Where to eat: 10 essential restaurants in Fort Pierce include 12A Buoy, Pineapple Joe's
When in Fort Pierce, eat as the locals do.
Bucket-list restaurants in Fort Pierce are legendary and beloved, whether it be for the food or for the views — or for both. They can be found on the beach by the Atlantic Ocean, on the water by the Indian River Lagoon or downtown.
When you think of Fort Pierce, you think of these restaurants.
The city has too many must-visit restaurants to include them all, so TCPalm plans to make more lists. If you have a restaurant that should be included in the next list for Fort Pierce or any Treasure Coast city, email laurie.blandford@tcpalm.com.
Here are 10 essential restaurants in Fort Pierce.
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12A Buoy has been a staple of Fisherman's Wharf since owners Katie James and Owen Hartley opened the small seafood restaurant in 2009. It's described as a rustic dive with exceptional eats, highlighting lunch and dinner options from its small kitchen on paper menus. Popular appetizers include lobster mac and cheese and hanging extra thick-cut black pepper and maple glaze bacon. Menu favorites include fresh catch fish, raw bar options, fried shrimp, Florida Black Angus burgers and homemade desserts.
22 Fisherman's Warf, Fort Pierce; 772-672-4524; 12abuoy.com
Archie's Seabreeze started when a former guard shack from the World War II Navy base became a beer joint in 1947. Archie Hitchins was the first owner, but it was Archie Summerlin who added ice cream, sandwiches and the infamous burgers in 1966 that still are a menu mainstay. Summerlin ran the business until his death in 1988 at age 59. Patty McGee bought Archie's from Summerlin's sister in 1994. Its slogan remains the same: "no shoes, no shirt, no problem."
401 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce; 772-460-3888; archiesftpierce.com
The late Dennis Horvath and his sister opened the original Captain's Galley Restaurant in 1984 across from the Fort Pierce City Marina and P.P. Cobb General Store. In 1987, Horvath moved and expanded the restaurant to the corner of Seaway and Indian River drives. He ran the eatery with his wife and three children until his death in 2014. Expect to wait for a table, especially for Sunday brunch. Get the Belgian waffle, but split it with someone to save room for more menu items. Order smaller portions of some plates, such as eggs Benedict and pigs in a blanket.
825 Indian River Drive, Fort Pierce; 772-466-8495; captainsgalleyfortpierce.com
Chuck's Seafood Restaurant opened in Fort Pierce on the Indian River Lagoon in 1961 on the Indian River Lagoon. Chuck and Elodie Tabor opened the restaurant using the 'Old Florida' recipes they developed in the 1940s for its famous fried shrimp. Peter Angelos took over in 1984 and ran it with his daughters, Georgette and Nicola — until they became owners when he retired in 2021. The Angelos sisters added weekend brunch and started selling bags of 'Chuck's Famous Seafood Breading' and Mason jars of 'Crazy Nick's Calypso Sauce,' the restaurant's house cocktail sauce and house tartar sauce. They also expanded the outdoor seating area and added live music.
822 Seaway Drive, Fort Pierce; 772-461-9484; facebook.com/ChucksSeafood
Dale's Bar-B-Q, known as Dale's BBQ South, was founded by Dale Ernsberger Jr. in 1962. Andrew Sparks took over ownership in 2020 from Daniel Kinser, according to state records. It's not affiliated with the former Dale's BBQ West on Okeechobee Road, which rebranded to become Moonswiners Bar-B-Q in 2014. Dale's BBQ South is known for its sweet tea, onion chips, coleslaw, barbecue sandwiches — beef or pork — and homemade sauces.
3362 S. U.S. 1, Fort Pierce; 772-461-0052; dalesbbqsouth.com
Hurricane Grill & Wings is a national chain that started on Fort Pierce's South Beach in 1995. The Seaway Drive original was called Chris' Hurricane Bar and Grill after founder Chris Russo, who was only 22. Known for its chicken wings and cold beer, that spot is still one of eight Hurricane restaurants in Martin, St. Lucie and Indian River counties. Since becoming a franchise, the restaurant has expanded to 40 locations in the U.S., including 29 in Florida. The restaurant is famous for its jumbo wings and 35 flavors. Signature sauces include Roasted Garlic Inferno for serious heat, Coco Loco with heat from habanero and cool from coconut, Gold Rush with spicy honey mustard, Cyclone with sweet and spicy chili sauce, and Kogi Secret Weapon with sweet garlic soy sauce.
