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A good place to talk
The Quarryhouse
BY MARJORIE CLARKSON

Sixty-six years old, but
getting stronger and more popular with time. Now that sounds
like a Baby Boomer's fantasy of old age, but it can be the
fantasyand reality, tooof a business's mature
years. Since 1937, customers have walked down 13 steps into
Silver Spring's Quarry House Tavern, a space described by
regular customer John Haslinger as "subterranean, dark,
warm and with good beer."
Those features, along with being "a good place to talk,"
have kept this business at the corner of Bonifant Street
& Georgia Avenue going for decades, through good and lean
times.
No televisions and no hard liquor, and a sense of family
among the staff and customers, are the reasons given by
veteran waitresses Sara Noel and Mara Wasilik for the tavern's
friendly and chatty atmosphere. "A talk bar" is what Sara
calls it, where "everyone speaks to each other. " She points
out that customers are from all walks of life"bricklayers,
lawyers, and architects."
On one Wednesday night, I counted 23 customers in the bar
and 18 in the dining room, talking, eating and drinking.
The bar area is darker, smokier and noisier than the dining
room. The walls of the bathrooms display mirrored bar ads:
some reproductions of antique beer advertisements using
quite fetching women to sell the beers. George Catlin prints
of19th- century Native Americans hang on one wall of the
dining room, providing an interesting contrast to the beer
ads.
On this evening, "lightly smoked turkey" with lettuce,
mayonnaise and cranberry relish on multi-grain bread was
the special of the evening. A preserved and framed tavern
menu from the 1940s did not list any fancy sandwiches on
multi-grain bread, but it did offer the hamburger, probably
then (and certainly now) the most popular item on the menu.
Back then it cost 25 cents. Today it cost $5.95. To wash
down the burgers, the bar offers 40 different bottled beers
and eight on tap, including Bitburger, Snow Goose, Paulaner
and Coors Light.
In the non-smoking dining room, I saw a young couple with
dark hair and, across from them, a couple with gray hair;
at another table, a family with grandmother, two grandkids,
and parents; and at yet another, a fellow staring at his
laptop while he distractedly ate a large salad. Married
couple Noreen and Jim Welch told me on their way out of
the dining room, after a dinner of fish & chips for him
and a pork chop sandwich for her, that they have been coming
to the Quarry House once a week since1965. Noreen remembers
the number of years so well because they first started coming
when she was pregnant with their daughter, who is now 37.
She also remembers a wonderful steak sandwich she used to
order during her pregnancy, and the cook who prepared it.
The Welchs say they keep coming back week after week, year
after year, because of the "great place, great beer, good
food, good company." They have become regulars in a tavern
whose life has been saved by its regulars.
As in the long life of any business, there are good times
and bad times. The Quarry House saw good times, undoubtedly
when it opened back in the 1930s, after Prohibition and
when there was a long pent-up desire for legal alcohol.
Some say it was a rough place back then. And according to
regular Matt Dillon, the official Quarry House historian,
it was a lively time during the '40s, particularly during
the World War II years, when dance bands and dancers filled
what is now the dining room.
Another go-go time was the late 80s and early 90s, just
before increased public awareness of the ills of over-drinking
and the subsequent tightening of DWI laws enforcement took
hold, and before home entertainment such as videos increased.
Bad times came to the bar in the late 1980's when its landlord,
Chevy Chase Bank, decided to kick the bar out so, it was
rumored, they could fill the space with safety deposit boxes.
Some thought the reason might be a problem with the image
of their bank being over a bar. Matt contacted local newspapers
to protest, stating that this unjust action demonstrated
to the community the bank's insensitivity to the historic
value of the Quarry House. After a long, tough battle fought
in the press, the bar prevailed.

Photo: Julie Wiatt
Quarryhouse proprietor
Jim Brown has served Silver Spring for the past 27 years.
The tavern has been an underground hit in for over 75 years.
Another bad time came in the mid-1990s, when business bottomed
out. According to Quarry House owner Jim Brown, business
was bad in general in Silver Spring. Matt and other regulars
began a letter writing campaign directing the appeal to
the folks who lived in neighborhoods within walking distance
of the bar. The letter asked them to support the business.
Matt humorously recalls one gentleman in his 80s who showed
up after getting the letter. He had last been there in the
thirties and hadn't been back since because he thought it
was still a rough place.
The letter writing campaign produced some good results.
Once again, the business pulled through because of the devotion
of its regulars, and the idea expressed by owner Jim Brown
when asked why he had kept the bar for 27 rough years: "I
like the idea of a local tavern."
Today, business is good, according to its owner, and looks
only to improve with the redevelopment of Silver Spring
finally happening.
A new generation of regulars appears to be coming on, too,
such as Dennis Avenue resident Michael Robbins.
"This place helped get through business school." he said.
"[I would] sit at the bar, pull out my calculator and spread
sheets, and work."
Michael graduated in December from the University of Maryland,
and he and his wife plan a graduation party atwhere
else?the Quarry House.
Richard Jaeggi provided assistance with
this article.