Riverside opened on Depot Street with some interior changes and a new menu —with a few popular holdovers.
DALTON, Mass. — A new restaurant is trying to fill the hole left by the iconic Dewey's Public House.
Robert Collins opened the Riverside Public House recently in the former pub.
Dewey's owner closed the restaurant in July to "prioritize his health and family," according to a Facebook post.
"I was a longtime patron of Dewey's Public House, and I always admired the fresh food and the homestyle cooking and broad range of menu items that he always either had on his menu, or it was always evolving and changing," Collins said. "I felt like there was a hole in town that missed that farm-to-table/pub atmosphere in town."
Collins was able to negotiate with Joe Dewey to acquire the items inside the restaurant. He changed some things like the tables, lighting, and the menu, but still paid homage to some of the classics, like Dewey's Milltown Pizza.
He also plans to have some events with music and a special prime rib night.
"We started on Saturday nights having a prime rib special every Saturday. And basically we're just gonna go with it until it runs out. We fix so much prime rib, and when it's gone. It's gone," he said.
Collins hopes, in the future, to bring in new taps for premixed cocktails and whiskey.
"My end goal is to have margaritas on tap and a Moscow mule on tap, on the draft system, and in time, we may end up having the ability to do draft bourbon," he said. "OK, bourbon on tap."
Collins said he wants his restaurant to focus on and buy local. Currently, he uses Berkshire Mountain Distillery and Holiday Brook Farm.
"We're using Holiday Brook Farm hamburg, and hope to use their vegetables and produce and in this summer and fall when it's available. And we plan to try to use as much of their hamburg and stuff that we can. And that's practical. We're trying to use local distilleries we're trying to do the farm to table as much as we can, that makes sense, and we're trying to do local," he said.
His chef Ryan McIntyre, makes everything in house with some popular dishes like clam chowder, smash burgers, and hand breaded chicken tenders.
He wants people to be able to enjoy their time at the restaurant and see it as a great family dinner night that can be nice to even the pickiest of eaters.
"I hope when somebody comes in, I hope they find that the atmosphere is friendly and warming and welcoming, and that people feel that it's an attractive and social place that they feel comfortable bringing their children and family to for dinner, where they can get really good home-cooked food and meet the needs of their entire family, if they have picky eaters."
As to the name, his wife didn't like the options he came up with.
"I had come up with a bunch of names, and one night, I was talking to my wife, and she hated all the names that came, and she's like, nah. So all of a sudden she got quiet, and she came back, she goes, how about the Riverside. You're next to the river. How about the Riverside. And I was like, You know what, honey, I think that sounds pretty good."
Since opening the community has been very supportive and happy to see a new restaurant open in the space.
"I have to say, I've been very, very pleased and seem to be very welcomed in the neighborhood you know, to have been opened up, and people are glad to see that this particular space is opened again," Collins said.
Riverside Public House is located at 16 Depot St. It is closed Tuesday and Wednesday, and open from noon to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and Sunday being from noon to 7 p.m.
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Berkshire DA Releases Victim's Name in Fatal Police Shooting
By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
An image Biagio Kauvil posted to his Instagram page in happier days.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Biagio Kauvil's family had attempted to secure mental health resources for him before a well-being check on Wednesday that turned deadly.
On Friday, District Attorney Timothy Shugrue identified Kauvil, 27, as the man who was killed by police in a shooting incident at 53 Off South St. on Jan. 7. The New York resident, he said, was expressing "paranoid delusional" thoughts on social media, and in calls to the FBI's National Threat Operation Center and local 911 leading up to the incident.
"This is a horrific scene, and there is a deceased person, and it's a very sad situation. It was a mental health situation," Shugrue said during a press conference at his office around noon, right after he had spoken to Kauvil's family.
The DA elaborated on details provided the prior day, though there are still many questions unanswered, and the investigation remains active. He declined to respond to queries about the officers' decision to breach the bedroom door the man was sequestered behind, details about the approximately 46-second struggle that resulted in Kauvil being shot in the head, or if an officer would be charged for the fatality.
Police say Hinsdale Sgt. Dominick Crupi was shot in the hand by Kauvil, the bullet going through and striking Police Chief Shawn Boyne in his bulletproof vest. Crupi was also shot in the elbow by another officer. He was released from Albany, N.Y., Medical Center on Friday.
Shugrue said his office will not be releasing the names of the officers involved, although he acknowledged that they have been named on social media and elsewhere. He is "not even near" ready to say if an officer will be charged.
"I'm only here today because there's a lot of rumors going around the community. I wanted to straighten that out," he said, clarifying that Kauvil was not wanted by the FBI.
"… I'm sorry I can't give you more information than that, but I really want to be clear about what we know at this stage. But again, this may change once we — I haven't seen the ballistics, I haven't seen the autopsy report. There's a lot of stuff I don't have yet, but I just felt the public deserved to know as quickly as possible what transpired, especially in light of what's happening nationally."
This is the third police shooting in Berkshire County in nearly four years that involved someone in mental distress. Miguel Estrella, 22, was shot and killed on March 25, 2022, at the intersection of Woodbine Avenue and Onota Street in Pittsfield; Phillip Henault, 64, was shot and killed at his Hancock home on Sept. 9, 2023.
In both cases, investigators cleared the officers as both men had advanced on police armed with knives and threatening them.
Based on the investigation so far, there were no mental health co-responders on site. Shugrue doesn't believe the officers knew Kauvil was armed, and cited the lack of mental health resources in the community.
"I hope one thing that comes out of this is that we can talk more about legislative work that needs to be done. We can talk about resources that need to be given to mandate that we have mental health professionals working with police officers and working with individuals that are on the street that haven't been able to get the services that they need," he said.
"And this is unfortunate. I know, speaking to the family, they tried to get services for him. Unfortunately, there's not a lot available, and there's not a lot available in the Berkshires."
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Biagio Kauvil's family had attempted to secure mental health resources for him before a well-being check on Wednesday that turned deadly.
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Police Chief Shawn Boyne and Sgt. Dom Crupi were injured during the incident. Crupi is recovering from gunshot injuries to the hand and elbow at Albany, N.Y., Medical Center.
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