2017 Seaway Drive, Fort Pierce; 772-467-9464; hurricanewings.com
Little Jim Bait & Tackle in Fort Pierce, known as Little Jim's, was built in 1942 and originally served as a Navy guard shack and barrier island checkpoint during World War II. When the Navy left in 1944, it gave the city the land, the shack and the wooden bridge. What started out early as a bait shop grew into the popular live music hangout Little Jim's is today. Menu highlights include the pimento cheese spread and house-made classic onion dip with chips for an appetizer, as well as its tacos, pizzas, sandwiches and smash burger. It also serves breakfast from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
601 N. Causeway, Fort Pierce; 772-468-2503; littlejimbaitandtackle.com
Joseph Robert "Joe Bob" Clemenzi opened Pineapple Joe's Grill & Raw Bar and ran the restaurant for decades with his wife, Mabel, before his passing in 2021. The large dining area with walls lined by pecky cypress wood panels features a clawfoot tub near a pool table topped with a Budweiser chandelier. Its menu includes raw bar options and items from the grill: burgers, hot dogs, chicken breast sandwiches, shrimp, oysters and clam platters. Highlights include the conch fritters, served with its secret sweet and tangy calypso sauce, and the signature pineapple fritters, which are slightly sweet, doughnut hole-like balls. Save room to try the freshly made Key lime pie for dessert.
6297 N. U.S. 1, Fort Pierce; 772-465-6930; facebook.com/pineapplejoesgrill
All things food: Roundups of the latest reviews, inspections, new and best restaurants
The Pot Belli Deli has been a staple of downtown Fort Pierce since owner Lisa Spagnuolo opened the small diner inside the historic Arcade Building in 1989. It's open for breakfast and lunch with low menu prices. For breakfast, order two eggs, bacon or ham or sausage, grits or home fries, and a biscuit or toast for $10.50. It also has pancakes, Texas-style French toast and biscuits and gravy for less than $9. For lunch, order a jumbo hot dog with chili and cheese for less than $8 or the deli burger with lettuce and tomatoes for less than $9. All cold subs and hot subs are less than $10 each.
101 N. U.S. 1, Fort Pierce; 772-465-4888; potbellideli.com
Sharky's is the only restaurant on North Hutchinson Island. Its plaza was built in 1979, and the owners opened a sandwich shop called Mike's Giant Submarines, which became Sharky's in 1985. It's been owned by Cindy Rohn and her son, Derek, since 2010. It has a laidback, casual atmosphere where customers walk up to the counter to place their orders before they grab a table. It started out with just subs but grew to have an extensive menu with pizza, wings, salads and hamburgers. The subs are named after different sharks: the Great White is an Italian, the White Tip is ham and turkey, the Mako is roast beef and turkey and the Hammerhead is chicken Caesar. Derek Rohn created the Buffalo Soldier with fried chicken, diced and tossed in wing sauce, then topped with bacon and cheddar cheese and toasted.
1012 Shorewinds Drive, Fort Pierce; 772-466-2757; facebook.com/sharkys.fortpierce
Laurie K. Blandford is TCPalm's entertainment reporter dedicated to finding the best things to do on the Treasure Coast. Email her at laurie.blandford@tcpalm.com. Sign up for her What To Do in 772 weekly newsletter at profile.tcpalm.com/newsletters/manage.
This article originally appeared on Treasure Coast Newspapers: 10 essential restaurants in Fort Pierce: Chuck's Seafood, Dale's BBQ
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Forbes
2 days ago
- Forbes
Exploring London's Buried History: The Subterranean Tourist
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Prime Minister Winston Churchill and his cabinet directed the British war effort during World War II from this secret underground complex. Preserved exactly as it was left in 1945, visitors can walk through the Cabinet Room, peer into Churchill's quarters, and explore the attached museum, which chronicles his life and leadership. It's a moving experience that brings wartime London vividly to life. How to Get There: Nearest Tube station is Westminster (Circle, District, Jubilee lines). From the station, it's a short walk along Horse Guards Road. Ticket Information Hidden beneath the streets of Clerkenwell lies a marvel of underground engineering — the Mail Rail. Part of the Postal Museum, this unique miniature railway once transported millions of letters across London in complete secrecy. Now, visitors can ride through the original tunnels on a specially designed train and see audio-visual displays that tell the story of this subterranean delivery system. The museum showcases postal innovation, with hands-on exhibits for all ages. How to Get There: Nearest Tube stations are Farringdon or Russell Square. Ticket Information Clink Prison Museum & Underground Vaults Underneath Southwark's cobbled streets, near London Bridge, the Clink Prison Museum offers a unique look into London's dark past. Built on the original site of the Clink Prison, which dates back to 1144, this underground museum recreates the grim conditions endured by inmates. Visitors can explore dimly lit corridors, view replicas of torture devices, and hear chilling tales of medieval justice. One of England's oldest prisons, it became a notorious symbol of cruelty, giving rise to the slang term "the clink." How to Get There: Nearest Tube station is London Bridge. Ticket Information The Vaults/Leake Street Arches Beneath Waterloo Station is a subterranean world of art and immersive creativity. 