Two things for news
Forbes Diner has moved from storage in New Haven, CT to Salisbury, CT, a very small bedroom community which seems to become a weekend jaunt for the metro NYC crowd. Located in Northwest Connecticut.
Cindy's Diner in Fort Wayne, Indiana moves in early June, and closed up on May 30. I just realized I do not have a digital photo of the place.
But lets start with the Forbes Diner. The first picture is from recent. This is the first half of the diner to arrive in Salisbury, CT. Two gentlemen were right to work on the diner. Lets hope the progress moves forward. I hope the owner has permits to get the diner on a location and open.
The second photo is from a couple of years ago, and shows the diner in New Haven. Supposedly, the diner sat at this location for a total of six years.
Philipsburg's Key City Diner in New Jersey sits on heavily traveled US Rt 22 a few miles from the Pennsylvania Border near heavily traveled I-80. The diner is an iconic place, and fortunately has not been altered too much, which is rare air for New Jersey. The diner does has an addition built on to it in retro style, but this side shows the original diner.
The Jolly Donut in Sandusky, Ohio is one of my favorite or regular stops on the way out west. Only open breakfast and lunch, the place usually works out perfectly for an early breakfast in either direction most of the time. The exterior is bricked over, but much of the original Mountain View, including the tag, are still left to enjoy. The prices are also very reasonable.
Darby, Connecticut is home to the newest style of diner. I don't know what you call it, but it looks like any ole chain store, tacked on to a diner shell. I am not sure how old the actual diner is, but I think this was a remodel.
A very non-descript environmental diner with some slight updating on the mansard roof can be viewed in Whippany, New Jersey. Not much to see here, move along.
Disclaimer for all photos posted here: ALL
RIGHTS ARE RESERVED. These are copyrighted photos, and I own that
copyright. My photos may not be copied, downloaded, or used in any way,
in any format, in any media without my written permission. Any
other use will constitute an agreement to pay me (Michael Engle)
$50.00 (US) per day/per image, plus a $200.00 (US) administrative fee
per photo, plus any other money generated through the use of my images. I
will bill you for this amount when I find my photos being used without
my written permission. When you are billed, you will also be instructed
to immediately return all physical image copies, delete all digital
images, and delete all links to my photos. Even after you have returned
and deleted the images, you must still pay me for the previous
unauthorized use. Any bills unpaid after 60 days will be referred to a
collection agency. (thank you to Bob Marville)
Five diners at a time, Michael Engle looks back at the diners that he has visited to either eat or photograph. The goal is to get to 1000 diners visited in real life before I get to 1000 on this blog.
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Friday, May 9, 2014
Diners #116-120
The Pelican Diner in Florida was in storage about four years ago. I have not heard that it has come out of storage unfortunately. The Pelican spent a good fifty plus years on St. Pete Beach on the main drag. The main drag became too popular with new buildings, and the diner went. Mountain View sent many diners to places like Indiana and Florida, and this is just one of many that ended up down in the southern confines on the Tampa-St. Pete region. There is a glimmer of hope, but it is going to take someone special to rescue this diner.
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma has at least five Valentines left, and not one looks similar to the other, either due to remodelings or due to the design by the manufacturer themselves. This diner is on South Walker, south of downtown and the main drag out of town in a neighborhood that has seen better days. It is that in between neighborhood. not quite the suburbs, not quite downtown. Plus, I don't think this diner has any off street parking. Plus, the door just doesn't fit too well.
The Hi-Lite is another diner that is no longer with us today. Out on Long Island, the diner sat on Nesconset Hwy in Port Jefferson Station. The road, like most on Long Island, is well traveled. The diner sported some environmental features, but it was also muddled in appearance. I did hear that the diner was demolished, but I never followed up to see what was built on the site. A view on google maps seems to show a TD Bank on site where they place the diner. Six years is too long for me to remember the precise location of the diner, especially with a regraded landscape.
Fortune Gardens in Babylon was another diner I visited on the same trip that I stopped at the Hi-Lite. On Long Island you can practically hit a diner every five minutes, minus traffic.At least the diner is still alive, even if it does not serve diner food. It is located in what seems to be downtown Babylon on West Main Street, also known as the Montauk highway and NY Rt 27A. Much of the through traffic is found the Sunrise Highway a little north, but there is still enough traffic on every road on Long Island.
This diner is open, and serves diner food, but I have yet to eat here, even though I have been by this place about three times, if not more. Joe's Diner, a Sterling in Taunton, Massachusetts is located just outside of the downtown. The diner has its own parking lot, but it has no fancy foundation or landscaping. They are a breakfast and lunch place, and I am usually headed elsewhere, with Joe's not my intended destination. Eventually, I will get to this Sterling diner.
Disclaimer for all photos posted here: ALL RIGHTS ARE RESERVED. These are copyrighted photos, and I own that copyright. My photos may not be copied, downloaded, or used in any way, in any format, in any media without my written permission. Any other use will constitute an agreement to pay me (Michael Engle) $50.00 (US) per day/per image, plus a $200.00 (US) administrative fee per photo, plus any other money generated through the use of my images. I will bill you for this amount when I find my photos being used without my written permission. When you are billed, you will also be instructed to immediately return all physical image copies, delete all digital images, and delete all links to my photos. Even after you have returned and deleted the images, you must still pay me for the previous unauthorized use. Any bills unpaid after 60 days will be referred to a collection agency. (thank you to Bob Marville)
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