Outside Captain Eddie’s Clam Shack is a hand-painted sign that says, “If the water rises, so do we.” It has been faded by forty years of Gulf sun and salt air. After Hurricane Ivan destroyed half of the roof in 2004, someone took a picture of it. The picture was shared throughout the neighborhood. People sobbed. Laughing, Eddie placed an order for plywood. This location had a personality, which was its unique quality. a stubbornness. The type that is passed down through fryers that have been in use since Reagan’s administration and cracked linoleum floors rather than through a business plan.
Captain Eddie’s is going to close. This time, for good. Not due to a tempest. Not due to a virus. The fryer is still functional, the building is still standing, and the recipe for clam chowder, which is written on a notecard taped inside a cabinet door, hasn’t been altered since 1987. However, sometime in late 2024, the math stopped functioning, first subtly and then suddenly.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Establishment Name | Captain Eddie’s Clam Shack |
| Founded | 1983 |
| Location | Gulf Coast, Florida Panhandle |
| Founder | Edward “Eddie” Marchetti |
| Type of Business | Family-owned casual seafood restaurant |
| Signature Dish | Fried clam basket with house-made remoulade |
| Hurricanes Survived | Three (including Category 3 and Category 4 storms) |
| Recessions Survived | 2001 downturn, 2008–2009 financial crisis |
| Pandemic Period | Operated through full COVID-19 closure and recovery |
| Closing Date | June 2025 |
| Reason for Closure | Compounding costs: rent tripling, insurance unaffordable, workforce dried up |
| Staff at Peak | 34 employees |
| Reference | National Restaurant Association |
Rosalie Marchetti, the daughter of Eddie Marchetti, took over full operations in 2019—bad timing, she’ll tell you with a flat laugh—and saw the restaurant get through its most trying period ever. Within a week of the COVID shutdowns in March 2020, she switched to takeout windows. Elderly regulars who were unable to drive were given orders by hand. She didn’t know if the checks she wrote would clear. The shack survived. Through, but barely. What followed her survival was something she didn’t expect.
Early in 2024, the property lease was up for renewal. The new rate, which was three times the previous monthly amount, was offered by the landlord, a property group that had purchased the land two years earlier. For a building of that size and age, insurance had crept into an area that felt almost punitive. Insurance was already painful along the Florida coast. With turnover so high that Rosalie occasionally worked the fryer herself on Friday nights, finding dependable kitchen staff had become an exhausting negotiation in and of itself. In isolation, any one of these pressures might have been controllable. When combined, they created a completely different kind of storm.

Walking down the Gulf Coast restaurant corridor these days gives me the impression that Captain Eddie’s story isn’t unique; rather, it’s just the most obvious manifestation of something that’s going on all the time. Fault lines in small hospitality businesses that were already present and growing were made visible by the pandemic. A devoted clientele and high-quality clam strips were insufficient to counteract the rising costs. Even well-resourced institutions had been humiliated by the pandemic, according to a 2020 article in The Atlantic. Smaller institutions, already operating on margins so thin you could read through them, had even less room for error once the crisis passed and the bills arrived.
The timing is really difficult to accept. It concludes with a lease negotiation and an insurance renewal notice rather than a flood after forty-two years of hurricanes, recessions, shutdowns, and unrelenting perseverance. In a local interview, Rosalie made a statement that stuck: “After a storm, we could always rebuild.” Rent increases cannot be avoided by rebuilding.
A Saturday in June is scheduled as the last day of service. There will likely be a long line. The fried clam basket will be ordered. Someone is going to cry. That old sign will be photographed by someone. It’s difficult not to think that what’s being lost here isn’t just a restaurant; rather, it’s a specific kind of evidence that community, perseverance, and delicious seafood could keep something together forever. As it happens, indefinitely has a cost. And that cost eventually materialized along the Gulf Coast in 2025.
