Rise of the Diner: Lunch Wagons Pull Off the Road
13 artifacts in this set
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The staff at The Henry Ford
Advertising Letter and Sample Menus for The Wright Diner, 1929
Letter (Correspondence)
Diners had long appealed to workers by offering quick, simple food at reasonable prices. By the late 1920s, as this letter and sample menus show, diner operators were attempting to broaden their appeal to women and their families by promising such enhanced amenities as comfort, hospitality, beauty in furnishings, and carefully prepared foods.
Worcester Lunch Car Company Tag from Lamy's Diner, 1946
Tag (Label)
The Worcester (Massachusetts) Lunch Car Company began as a lunch wagon producer in 1906. By the mid-1920s they were manufacturing larger, fully outfitted diners and became one of New England's premier diner builders. This tag came as part of the Lamy's Diner donation when the diner was moved to Henry Ford Museum in the 1980s.
View inside a Roadside Diner, 1927-1929
Photographic print
Entrepreneurs could start a business easily by purchasing a fully outfitted diner. Wason Manufacturing Company, a noted streetcar and railway passenger vehicle manufacturer, produced the Royal Diner in Los Angeles, California, pictured here. Owners wanting to attract women and families purchased diners with space for tables or booths with more comfortable seating and hired waitresses to serve customers.
Menu, "Blue Parrot Diner," Manchester, New Hampshire, circa 1928
Menu
Diners had long appealed to workers by offering quick, simple food at reasonable prices. By the late 1920s, as this menu shows, diner operators were attempting to broaden their appeal to women and their families by promising such enhanced amenities as comfort, hospitality, beauty in furnishings, and carefully prepared foods.
Hi-Way Diner in Holyoke, Massachusetts
Photographic print
This diner was managed by the Hi-Way Diners Club of New England, established in 1928 to create a chain of good diners along national highways throughout New England.
Customers and Staff inside a Roadside Diner, 1927-1929
Photographic print
Diner owners looked to attract as many patrons as possible. Companies that built and shipped fully outfitted diners, like Wason Manufacturing Company, provided owners with several options. The diner pictured here has a glass counter to display prepared foods and tables for those who want a bit more seating comfort.
Menu, "Florence Diner," Florence, Massachusetts, circa 1928
Menu
Diners had long appealed to workers by offering quick, simple food at reasonable prices. By the late 1920s, as this menu shows, diner operators were attempting to broaden their appeal to women and their families by promising such enhanced amenities as comfort, hospitality, beauty in furnishings, and carefully prepared foods.
Male Cook at Work Behind the Counter of the Fairfield Diner, 1938-1940
Photographic print
Diner cooks prepared food to order, deftly handling grills, ovens, fryers, and coffee urns in plain sight of customers. This photograph, taken about 1939, shows a cook working behind the counter at the Fairfield Diner in Connecticut.
Postcard of Lindholm's Diner, Rutland, Vermont, circa 1950
Postcard
After World War II, Americans were eating out more than ever before. Diners became familiar sights--especially in New England (where the industry originated), New York, and New Jersey (where the industry was moving). Their new, modern streamlined forms, like the diner shown here, represented efficiency and progress--perfect embodiments of a nation on the go.
Lamy's Diner at Its Original Site in Marlborough, Massachusetts, circa 1946
Photographic print
This photograph shows Lamy's Diner on its original site in Marlborough, Massachusetts, about 1946. The diner moved three times: first to Framingham, Massachusetts; next to Hudson, Massachusetts, in 1949; and finally to Henry Ford Museum in 1984.
Mickey's Diner, Saint Paul, Minnesota, 1976
Slide (Photograph)
In the mid-1970s, John Margolies began to assemble a visual record of America's built roadside landscape. Over the following three decades, he traveled thousands of miles to photograph the overlooked and often quickly vanishing structures that had grown out of American automobile culture and main street commerce. His photographs of hotels, motels, diners, service stations, drive-ins and attractions celebrate and capture a unique chapter of...
Lamy's Diner, 1946
Diner (Restaurant)
World War II veteran Clovis Lamy ordered this 40-seat diner from the Worcester Lunch Car Company, a premier New England diner builder. In April 1946, Lamy operated the diner in his home town of Marlborough, Massachusetts. Local factory workers ate lunch there and those returning from a movie or show dropped in for dinner. Lamy sold the business in 1949.
Photograph Album, "Brill Steel Dining Cars," 1927-1929
Photograph album
Diners promised quick, simple, affordable food in comfortable surroundings. By the 1920s, entrepreneurs could easily start their own business by purchasing a fully outfitted diner, mass produced in factories and shipped to order. This photograph album featured diners produced by the J.G. Brill Company, parent company of the Wason Manufacturing Company after 1908. It was used by company sales representatives.