The Old Market House Inn Restaurant, situated across
the street from the site of Zanesville's original farmers' market,
preserves an era of pioneer Zanesville while offering a gourmet
menu in an atmosphere of the bygone days.
Farmers drove their wagons filled with produce to the first small,
one-story market built in 1814. The second market, built in 1832,
supplied an increasing population with meat and vegetables. In 1863
a heavy snow crushed the roof, causing a tragic collapse of the
bustling marketplace.
The third farmers' market opened in 1864. In consisted of a first
floor for market and a second floor for city offices. Hundreds of
farm wagons would be hitched to trees and posts for several blocks
in all directions three days a week. Cabs and drays clattered up
Market Street from two railroad stations. Hotels with large dining
rooms eventually opened their doors to accommodate the increasing
commerce in Zanesville. On such hotel and the Barnett which stood
on the site of the present-day Old Market House Inn.
The third market place was destroyed by fire in 1912. After a long
controversy, the present building was completed in 1919 and serves
Zanesville for nearly thirty years. After World War II, area residents
began to patronize supermarkets and in 1946 the final farmers' market
was closed and the entire building converted to city offices.
In 1974 James L. Adornetto Purchased this building, then known as
the Casino Restaurant, from Tony Saup. Mr. Adornetto engaged Coburn
Morgan, a renowned restaurant designer from Columbus, Ohio. Using
London, England's oldest operating riverside pub, the prospect of
Whitby, as a model, they orchestrated an extensive nine-month renovation
of the historic building. In October of 1974 the present Old Market
House Inn opened its doors.
Jim Adornetto, born and raised in Zanesville, has been a successful
restaurateur in the city for over 50 years. He opened his first
restaurant, Adornetto's Pizzeria, at the age of 19. In 1994, Mr.
Adornetto opened Giacomo's Bread & Deli in the building north
of Adornetto's Pizzeria, featuring European hearth-style breads and Italian deli with made to order sandwiches and soups. |