Harry’s Restaurant

Westborough, United States

4.1

Open now

20 reviews

Does not accept credit cards

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Bussiness info

Takes Reservations
No
Delivery
No
Take-out
Yes
Accepts Credit Cards
No
Accepts Apple Pay
No
Accepts Bitcoin
No
Good For
Lunch
Parking
Private Lot
Bike Parking
Yes
Wheelchair Accessible
Yes
Good for Kids
Yes
Good for Groups
Yes
Attire
Casual
Ambience
Casual
Noise Level
Average
Alcohol
Beer & Wine Only
Outdoor Seating
No
Wi-Fi
No
Has TV
Yes
Waiter Service
Yes
Caters
No

Description

Specialties

Sandwiches, Deli, BBQ, Italian, Beer and Wine, Breakfast, American Food, Lunch, Dinner, Late Night

Welcome to Harry’s Restaurant, family owned and operated for two generations. A roadside diner serving some of the best fried clams in Metrowest. Harry’s, known as a route 9 hangout, has been around since 1946. The décor is vinyl galore, but you can expect some of the freshest home cooking anywhere around.

Harry’s «one of the few places serving dinner past midnight «bills itself as «the place for fried clams,» and the claim’s legit. The clams (both with bellies and the sacrilegious strips) are tender.

Stop by and enjoy our menu full of classic American home style dishes. Sure, we get a bit fancy here and there, but only to make the food taste extra special. After all, down home doesn’t mean down scale.

History

Established in 1946.

Harry’s originally opened in Shrewsbury in 1946 and moved to a former gas station in Westborough in 1968. The restaurant and dairy bar are iconic in Westborough. It got started in 1946 by Harry Cohen from Worcester, MA. He used to be a house painter who was diagnosed at an early age with diabetes. The ladders became too heavy to carry and he needed to be in close proximity to food. He had always worked for himself so he decided to open a restaurant. He rented an old shack on Rt 9 in Shrewsberry, MA and started out with pastrami sandwiches. At that time it was called Harry’s Famous Hot Pastrami. He would line up rows of rye bread and being a painter, he would use a paint brush to paint each slice of bread with mustard. People lined up for his famous pastrami sandwiches. Then he followed with hand cut onion rings (devised of a homemade batter) and that too became a hit. The same recipe is still used today (it’s a seven step process).

Meet the Business Owner

Jon C.

Business Owner

The current owner Jon Cohen grew up around Harry’s and has at some point, worked in every position of the diner. In 1985, he took over as owner and remains as dedicated today.