Anchor Food Pantry

Anchor Food Pantry For Delivery Information email: [email protected]

Swampscott student leaders give backErin HickeyApril 1, 2026 by Erin HickeySWAMPSCOTT — This weekend, a steady stream of...
04/02/2026

Swampscott student leaders give back
Erin Hickey
April 1, 2026 by Erin Hickey

SWAMPSCOTT — This weekend, a steady stream of shoppers were met at Stop & Shop by a group of Swampscott students, braving the cold and greeting them as they entered the store, asking them to consider picking up an extra item for a neighbor in need.

By mid-morning, donations had started to build. Bags of groceries were set aside in the students’ carts, waiting to be delivered to the Anchor Food Pantry.

The effort brought together students from eighth through 12th grade, some participating in the National or Junior National Honor Society, but some simply showing up because they wanted to help.

“It’s open to everyone,” said Matt Moran, an eighth-grade math teacher at Swampscott Middle School who organizes the efforts. “We have a lot of students who exceed their service requirements, and they just keep doing it because they love to help and they love serving.”

The food drive is one piece of a broader network of service opportunities Moran coordinates throughout the year, connecting students with local organizations like Anchor and My Brother’s Table in Lynn.

Moran is the advisor for the Junior National Honors Society, but the group that he calls “Student Leaders” has an email list of over 100 students across middle and high school. Each month, Moran sends out a list of service opportunities — and those spots fill up fast, he said. Small groups of students help out at local events like a recent inclusive Easter Egg Hunt. Each month they head to Anchor and unload and stock deliveries from the Greater Boston Food Bank. It’s work that Moran said often leaves a lasting impression.

“It’s such an eye-opening experience for our students to realize that there are people in our own community who are struggling with food insecurity,” Moran said. “That monthly delivery might only last two weeks or three weeks … and so it really depends on these supplemental resources to keep them and our people in our community who need help going for the month.”

At Stop & Shop, students rotated through two-hour shifts, transporting their haul to the food pantry after collecting carts full of pasta, beans, canned goods, miscellaneous food items, and household products. While Moran helps coordinate logistics, he said much of the work is driven by the students themselves.

“A lot of these drives are routine now,” he said. “The students know what to do. They know the drill. They really run the show.”

For many students, that sense of ownership and the impact behind it is what keeps them coming back.

“I think the amount of people willing to help has been really inspiring,” said Easter Cunningham, a senior at Swampscott High School who has been involved in the group’s volunteer work for several years. “Even people who don’t need the hours, they still show up. And the people shopping — they’re willing to take time out of their day to help too.”

Cunningham is part of that regular group that sorts monthly deliveries at Anchor Food Pantry. “I usually am sorting hygiene products and things, which before I didn’t even really consider,” she said. Anchor provides a range of household products from toothpaste to diapers to cleaning products — items not covered under SNAP benefits. “When you think of a food pantry, you think of food … I guess I never thought of it, but it feels really obvious,” she said.

With plans to attend college and study to become an art teacher, Cunningham said that the exposure to serving her community she’s had in Swampscott will likely continue well into her future. After moving to Swampscott in seventh grade, shortly before the pandemic started, she said this service group really helped her find her footing in the community.

“It’s giving students opportunities to go out of their way and help people,” she said. “It’s really inspiring to me.”

Other student volunteers are following in Cunningham’s footsteps and starting their service early, like eighth grader Sang Tong, who said that participating in these volunteer opportunities has changed his perspective.

“I like going to My Brother’s Table,” Tong said. “It’s life changing. You can see how people are doing, and you realize not everything’s perfect. It makes you want to help.”

Fellow eighth grader Johan Standal said that even with a busy schedule filled with school and sports, he feels the importance and the value of that volunteer work.

“I’m prioritizing this over everything else,” Standal said. “I just want to help people and I feel like I’m making a difference.”

Tong and Standal said they both plan to continue volunteering with Moran’s group, even as they move beyond middle school.

“Helping and making a difference, making the community a better place, is really nice,” Tong said.

Moran said that sentiment is exactly the kind of mindset he hopes to foster.

“I’m just so proud of our students,” he said. “They’re not just showing up once to check a box. They’re coming back again and again because they see the impact they’re having.”

02/22/2026

The Anchor Food Pantry will be closed tomorrow 2-23-2026. Stay safe everyone!

