logo
Sarasota area waterfront restaurant closes after nearly 70 years, will be deeply missed

Sarasota area waterfront restaurant closes after nearly 70 years, will be deeply missed

Yahoo19-03-2025

One of the best restaurants in Sarasota and Bradenton for burgers, grouper sandwiches, and classic Old Florida waterfront charm has permanently closed.
For two decades, I visited Annie's Bait & Tackle, a humble gem hugging the Intracoastal Waterway in the historic commercial fishing village of Cortez, which also borders north Sarasota Bay.
Opened in 1955, Annie's was where boaters and fishermen stopped for fuel and bait — but it was the food served at its cozy tables, laid-back beer and wine bar, and breezy patio that kept me coming back.
Alas, now it's gone — another victim of hurricanes Milton and Helene, and the relentless march of progress, as they say.
Best waterfront restaurants 10 favorites I love to recommend in Sarasota-Manatee
Ticket Newsletter: Sign up to receive restaurant news, reviews, and fun things to do every Friday
The community's hopes of saving Annie's Bait & Tackle after hurricane flood damage left it battered were dashed when Manatee County officials opted to move forward with plans for a new marina on the property, my Herald-Tribune colleague Jesse Mendoza reported earlier this month.
Annie's Bait & Tackle owner Bruce Shearer and his family pushed to rebuild, but he dismissed Manatee County's proposals as 'losing efforts.' County officials presented options at a public meeting, including a two-year rebuild to meet flood standards or a temporary setup costing up to $250,000 with food trailers and limited services. Shearer rejected the temporary option, arguing he could repair his shop for around $100,000 and that the county's plan wouldn't support a viable business.
"That business is like 'Cheers' on TV — it's where people got together and had birthday parties and all that stuff — that won't happen in your proposal," Shearer said. "As you've proposed things right now, I'm done. It just won't work. Financially, it won't work. You'll lose $250,000, and I'll lose $100,000. It would be failed within two months, I guarantee ya."
Longtime local resident Shearer bought Annie's Bait & Tackle, located at 4334 127th St. W., Cortez, in 1995, but its history dates back much earlier, with Shearer explaining to me in 2021 that the Cipriani family, who would later sell their nearby C&C Marine, purchased the property in 1945.
'They filled it all in, with construction of this building taking place in the early to mid-'50s, I'm guessing,' Shearer said from behind the counter at Annie's on a Friday afternoon in February four years ago. 'There were snacks and then those square sandwiches from a vending machine in the 1970s.'
Shearer's memory aligns with that of Capt. Zach Zacharias, the Herald-Tribune's former outdoors correspondent. 'My first recollection of the proprietors was a salty old character by the name of Taylor,' Zacharias wrote of Annie's Bait & Tackle in 2014. 'He purveyed live shrimp primarily and also stocked rudimentary tackle items, drinks and snacks up until the late '70s, when Annie took over. Annie was a real breath of fresh air and the name has stuck despite a string of operators since.'
As for the waterfront property on which Annie's sat, the Cipriani family sold it to the Berry family, which, according to Herald-Tribune archives, was known for operating 'the Miss Cortez Party boats.' They eventually sold the property to Hamlin Jones, who also owned the Seafood Shack next door.
Shearer said he made a million-dollar offer to Jones for the Annie's property. Jones declined and sold the entire waterfront lot to the Canadian developer Vandyk Group in 2014. Aside from the dock being washed out in 2012 by Tropical Storm Debby, Annie's Bait & Tackle required only minor repairs for decades, with the exterior and interior looking much the same as it did in the 1950s — or at least the '70s, when Shearer recalled first setting foot in the place.
'We've been so damn lucky,' Shearer told me in 2021. 'I hope to hold onto it for at least a few more years. We'll see.'
Manatee County purchased the property that includes the Seafood Shack restaurant and marina, as well as Annie's Bait & Tackle, for $13 million at the end of 2024.
County commissioners now plan to build a public boat ramp there called Cortez Marina, designed to expand access to local waterways with boat ramps and other potential amenities on the property located at the base of the Cortez Bridge, right across the Intracoastal Waterway from Anna Maria Island and Bradenton Beach.
While many local residents support the project, they have also voiced a clear desire for it to include Annie's Bait & Tackle.
Annie's "has been a staple of this community since the doctor at Manatee Memorial Hospital patted me on my little rear end," Manatee County community activist Andrea Griffin said during the early March meeting. "It is the tackle shop that I got my first shrimp from to go fishing, and I know that those things are important to people in this community."
"I hope that each and every one of you guys take your time before you say 'no' and look at all the good that this tackle shop has done," she said. "I'm 45 years old — 45 — and there's nothing but good memories from that place."
Yeah, I also have nothing but fond memories of Annie's. Bottles of beer with fried grouper sandwiches or burgers — always with an order of thin-cut, salty fries — sitting with the water right at your feet, in the shadow of the bridge, watching folks fuel up their boats, buy more bait, or just grab a bite to eat and a cold one.
I dined and drank there alone, with my wife, Kristin, and several of our dogs on the back patio over the years. We dined alongside strangers, too, who soon became friends, if only for one gorgeous afternoon.
Like Shearer said, it was similar to "Cheers" — if the sitcom took place in a small Southern fishing village rather than a big city in the Northeast. I'll sure miss Annie's and wish the best for the Shearer family moving forward.
Thank you for many cherished memories!
Wade Tatangelo is Ticket Editor for the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, and Florida Regional Dining and Entertainment Editor for the USA TODAY Network. Follow him on Facebook, Instagram, and X. He can be reached by email at wade.tatangelo@heraldtribune.com.
This article originally appeared on Sarasota Herald-Tribune: Sarasota area waterfront restaurant closes after nearly 70 years