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The museum, located above ground, explains the history of money and the role of the central bank, featuring interactive displays and historic artifacts. How to Get There: Nearest Tube station is Bank. Ticket Information London Transport Museum Depot The Acton Depot features exhibits on the history of the London Underground, including decommissioned Tube trains and subterranean service vehicles. It showcases the behind-the-scenes workings of the system that keeps London moving. The depot houses rare posters, architectural models, and artifacts from every stage of the network's development. How to Get There: Nearest Tube station is Acton Town. Ticket Information Euston Tunnels Beneath the modern bustle of Euston Station lies a ghostly network of unused tunnels, platforms, and passageways that once formed part of the early Underground. Now only accessible via special Hidden London tours, these forgotten spaces feature original signage, tiling, and eerie echoes of commuter life long since vanished. How to Get There: Nearest Tube station is Euston. Ticket Information Old Aldwych Tube Station Once a branch line station off the Piccadilly Line, Aldwych Station was closed in 1994 but still feels alive thanks to film shoots and special tours. The station served as a World War II bomb shelter and has been preserved in near-original condition. Period posters still adorn the walls, and rusting signage leads to tunnels that haven't seen commuters in decades. The station is a hidden cinematic icon, featured in films such as "V for Vendetta" and "Atonement." How to Get There: Nearest Tube stations are Temple or Holborn. Ticket Information London, England, United Kingdom - September 05, 2023 : Ancient stone staircase leading to the catacombs located under the colonnades of Brompton Cemetery. Sunlight. Natural colors. Architect : Benjamin Baud (1806 - 1875). Brompton Cemetery was established in 1840 and is located in West London. Abandoned since 1966, the cemetery is part of the "Magnificent Seven", a set of 7 former London cemeteries. It is owned by Royal Parks. getty Chislehurst Caves Beneath the quiet suburb of Chislehurst lies a sprawling maze of 22 miles of man-made tunnels known as the Chislehurst Caves. Dug initially for chalk and flint, the caves were later used for a variety of purposes, including a World War II air-raid shelter that housed thousands of Londoners. They've also served as a concert venue for The Rolling Stones and Jimi Hendrix. How to Get There: Nearest rail station is Chislehurst (Southeastern Railway). Ticket Information Brompton Cemetery Catacombs Hidden beneath one of London's most atmospheric Victorian cemeteries lie the Brompton Catacombs — a shadowy underworld of vaulted chambers and crypts. 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Ticket Information Thames Tunnel/Brunel Museum The Thames Tunnel was the world's first passage built through soft ground beneath a navigable river. Designed by Marc Brunel and completed in 1843, it paved the way for modern tunneling techniques. Visitors can descend into the Grand Entrance Hall, which was once used for underground fairs and markets. The nearby museum explains its significance in London's growth, while the tunnel itself showcases the ingenuity of Victorian engineering. How to Get There: Nearest Tube stations are Rotherhithe or Canada Water. Ticket Information These hidden gems reveal just a fraction of the history buried beneath London's streets. Mysterious, fascinating, and often overlooked, they offer an unforgettable entry point into the city's underground past. For any subterranean tourist ready to explore the layers beneath the surface, this is where the adventure begins. 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New York Post
5 days ago
- New York Post
Castle-equipped Scottish island lists for the first time in 80 years — and it's accessible only by boat or helicopter
An entire private island off Scotland's rugged west coast — complete with a ruined castle, a working farm and a cluster of off-grid holiday cottages — is hitting the market for the first time in nearly 80 years. Shuna, a 1,100-acre island in the Inner Hebrides, is being offered for about $7.44 million, marking the end of an era for a family that has stewarded it since World War II. The Gully family has owned the island since 1945, when Viscountess Selby, reeling from the war's aftermath, walked into a London estate agency and inquired — somewhat famously — if they had 'any islands on the books.' 11 For the first time in nearly 80 years, the remote Scottish island of Shuna is on the market for roughly $7.44 million. United Kingdom Sotheby's International Realty As family legend goes, they had one. She bought it sight unseen and relocated her family to the Atlantic outpost. 'It'd been a pretty traumatic time for lots of people and she was looking for a new start,' her grandson, Jim Gully, told Bloomberg. 'They thought it was a fairly eccentric question.' Spanning roughly 3 miles by 1.5 miles, Shuna boasts dramatic shorelines, secluded coves, white sand beaches and rich biodiversity — from red and fallow deer to sea eagles, seals and dolphins. It's reachable only by boat or helicopter, with no cars, roads or full cell service — an increasingly rare retreat from modernity. 