- Four acres
- The size of sandy and pebbly Willard Beach, which occupies Simonton Cove between Fisherman’s Point and the Southern Maine Community College campus. (southportland.org)
- Opened June 9, 1896
- The Willard Beach Casino, a trolley destination that cost $30,000 to build and featured a dance hall, a bathhouse, a bowling alley and an orchestrian (automatic pipe organ) burned in January 1898. (mainememory.net)
- 75 vehicles
- Capacity of the Willard Beach parking lot on Willow Street. (southportland.org)
- A century old
- The Scratch Bakery Co. building in Willard Square dates to 1918 and has previously served as “an A&P grocery, a pharmacy, a heating company, a children’s clothing store, and others lost in time.” (scratchbakingco.com)
- Dog days
- Between May 1 and Sept. 30, dogs are allowed on the beach only before 9 a.m. and after 7 p.m. (southportland.org)
- Getcher sandwitches!
- The Willard Haven Hotel, whose sign promised “PIZZA, SANDWITCHES, SOFT DRINKS,” was razed and burned in 1967. (mainememory.net)
- In 1907
- Willard Beach was designated a South Portland city park. (sphistory.pastperfectonline.com)
- Tracking device
- Willard Beach, like Riverton Park and Cape Cottage Casino, was among the popular tourist destinations served by electric railway. (mainememory.net)
- Victorian rendering
- Artist John Bradley Hudson (1832-1903) whose shop was on the edge of today’s Tommy’s Park in Portland, painted an evocative landscape showing Simonton Cove. (See: mainememory.net/artifact/42150)
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