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History of the Half Moon

Tea Room, Bowling Alley, and Cabins

prime vacation spot for over a century, the Half Moon is located on the grounds where there once stood a magnificent grand hotel—the former New Hotel Weirs (1880-1924). As was typical of so many of the wooden Victorian-era hotels throughout New England, it burned to the ground.

In the early 1930’s, Robert ‘Bob’ Wagner and Carleton C. Williams constructed the Half Moon Tea Room – a restaurant, snack bar, bowling alley, and cabins – on the Lakeside Avenue site of the former hotel. They had purchased the empty land in mid-March, 1931, from the Minor Robinson estate. Bob Wagner already had experience in providing accommodations for visitors, as he owned the nearby Hotel Samoset on Centenary Avenue, and the original Half Moon Tea Room, which had been located further up on Lakeside Avenue, on the site of what was later to become the 1936 Weirs Beach fire station. In fact, Mr. Wagner recycled the original 1927 Half Moon Tea Room building. In late 1931, he moved it down Lakeside Avenue to his new property. In 1932 he added the new Half Moon Tea Room to the left of the old building. Later, he added 12 bowling alleys to the right. The old building became a snack bar, and was called “The Clam Shell”. At some point, Mr. Wagner bought out his partner, and became the sole owner of the Half Moon property.

Mount Washington wharf. Note the imposing Hotel looming overhead.
Uncolored, black and white version of the postcard on the left.
A similar photo, from a 1914 Lake Winnnipesaukee booklet by the B&M railroad.

A wide-angle picture of the Mount Washington wharf in the early 1920s. The Uncle Sam mailboat is tied up at the wharf. The Weirs Cafe juts out over the waterfront. Attached to the Cafe is a 300′-long canopy over the boardwalk. The B&M railroad freight house is to the left of the Cafe and is elevated to boardwalk height as it sits on stilts atop concrete footings. The impressive New Hotel Weirs spreads across the background. High atop the hill, a glimpse of the Winnecoette hotel can be seen amongst the pines.

“Although Messrs. Williams and Wagner have made no definite plans for the development of the property present tentative plans provide for the establishment of a recreational center on the site. Both men are enthusiastic over the possibilities of the lake region as a more extensive summer colony and believe in the future of the resort. Definite plans will be announced at a later date.” – From the Laconia Democrat, 1931
Telephone listings, Central New Hampshire Bell Telephone Company, Weirs NH Dial System, September, 1930

Postcard below circa 1933. This same photo was used in a 1930’s brochure, “City on the Lakes – The Year Round Vacation Land – Laconia, New Hampshire”, advertising “BOWLING…CABINS…BICYCLES FOR HIRE. A sandwich or full course dinner—Try our delicious fried clams”. Notice the sign on the left side of the building. It says “The Half Moon Tea Room” and features a left-facing moon on the left, and a right-facing moon on the right. On the front of the building we see the dining room sign, with a larger moon facing to the left. Further down is a bowling alley sign with a moon facing to the right.

Only a one story building at this point, a second story was added later to the Tea Room portion of the building, and the building was also expanded rearward. During this expansion, the entrance was removed from the side of the building. A large stone fireplace replaced the former side entrance. Access to the Tea Room was now gained through a doorway from the refreshment stand. Later, in the late 1940’s, an entrance was built in the front center of the Tea Room, providing access directly from Lakeside Avenue.

In the photo below, the bowling alleys stretch off to the right corner of the block. The left side of the middle portion of the building served refreshments to customers on the sidewalk. This was the original Half Moon Tea Room building that had been moved from its previous location further up Lakeside Avenue. Later, with the addition of interior seating, this became the Half Moon Snack Bar, while the right side of the middle portion, initially used for an ice house and storage, became the very first Half Moon Arcade, in 1948. (Click on the link for information about the original ice house in Weirs Beach.)

