Downtown army-navy store latest Boston company to sue insurer over coronavirus losses
The Kenmore Army & Navy Store, 477 Washington St. in Downtown Crossing, is suing its insurance company for the more than $320,000 it says it's lost due to the Covid-19 crisis - which it says its insurance company is supposed to cover.
In a suit filed in US District Court in Boston, Kenmore says it bought an "all-risk insurance policy" from Travelers Casualty Insurance Co. last November, with a "civil authority" clause promising to pay Kenmore for any losses caused by "loss of business income sustained when the action of a civil authority prohibits access to the business premises."
Kenmore says it hasn't been able to operate normally since March, when Gov. Baker issued his declaration of emergency and a series of orders aimed at slowing down the spread of the virus:
As a result of the foregoing facts and circumstances, there has been direct physical loss of and/or damage to property at the premises covered under the Policy by, among other things, the property being damaged, access to the property being denied, customers being prevented from physically occupying the property, the property being physically uninhabitable by customers, the function of the property being nearly eliminated or destroyed, and/or a suspension of business operations occurring at the property.
It's at least the third Boston company to file such a suit, joining Legal Sea Foods and Hampshire House Corp., the owner of the Cheers bar and 75 on Liberty.
Travelers has until next month to respond to the Kenmore suit.
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Comments
Is this the last Army/Navy
Is this the last Army/Navy store in the city? Army Barracks moved out of Mass Ave in the past decade.
Boston keeps loosing unique
Boston keeps loosing unique retailers for specialty goods and is becoming a retail desert for anything other than generic apparel.
Try buying a fishing rod in Boston. Skis? Surfboards? Hobby kits? Crafts? Board games? All the hobbyist and non-lifestyle type outdoorsy stuff (think more extensive than the weekend warrior stuff at REI) is gone. Not all of that stuff can be replaced by mail order either because of various consumer regulations either. Nor would one want to buy some of these items sight unseen.
Hardware Stores
There's hardly any left in the city. I think Charles Street Ace and Economy hardware are the only one left.
Thanks to Covid, I've resorted to buying clothes online. It would take me weeks to get stuff that fit because I had to try on so much and send it back. Waste of time. This is something brick and motar that cannot be replaced.
Well,
There are online surplus stores, but it's not at all the same experience. I remember the smell of the preservative on all that military clothing. What do they use?
You're right. I was actually
You're right. I was actually walking around the North End this morning, down Salem Street, thinking to myself "wasn't this a hardware store the last time I walked down this street?" Which, yes, it was. It has been a few years apparently...
I occasionally patronize Economy when we unexpectedly need a piece of hardware at work, I can only hope it stays. That and the Wendy's & Boloco over that way, both of which we had at NU when I first arrived there as a student. Any hardware store trip around lunchtime was purely coincidental.
It's too bad that the North
It's too bad that the North End and Back Bay lost their hardware stores. It makes a neighborhood less of a real place.
There used to be one in the Financial District as well.
Dickson Brothers in Harvard Square is going to close soon.
Warren Hardware in the northern end of the South End is still there.
Is Boston Hardware still open
Is Boston Hardware still open? It's the North End's other hardware store, on Fleet Street.
I take it
you have a very parochial definition of "the city"--between Brighton, Allston, and JP there's at least 4, I can think of.
One in HP too.
One in HP too.
at least two in cambridge.
at least two in cambridge.
There's also Warren Hardware
There's also Warren Hardware (Ace) on Tremont in the South End.
Skis
Where do you buy those in Boston? A few years ago, I had to buy replacement cross-country ski poles, and they were almost impossible to find. I finally ended up at East Coast Alpine where they had a few in a forgotten corner. The salesperson told me that nobody cross-country skis anymore.
(And now, East Coast Alpine is no more.)
The old Sears building or
The old Sears building or towards Tufts.
Can you be more specific?
What stores at what addresses?
REI
They had a store on the old Sears building.
REI in Fenway had no cross-country ski equipment
when I visited it several years ago. (I bought my cross-country skis at REI in Reading, many years earlier.)
You're probably gonna have to go out of town for that
I would also not expect to find many places in Boston to buy snowmobiles, or surfboards, or whitewater kayaks. For sporting equipment that doesn't have a mass appeal, if you want to buy brick and mortar, you generally have to go closer to where those sports are practiced.
Try The Ski Monster
on Canal St., near the Garden. I think they are open by appointment only at this time. Not sure if they have cross-country skis or not.
www.theskimonster.com
I bought ski goggles at that
I bought ski goggles at that Canal St. shop a few years back -- was shocked there was a ski shop in Boston.
The Weston Ski Track sells
The Weston Ski Track sells used equipment. For new skis, they recommend Bikeway Source in Bedford, REI, and New England Backpacker in Worcester.
I've gotten xc skis used on Craigslist, and in free stuff piles at the curb.
The Weston Ski Track sells
The Weston Ski Track sells used gear.
For new XC skis, they recommend Bikeway Source in Bedford, REI, and New England Backpacker in Worcester.
Mickey Finn's
Anybody remember Mickey Finn's that was on Temple Place in the 60s and 70s? Man, I'm old.
Mickey Finn's
Hi, I am trying to find our more info on the Mickey Finn store that was in Boston in the 60's and 70's. As far as I know, I was related to him. I remember going there with my father as a kid and meeting our cousin. In the mid 70's my parents moved to Florida, where we met the wife of Mickey Finn in Miami one night. I don't remember anything else. I would love to find more info on this business and Mickey Finn himself. Any help would be great
Thanks,
Mike Lewis
Mickey Finn
Loved that store. Bought several pairs of Tiger sneakers there sometime between 1986-1988,
I hope they get their money.
They are very nice shopkeepers and the store is like no other.
The youngsters know nothing
The youngsters know nothing about Surplus, Army or Navy.
Once the supply erodes I'm not sure what they'll sell. Desert stuff I guess.