had a couple of situations where we definitely should have gotten some runs in and didn’t get that hit.
 
“And there were a couple of plays with a little rust. Certainly, the ball that was hit over [Evan] Meier’s in left field, he just mistracked that one. And the extra run they scored in the eighth, the kid wasn’t going to go [from third on a fly ball], we made a throw and nobody could stop it.
 
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