The Half Moon Tea Room postcard.
This is the original photo used in the postcard on the left. This photo is framed and hanging on a wall at a home in the Salt Lake City, Utah area.
The Half Moon Tea Room menu.
Postcard circa 1938. Here showing the tea room shortly after it had been rebuilt; the building looks fresh and new. Notice the “Tea Room” had been dropped from the name; the new sign on the front of the building proclamed the “Half Moon Restaurant”.

These are the original ten Half Moon Cabins, built circa 1933. On the left of the photo, a hatch covers the fresh water spring that was used to service the former New Hotel Weirs. (The hatch is still there, although the spring has mostly dried up.)

The ten cabins were either replaced or extensively reconstructed a few years later. In the postcard of the Half Moon Tea Room Cabins that follows right below, the ridgeline of the cabin roofs can be seen running from left to right. However, the new or reconstructed cabins have ridgelines that run from back to front, as seen in all other later photos of the cabins. The 1937 aerial photo (scroll down) shows the original ten cabins formed the back row of what is now two rows of cabins. 

In the photo below one can see the train canopy over the boardwalk – dating this photo before the fire of December 22, 1939.

A later postcard with the same photo but a different caption, dropping the “Tea Room” part of the name.
Later, part of the same photo was re-used in a promotional brochure for the cabins, the words “Tea Room” having been dropped from the name.
On September 24, 1945, local businessman Howard Ballou purchased the Half Moon and Hotel Samoset properties from Bob Wagner. Ballou quickly sold the Hotel Samoset, and when he opened for his first summer season in May, 1946, he had renamed the Half Moon business after himself. However, old habits die hard; the general public continued to refer to the business as “The Half Moon”. Sidney Ames purchased the restaurant, snack bar, and bowling alley half of the property in the fall of 1950, and in the summer of 1951 brought the old name back. Howard Ballou joined the Postal Service, where he was Postmaster of Laconia from February 28, 1953, until August 14, 1970.

Howard K. Ballou. From a campaign poster.

The Half Moon Bowling Alley

Howard Ballou’s

Howard Ballou’s brochure, late 1940s

From a 1950 promotional brochure, “Where To in the Lakes Region”.

The photo in this postcard was taken within a few minutes of the photo in the promotional brochure, but from a slightly different angle.

Circa 1946 photo of Howard Ballou’s.

By the late 1940’s, the restaurant sported a new neon sign and a new front entrance. The parking pattern in front of the restaurant had also changed. Photo from an ad in the 1949 Lakes Region Association’s Where To guidebook.

A map of Howard Ballou’s, rubber stamped as “Half Moon”.

The Half Moon Restaurant

A view of the dining room of the Half Moon Restaurant towards the entrance from the refreshment stand.

A view of the dining room of the Half Moon Restaurant towards the stone fireplace. The former dining room now houses Cook’s Candy Kitchen; the stone fireplace is still there.

Upstairs, a banquet hall, serviced by a dumbwaiter, was available for large gatherings. This room still exists, with tin ceiling and wood floors intact, although these days it is just used as a storage area for the Half Moon Gift Shop.

Below, a very youthful looking Sid Ames poses with the waitstaff of his Half Moon Restaurant in 1951. By this time many of the chairs and tables had been replaced by dining booths, with one circular, corner booth being the most popular table in the entire restaurant. The sides of each booth were engraved with the Half Moon logo. Unfortunately, all of the booths, and the rest of the original furniture, save a few chairs and tables, were destroyed in 1991, when the Weirs Hotel, where the furniture had been stored along with some arcade equipment, burned down.

By the late 1970’s the Half Moon Restaurant’s neon sign (which dated from late 1940’s) was no longer working. Considered unrepairable, it was removed.

This late 1950’s photo of the boardwalk area shows the right half of the Half Moon Restaurant building, which included an entrance to the original Half Moon Gift Shop. In the late 1960’s the Gift Shop was turned into a cocktail lounge. During the 1974 season, the lounge was revamped and renamed the Lunar Lounge, a popular discotheque with a wooden dance floor, a colored lighting system, and a plagiarized marketing slogan, “Space is the Place”. In the early 1980’s the lounge reverted back to a gift shop.

