The Fife and Drum Snack Bar |
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"Snacks and Soft Drinks."
The first incarnation of Liberty Square rendered the
quiet space behind Old World Antiques, Mlle. Lafayette's
Parfumerie and the Silversmith (all now gone and
replaced by the Liberty Square Christmas Shop) a more
wooded location than what it would become in the year
after the park's opening. Initially, the only pedestrian
pathway through this area ran close to those shops and
was bound by an undulating brick wall to the south,
which held back the patch of forest area between
Colonial civilization and the canal that passes through
the hub. |
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The Fife and Drum Extinct WDW Food Outlet Located in: Opened: 1972 Remnants: |
The small building, as pictured above and still visible in the park today, looks like a
miniature version of Aunt Polly's Landing on Tom Sawyer Island. Technically
speaking, however, Aunt Polly's is just a larger version of The Fife and Drum because
the latter came first. It was built onto an existing structure called the "can wash
building." The revised layout consisted simply of a back room with an ice machine,
sink and refrigerator and a front counter area with a drink machine and refrigerated
sandwich dispenser. The menu selection wasn't diverse, as the equipment
description no doubt implies. But on hot summer days it offered sufficient relief in the
form of drinks, cold sandwiches and desserts. In 2000, a new bridge was erected across the hub canal directly into this area. As part of this change, the Fife and Drum plaza was opened up as a direct traffic route between other points of interest in the park. So the days of sneaking some solitary relaxation in this shady corner are now all but relegated to the past. |
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