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Insurance reform fizzles in Florida. ‘We didn't see as much happen as we'd like'
Insurance reform fizzles in Florida. ‘We didn't see as much happen as we'd like'

Miami Herald

timea day ago

  • Miami Herald

Insurance reform fizzles in Florida. ‘We didn't see as much happen as we'd like'

Florida's legislative leaders ushered in this year's session vowing to investigate insurance company profits and holding the industry accountable if it wasn't paying claims. A House committee held rare hearings to grill the state's current and former insurance regulators. Republicans and regulators proposed several pro-consumer bills. But 105 days later, it didn't amount to much. After one of the longest and most contentious sessions in memory, lawmakers left Tallahassee late Monday night without taking significant action to reduce premiums or increase scrutiny on the insurance industry. 'We didn't see as much happen as we'd like,' said Rep. Brad Yeager, the New Port Richey Republican who leads the House's insurance committee. Lawmakers are promising more action in the next session. Committees are scheduled to begin meeting again in October. They did devote $280 million to renew the popular My Safe Florida Home program, which awards $10,000 grants to help homeowners harden their homes. But lawmakers limited future eligibility to homeowners with low or moderate incomes. Legislative leaders began the session by talking tough about reining in the industry, receiving standing ovations in the House and Senate. Miami Republican House Speaker Daniel Perez ordered hearings into a never-before-seen study by Florida's Office of Insurance Regulation revealed by the Herald/Times weeks before the session. The study showed that at the start of the state's insurance crisis, insurers claimed to lose millions of dollars while their affiliate companies made billions. The study was never shared with lawmakers until the Herald/Times reported on it. Yeager's committee held two hearings during which regulators said the study 'raised red flags.' But they said the report wasn't shared with lawmakers because it was never completed. The author of the report, a government contractor, testified that the report was finished but that regulators never followed up with her on it. The hearings were the extent of the House's public investigation. Lawmakers also did not propose spending money to duplicate the study or pass legislation to enhance regulators' oversight. Yeager said the hearings 'validated our concerns' about companies shifting profits, but said there were outstanding questions about the data underlying the report. He said the House is considering hiring a forensic accountant this summer to analyze the full dataset, which was turned over to his committee. 'We're not done. This was not a one-session project,' he said. Insurance executives in Florida have earned incredible paydays over the years by shifting premiums to affiliate companies and away from the eyes of state regulators. Late in the session, the trade publication Insurance Journal revealed that the CEO of Tampa-based Slide Insurance and his wife earned $50.3 million in two years. Perez said the House's work looking into profit-shifting would continue. 'I think it's disgusting,' he said of the compensation. 'Internally, we're having discussions on what we can do to look into that,' he said. 'It is something that we will address. It is not something that we are putting on the back burner.' Legislators cited different reasons for why legislation stalled this year. House Minority Leader Fentrice Driskell, a Tampa Democrat, said the session was distracted by Republican infighting, including over Hope Florida. The program created by Gov. Ron DeSantis to move people off government aid was investigated by House lawmakers during the session. 'I think that we lost momentum in terms of big policies and big ideas because so much had to be worked out between personalities,' Driskell said. Sen. Blaise Ingoglia, a Republican from Spring Hill who leads the Senate's insurance committee, said legislation mostly failed because 'some were trying to undo the reforms that have stabilized our insurance market.' Those reforms largely made it harder to sue insurance companies. Some Republicans, including Donald Trump, have been critical of those recent changes. House lawmakers this session introduced bills that would have allowed homeowners to recoup their legal fees when they sue insurance companies. DeSantis repeatedly railed against the idea, and the legislation failed. 'This would have led to increased costs and higher rates for everyone,' Ingoglia said.