Note the “weigh yourself for a penny” scale on the sidewalk next to the Gift Shop. Also note the Half Moon sign; it is the same sign as in the 1940’s B&W postcard shown above of Howard Ballou’s. Finally, note the green pickup truck parked in front of the Snack Bar. The truck belonged to the business and was used for many, many years, until it was stolen and driven right into the Lake!

The Half Moon Cabins

The lawn in front of the cabins doubled as a parking lot. Parking was 25¢.

The cabins featured small fir trees in front for shade.

Honeymooner’s Paradise at Howard Ballou’s.

A view of the Lake, late 1930’s. The old Mount Washington steamer is visible departing Weirs Bay, as is the train canopy over the boardwalk. That dates this photo as having been taken before the fire of December 22, 1939. Note also the back of the Half Moon Restaurant. That means the expansion of the original Half Moon Tea Room into the Half Moon Restaurant must have occured before 1940. Somebody needs to mow that lawn!

In the upper right corner of this aerial photo from 1937 is seen the original tea room before expansion; and only one row of ten cottages! The photo demonstrates that the back row of cottages was built first, and that the front row of nine cottages was built later. In the foreground of the photo are the Weirs Seaplane Base and the Mount Washington Wharf with attached Weirs Cafe.

A late 1950’s view of the Half Moon Cabins.

Cover from the original Half Moon brochure — the original Half Moon logo!

The caption of this photo in the brochure read: “TYPICAL INTEROR OF THE 19 MODERN CABINS. Each cabin is equipped with private toilet, shower with running hot and cold water, alcove bedroom, living room with studio couch, club chair, etc. Insured against heat, and has five windows. All the comforts of home.”

Selling points for the cabins.

In December of 1956, Sidney Ames purchased the cabin half of the property from Howard Ballou. Seven years later, in July, 1963, the first, Lower Balcony floor of the Motel opened, and the property became known as the Half Moon Motel & Cottages. A second floor, the Upper Balcony, was added to the Motel several years later.

Family owned and operated for over 50 years, the Ames family continues to offer the same friendly service and reasonable rates that generations of tourists have enjoyed, while adding all the modern conveniences the present-day traveler expects.

Cabin Numbering Explained

Question: On the Half Moon Motel & Cottages property map, the Cottages are numbered from 1-6 and from 9-22. Why are there no Cottages numbered 7 and 8?

Answer: The original 19 cottages were numbered from 1-9 (front row) and from 10-19 (back row). In an unusual numbering scheme, they were numbered from right to left, presumably in relationship to their closeness to the Main Office.

In 1963, to make room for the Half Moon Motel, Cottages 7-9 were moved from the front row to the back row. Rather than re-number all of the cottages, only Cottages 7-9 were re-numbered, to become Cottages 20-22. In 2004, Cottage 10 was expanded to become a duplex. The new half of the duplex became Cottage 9.

(The Motel uses a conventional numbering scheme, with rooms 1-8 from left to right on the first floor, and rooms 9-16 from left to right on the second floor.)

The view in 1962, before the motel was built. At this time one could enter the property from New Hampshire Avenue.

A similar view circa 1962.

The view in 1956, used as the front cover of the 1957 Weirs Beach promotional brochure!

The large spruces blocking the view were removed in 1957, when the new Half Moon arcade was built.

1940’s Half Moon Letterhead

1950’s Half Moon letterhead

A rare wintertime view – and possibly the only close-up available of the Korner Kubbard convenience store. In early 1947, Howard Ballou had remodeled the former ice cream stand on the corner and given it the new name. The store would stay open year round, unlike the other seasonal businesses on the block. In this photo, the snow has been cleared out from in front of the store and around the fire hydrant. It is unknown if the Korner Kubbard stayed open during winters after its first winter of 1947-1948.

A view from the SW corner of the property, late 1930’s.