Anchor Food Pantry is feeling the ❤️ from SES first grade families!! Thank you for the amazing 100th day of school food ...
02/14/2026

Anchor Food Pantry is feeling the ❤️ from SES first grade families!! Thank you for the amazing 100th day of school food drive. And special thanks to Mrs. Sheehan for organizing this every year and for the fourth grade leaders who helped check the dates! Enjoy a well deserved break. 100 elementary school # community support

Due to the upcoming storm we will be closed on Monday January 26th. We will be open on Wednesday January 28th from 6-8pm...
01/24/2026

Due to the upcoming storm we will be closed on Monday January 26th. We will be open on Wednesday January 28th from 6-8pm. Please stay safe everyone!

SWAMPSCOTT — Anchor Food Pantry has been designated as a Salem Five Community Star and received a $5,000 donation from t...
01/16/2026

SWAMPSCOTT — Anchor Food Pantry has been designated as a Salem Five Community Star and received a $5,000 donation from the organization to continue its work supporting families in need.

Salem Five Vice President and Branch Manager Hariklia Gjikuria explained how the donation came about.

“We focus a lot on the community, and both companies and nonprofits that do a lot of good work in the surrounding areas. The donations we do in December are part of a larger program called ‘Make a Difference in December,’ and Anchor Food Pantry does amazing work for the nearby communities,” Gjikuria said.

She noted that, last November, the pantry gave approximately 165 Thanksgiving meals to families in need. Gjikuria reiterated that the pantry’s work aligns closely with Salem Five’s mission to support local organizations and nonprofits.

“I’ve always been a strong believer that you have to give back to the community. In order for Anchor Food Pantry to do what they do, they need the support of organizations like Salem Five and other companies. We are blessed that we have the ability to do so, and we like giving back to the community,” she said.

Anchor Food Pantry Treasurer Diane O’Brien said, when the federal government announced last October that the SNAP benefits program was going to be suspended, the community responded immediately to help the organization.

“Donations flooded in; food drives were starting; kids were selling hot chocolate stands to collect money for us… It was overwhelming, the amount of support we received. We’re just a little food pantry; we serve approximately 150 families a month, and we’ve been doing this for six years,” O’Brien said. “We really depended on the community’s support, and they have continued to wow us with their support. It’s incredible.”

O’Brien said it’s humbling for the pantry to be designated as a Salem Five Community Star.

“The only thing that we spend money on is food. The Town has been very gracious to lend us a building. We don’t pay rent; we don’t hire employees; we don’t do marketing… We’re just out in the community all the time,” she said. “I’m just incredibly grateful for the donation.”

The organization gets 4,500 pounds of food each month from the Boston Food Bank, and it supplements that amount with purchases from local supermarkets and food drives.

“The money will go right back into the food stock that we purchase and give to the community,” O’Brien said. “We don’t even buy bags; we beg, borrow, and steal from our friends and family… We don’t spend money on anything else but feeding our community.”

Anchor Food Pantry President Susan Downs-Cripps said, “We are so grateful to Salem Five for recognizing us with this wonderful donation. It will help us supply food for our ongoing project of feeding people in Swampscott and Nahant.”

We were honored to be selected as the Salem Five Bank Community Star. We would like to extend our sincere thanks to Sale...
01/13/2026

We were honored to be selected as the Salem Five Bank Community Star. We would like to extend our sincere thanks to Salem Five for their generous $5,000 donation, which will support the continuation of our work. Pictured here are Hariklia Gjikuria, VP Branch Manager, and Anchor Board Member Diane O'Brien. We are consistently moved by the ongoing support we receive from our community.

We are incredibly grateful to our new friends at Sam Walker's Tavern for supporting our efforts.We highly recommend tryi...
12/19/2025

We are incredibly grateful to our new friends at Sam Walker's Tavern for supporting our efforts.
We highly recommend trying their signature drink, "The Late Checkout." For every one of these drinks purchased, a generous donation goes directly back to the Anchor Food Pantry.
We encourage you to visit and support a great cause!

After over 5 years of Laura Spathanas being the president of the Anchor Food Pantry she is moving on 🫶 We thank and appr...
12/17/2025

After over 5 years of Laura Spathanas being the president of the Anchor Food Pantry she is moving on 🫶 We thank and appreciate you for all you've done 🩵🤍

Address

86 Burrill Street
Swampscott, MA
01907

Opening Hours

Monday 11am - 1pm
Wednesday 6pm - 8pm

Telephone

+17814793080

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