11 The Dowager Viscountess Selby is shown with her four children — Xandra, Audrey, Michael and baby Eddie, who is now 80 years old. Courtesy Jim Gully 11 Spanning over 1,000 acres off Scotland's west coast, the rugged private island includes eight homes — seven of which are run as vacation cottages. United Kingdom Sotheby's International Realty 'It's really been such a dream island and a huge part of all of our lives,' Gully said. He and his brother were homeschooled on the island by their grandfather. 'It was such an idyllic place to grow up and explore and have adventures.' The island currently supports a modest tourism business. Seven cottages — rented seasonally from April to October — can accommodate up to 52 guests. Each comes with its own boat, and activities range from sheep gathering to archery. 'It's a very simple, relaxed setup,' said Gully, noting many guests return year after year, often spanning generations. Power is supplied by solar panels, wind turbines and generators, as Shuna is off the national electricity grid. There's also an eighth home historically used by the island's caretakers, who have managed the island for the past dozen years. 11 The estate also comes with flocks of sheep, a crumbling early 20th-century 'castle,' and no connection to the power grid or paved roads. United Kingdom Sotheby's International Realty 11 Owned by the same family since Viscountess Selby impulsively bought it after World War II, Shuna has been a multigenerational haven. United Kingdom Sotheby's International Realty The most striking structure on the island, however, is its castle — or what remains of it. Built in 1911 by George Buckley, a New Zealand-born adventurer who made his fortune during the Australian gold rush, the turreted mansion was intended to be the prototype for a new kind of castle-style housing in the US. But fate intervened. 'The plans for it went down with the Titanic,' Gully told BBC Scotland News. 'It stopped lots of flat-roofed castles being built in America.' Buckley, who had recently returned from Ernest Shackleton's Antarctic expedition, spared no expense. Brokers estimate the original construction cost would be the equivalent of roughly $13.6 million to $40.9 million today. 11 The current owner, Jim Gully, calls it an 'incredible playground' rich with wildlife, secluded beaches and history. United Kingdom Sotheby's International Realty 11 Vacationers can rent the cottages during warmer months and explore by boat, hike its 300-foot-high peak or even help gather sheep. United Kingdom Sotheby's International Realty But by the 1980s, the castle's flat-roofed design proved no match for Scottish weather and it fell into disrepair. 'But I guess that just the having the flat roof was not a terribly good design feature in Scotland,' Gully told Bloomberg. Gully, who lived in the castle as a child, recalls moving furniture around to find safe spots where it wouldn't fall through the floor. 'It still looks very impressive even though there are trees growing out of the windows,' he told BBC. 11 A living space inside one of the cottages on the island. United Kingdom Sotheby's International Realty 11 A kitchen. United Kingdom Sotheby's International Realty The island's recorded history stretches back far beyond the 20th century. Archeological finds suggest human settlement as early as 9,000 years ago. In the 14th century, it was given by Robert the Bruce to Clan Campbell and later passed to the Macleans. In the 18th and 19th centuries, its population peaked at around 80, evidenced today by lime kilns, burial mounds and ruins of old farms. Jim Gully's father, Edward, now in his 80s, has moved to nearby Seil Island, and the family is ready to pass Shuna on to a new generation. 'We've done what we can with the island,' Gully told Bloomberg. 'We haven't had a huge amount of funds to invest in transforming it. So the idea that someone could come along and invest and bring the island back to life is exciting.' 11 Gully says the sale could appeal to a conservation-minded buyer or developer interested in transforming Shuna into a five-star eco-retreat, tapping into Scotland's growing rewilding trend. United Kingdom Sotheby's International Realty 11 'We've done what we can,' he said. 'So the idea that someone could come along and invest and bring the island back to life is exciting.' United Kingdom Sotheby's International Realty Alex Collins of Sotheby's International Realty and Knight Frank, who are marketing the property, say interest has ranged from those seeking a boutique hospitality venture to rewilding advocates and families in search of a secluded multigenerational compound. The listing suggests Shuna would be 'perfectly suited' for a wellness destination. Whether it's bought as a conservation playground or a luxury eco-retreat, the island's next chapter remains unwritten. But for the Gully family, the page is turning on a defining part of their legacy. 'It's been a huge part for all of our lives,' Gully told the BBC. 'Definitely sad that all of that is coming to an end, but tinged with relief for my father.'

Yahoo
23-06-2025
- Yahoo
Abandoned Blitz tunnels under London could be the city's latest tourist attraction
A long-secret network of tunnels 100 feet below the streets of London could be the city's next big tourist destination. Local authorities have approved plans to fill the site — originally dug as a World War II bomb shelter — with an intelligence museum, an interactive World War II memorial and one of the world's deepest underground bars. (AP Video by Tom Rayner)