In
1906 a boy of 14 ventured from Arna, a village in Sparta, Greece,
to America on the English Ship Compania, with one suit of clothes
and enough money ($57) to cover fair, food and the immigration
law, which stated that any alien must have $25 in his pocket to
enter America.
He
settled with Greek friends in Brooklyn, N.Y., and found a job
as a pin boy in the bowling alley of the Germany Club, making
"good money" at $1.50 a week. He diligently saved what
he could and soon had $15, enough to but a pushcart. Thus began
the humble beginnings of a career in the food business, as the
young boy pushed his cart through the streets of Rockaway, N.Y.,
selling peanuts and popcorn.
At
the urging of his first cousin, he came to Annapolis to meet Cecelia
Mandris, whose beauty and charm captured his heart. In 1913 they
wed, and Annapolis became the the new and permanent home of Sam
Lewnes.
Sam,
with his brother-in-law, operated the Palace Confectionary on
Main Street. Later Sam and his brother, John, opened the Sugar
Bowl on West Street and the Busy Bee Lunch on Calvert Street.
In 1921, Sam bought a business in Eastport, (a subdivision of
Annapolis) from his brother-in-law Nick Mandris, and opened Sam's
Corner.
Sam,
with his eldest son George, who married Helen Diamond in 1940,
continued the family tradition of serving the public building
a small concession stand at Horn Point Beach, selling hot dogs,
peanuts, and soft drinks to the bathers. For years, George and
Helen also ran a similar concession stand at the East Port Fire
Department carnivals.
Then,
in 1947, George and his brother Lou, took over Sam's Corner and
named it Lewnes' Bar & Grill. For many years, Lewnes' was
a favorite lunchroom with local residents and the workers at Trumpy's
boatyard.
Nine
years later, George left Lewnes' Bar and Grill in the capable
hands of his brother Lou, and with his wife and his father, ventured
two blocks away and opened the Bridgeview Restaurant, a small
establishment which seated 50 people.
George
and Helen's two sons, Spiro and Charlie, eventually joined their
parents in the family business, and by 1966 added a lounge and
changed the name to the Yardarm.
More
renovation followed in 1975 with the expansion of the kitchen
and dining facilities to accommodate 250 people. With the addition
of Greek Cuisine to the menu, the Lewnes' family decided to rename
their restaurant Spiro's. With the passing of Sam in 1981, and
George in 1983, the family sold the business.
With
the restaurant business still in his blood, Charlie and his wife
Pam, and sons Sam and Mack, ventured back to Fourth Street, and
bought the restaurant from thier Uncle Louie. In 1989, after extensive
remodeling, Sam's Corner reopened in honor of Sam Lewnes, the
man who 83 years earlier had started it all.
The
demand for prime steaks encouraged Charlie to establish Lewnes'
Steakhouse.
His
father would be proud.