image description
Village Pizza was closed on Wednesday and its owner says it is for sale.

Village Pizza in North Adams Closes After 40 Years

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — A pizzeria that's anchored the north corner of historic Eagle Street closed indefinitely on Wednesday.
 
Village Pizza owner Christina Nicholas took to Facebook to announce the closure with an emotional goodbye, explaining that medical issues were forcing her hand. 
 
"Since 2022, I've been dealing with back and spine issues," she said. "Unfortunately, it's gotten worse and the sad news is effective immediately I have to close. I am no longer able to perform the work to keep this business going and I have to concentrate on my own health."
 
Nicholas later said Village had been her "whole life," working there since she was 14 and buying it in 1991. 
 
"It's not the way I wanted to think about retiring," she said, at the door of the empty pizza place. "It's probably the hardest decision I've had to make my whole life."
 
The closure came on the heels of her most recent medical report and the reality that she was facing a long recovery. 
 
She hopes that a buyer will come through and continue its pizza legacy. "It's a good business and I'm sad to make this announcement," Nicholas said in her post.
 
The location at 51 Eagle St. had been Carlisle's Drug Store for many years until Constantin Agnanos opened there as Colonial Pizza in the 1970s. Aristedes Theodoropoulos bought the business in 1986 and renamed it Village Pizza. 
 
The pizzeria had been popular with the college crowd for years because of its "crazy late" hours of operation. 
 
Its closure means that there's no pizza place on historic Eagle Street for the first time in at least 50 years as the Pizza House and its several successors closed on the south corner in 2020. It's also the second eatery to close this week after Bailey's Bakery ceased operations at 55 Main St. 
 
"I want to thank all the customers throughout the 40 years. It's been quite the ride for 40 years so, and my staff, but it is what it is I guess," Nicholas said her in social media post. "Hopefully it will be sold soon and you'll be able to get your pizza again. 
 
"Take care and thank you."

Tags: business closing,   pizza,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Veteran Spotlight: Coast Guard Capt. Robert H. Potter Jr.

By Wayne SoaresSpecial to iBerkshires
PLYMOUTH, Mass. — Robert H. Potter Jr. served his country in the Coast Guard for 29 years from, 1995 to 2024, retiring as a captain and commanding officer of Air Station Cape Cod.
 
He grew up in Manassas, Va., and graduated from the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in 1999.
 
"One of the things that made our class so unique was our size," he said. "We were one of the smallest classes to graduate ... I was really interested in engineering, which was one of the things that drew me to the academy." 
 
His first assignment was onboard the Coast Guard Cutter Hamilton out of San Diego. 
 
"I wanted to get into the nuts and bolts of engineering and found out it wasn't really for me," Potter said. He would go on to become a helicopter pilot, leading search and rescue missions.
 
Potter recalled one search and rescue mission in the Gulf of Alaska. 
 
"The mayday call comes over the radio and I was in the engine room. We were going about 20 knots, the helicopter took off from our ship to rescue some fisherman. The weather was awful, they picked them up but couldn't return back to the ship. The helicopter crew was on shore for three days.
 
View Full Story

More North Adams Stories