They talked big about making Florida more affordable, but lawmakers disappointed
They talked big about making Florida more affordable, but lawmakers disappointed

Miami Herald

time2 days ago

  • Miami Herald

They talked big about making Florida more affordable, but lawmakers disappointed

Florida lawmakers had one big job this year and, with some exceptions, they failed at it: They didn't address the lack of affordability that's forcing people to leave the state, especially in expensive areas like South Florida. The passage of a $115 billion state budget this week marked the end of an unusually long and tense legislative session in which Senate and House leaders disagreed over funding matters. We're glad they came to a consensus, but 2025 did not turn out to be the year of affordability as advertised when the session began in early March. The Herald Editorial Board met with dozens of candidates, Republican and Democratic, ahead of last year's legislative elections. Back then, virtually all of them told us that the biggest concern they were hearing from voters was the exorbitant price of homeowners' insurance and housing. As the Editorial Board wrote on March 4: 'Lawmakers will return to their districts at the end of the two-month session and explain whether they have done enough to address what's behind the increased cost of living in Florida.' They will have a lot of explaining to do. To be fair, the Legislature did make disaster-relief sales-tax cuts year round and extended the back-to-school sales tax holiday for a full month, the Herald reported. These cuts will go into effect every year without the need for legislative approval. Lawmakers also eliminated the business-rent tax, which is supposed to help small businesses, and doubled the funding to address food insecurity. These measures will provide some relief for Floridians, but, as the Herald reported, most tax breaks passed this year actually went toward businesses, many of which have an army of lobbyists in Tallahassee. For example, lawmakers eliminated the aviation fuel tax, helping airlines, and reduced a tax on cardrooms operated by parimutuels. House Speaker Danny Perez, R-Miami, told the Herald that the sales tax holidays are a 'win' for consumers — 'I believe we batted 1,000,' he said. (Perez originally wanted to reduce the state's sales tax from 6% to 5.25% but that didn't make into the budget.) Perez and his colleagues are naive if they think their constituents will be satisfied. Even longtime homeowners cannot keep up with the cost of everything, especially, property insurance. A few years ago, the Legislature passed a reform package that made it harder to sue insurance companies, which said they were forced to pass their high legal costs onto consumers in the form of higher premiums. President Donald Trump once blasted the changes as a 'bailout' to insurers and even Perez hinted the reforms were a giveaway to the industry, the Herald reported. After years of instability, Florida's insurance market has stabilized with premium increases slowing down, but the crisis for homeowners is far from over and many are paying more than they can afford. Last November, the Herald reported that Republican leaders were surprising their colleagues with 'tough talk' on insurance companies and the affordability crisis. '[Floridians] don't want our state's insurance laws to be written by insurance companies,' Perez told the House. The political appetite for more accountability grew when, in March, the Herald/Times uncovered a 2022 study that found that insurance executives distributed $680 million in dividends to shareholders and diverted billions more to affiliate companies while justifying big premium increases to cover their losses. Perez even ordered legislative hearings to look into the issue. In the end, no meaningful comprehensive reform on the insurance industry passed, even though Republicans put forward proposals to demand more transparency on the compensation of insurance executives. That legislation died and would have, according to sponsors, sped up the insurance claims process and cooled rates. Lawmakers always have next year to tackle broader reforms. Caution, in some cases, is needed. Lawmakers, for example, did not try to eliminate property taxes as Gov. Ron DeSantis wanted, which would have wreaked havoc in local governments and public schools, choosing instead to study the proposal. The real issue making Florida increasingly too expensive for those who aren't millionaires remains the cost of owning a home and insuring it. That hasn't changed. Floridians need meaningful reforms ASAP. Click here to send the letter.

