
MANCHESTER, NH โ When walking into the Second Brook Bar and Grill in Hooksett, a sign hangs to the direct left of the entrance.
The sign is a replica ticket used by the members of Central High Schoolโs (CHS) Class of 1984 for the โDay Afterโ graduation party at the Second Brook, a somewhat covert gathering spot for teens to sow their rebellious urges and gather as a community.
โIf you grew up in this area, you knew the Second Brook,โ said Jeanne Foote, the co-owner of the Second Brook Bar and Grill and a graduate of Central High Schoolโs Class of โ84.

The Second Brook was a notorious spot on the North End of Manchester for CHS students to party, seeing local cops would have to leave their cruisers and traverse the woods to find the restive teens.
Yet the restaurantโs moniker is not a taunt at law enforcement, rather a nostalgic recognition of a community the CHS classmates shared, which Footeโand her husband and co-owner, Tom Foote, as well as general manager Kim Vaillancourt and a CHS grad of the Class of โ88โare recreating at their establishment on Hooksett Road.
The structure itself was at one time The Jerry Lewis Twins Cinemas, where Foote first saw a viewing of Steven Spielbergโs 1975 classic โJaws.โ

Renovated largely by Tom Foote, a military veteran and engineer, and other friends from the Manchester community, The Second Brook Bar and Grill is an airy and welcome spaceโreplete with artfully rendered photos of the Second Brook itselfโwhere old friends can create โnew memories,โ according to the restaurantโs website.
โItโs your neighborhood hangout,โ said Jeanne Foote, who worked for multiple Manchester restaurants, including Billyโs Sports Bar and The Puritan Backroom before opening her own place, Bellaโs, in Durham.
Foote still lives in Durham and commutes 35-minutes, back and forth, each day. But for her, itโs worth the drive.
โOur saving grace is that we grew up in this community,โ Foote said. โMost people who walk in this door know everybody else. This is family.โ

Despite the COVID-19 conditions, the Second Brook Bar and Grill opened its doors on Sept. 9, 2020, where staffing and training proved a daunting challenge.
But the restaurant has persevered, while still not immune from the staffing struggles that many establishments currently face.
Foote said that sheโlike many restaurant ownersโhas experienced difficulties finding cooks to man the kitchen and has had to work on the line and cook herself, as well as having to spontaneously close down the restaurant on occasions.

โI would rather close for a day or two and save [her workers’] sanity,โ she said. โTheyโre humans, not machines. We work together.โ
Meanwhile, the Second Brook Bar and Grill offers an eclectic and diverse menu, developed by Foote and former head chef Jackson Paulson. It includes innovative entrees and appetizers along with customer favoritesโsuch as the Sheppard Rolls, which are mashed potatoes, ground beef and gouda cheese deep fried in a wonton wrap and served with an au jus and demi-glaze sauce.
โFood is a huge draw here,โ Foote said. โThe majority of it is homemade, and we try to include ingredients from local places. We try to promote the local small businesses.โ

As far as the drafts, Vaillancourt tries to represent many of New Hampshireโs microbreweries, including drafts from Pipe Dream Brewery and the 603 Brewery in Londonderry, and Tuckermanโs in Conway, among others.
Vaillancourt added that this local connection and sense of real community โadds to the attitude of [the staffโs] smiles.โ
โI see the community come inside here, and that creates a smile,โ she said. โTheyโre actual family.โ

Some decades ago, Jeanne and Tom Foote, Kim Vaillancourt and their friends from the Second Brook Bar and Grill may have actualized some of the names of their specialty drinksโThe Swimhole Fashioned, the Train Wreck Margarita, the Running from the Popo Punch.
Or maybe not.
Now theyโve returned to their roots and found a path back home, where everyone is welcome and everyone is appreciated โ and no special ticket necessary.
โIโve made such good friends here, and I include them as my family,โ said Foote.