Rays owner in ‘advanced talks' to sell MLB franchise for $1.7 billion
Rays owner in ‘advanced talks' to sell MLB franchise for $1.7 billion

New York Post

time2 days ago

  • New York Post

Rays owner in ‘advanced talks' to sell MLB franchise for $1.7 billion

The Rays revealed Wednesday that owner Stu Sternberg is in 'advanced talks' to sell the team. The potential deal values the MLB club at $1.7 billion with a group led by Jacksonville homebuilder Patrick Zalupski having executed a letter of intent to purchase the club, per Sportico. 'The Tampa Bay Rays announced that the team has recently commenced exclusive discussions with a group led by Patrick Zalupski, Bill Cosgrove, Ken Babby and prominent Tampa Bay investors concerning a possible sale of the team,' the team said in a statement. 'Neither the Rays nor the group will have further comment during the discussions.' 3 Rays' Junior Caminero runs the bases after his double off Miami Marlins pitcher Edward Cabrera. AP The Rays perennially have one of the smallest payrolls in Major League Baseball but have been one of the most successful teams since 2008, with the third-highest winning percentage in that time. Only the Yankees and the Dodgers have a higher win percentage. Sternberg, principal owner of the franchise, purchased the Rays in 2004 for $200 million, but has faced mounting pressure to sell the team in recent years. According to The Athletic, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred and other owners have been attempting to persuade Sternberg to sell. The Rays have spent considerable time trying to build a new stadium to replace Tropicana Field. They had a deal in place to begin building a new 30,000-capacity stadium as part of a mixed-use development in the Historic Gas Plant District in downtown St. Petersburg. 3 Patrick Zalupski is the founder, chairman and CEO of Dream Finders Homes, a Florida-based homebuilder. University of Florida 3 Tropicana Field after Hurricane Milton. AFP via Getty Images However, as the March 31 funding deadline passed, Sternberg announced that the plans were being scrapped due to financing delays. Currently, the Rays are unable to play at Tropicana Field after the stadium sustain massive damage from Hurricane Milton in October 2024. They are instead playing out of George M. Steinbrenner field in Tampa, which is the site of the Yankees' spring training facility and home of their High-A club. A Rays sale would be MLB's third franchise to change hands in recent years. In 2020, the Mets were sold to Steve Cohen, and, in 2024, a group led by David Rubenstein bought the Orioles. The news of the franchise's potential sale came just hours before ESPN reported the majority share of the NBA's Lakers being sold to Mark Walter, owner of MLB's Dodgers, in a $10 billion deal.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store