The Sladich Bar, Anaconda, Montana

The Sladich Bar opened in 1896 and closed in the early 2000s.
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Wide factory windows for the apartment up top give the building some ’30s modernist flair, along with the glass brick, porthole windows and tile facade. The left side door skews the ground floor facade off to the right, giving the whole package a slightly unbalanced look. Awning frames are still in place, but the awnings are long gone.
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From the side it becomes apparent that this is an older building with later updates. Note the brick infill of the tall, skinny original windows on the second floor.
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An incredibly well preserved and original hand painted sign on the side of the Sladich Bar for Rocky Mountain Beer, brewed by the Anaconda Brewing Company. Remember – you work better refreshed!
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The Anaconda Brewing Company operated from 1898 to 1958, with time off for Prohibition. Their soft drink division became the Sugrue Bottling Company.
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The College Park Little Tavern

The Little Tavern at 7413 Baltimore Ave College Park, MD, was built around 1940 (some sources say 1938, others 1941. Little Tavern Shops started their expansion into Maryland suburbs in the late 1930s), and is slated to come down very soon.

The College Park LT in the late 1940s, on the far left.
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In the 1970s. Little Tavern fed hungry Terps for more than half a century.
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After Little Tavern went out of business in the early 1990s (read about the life and death of the Little Tavern chain on some of the other posts on this blog), the building operated as a Toddle House, the Philadelphia Cheesecake Factory, Curry Express and JD’s Roadhouse Barbecue. It has been vacant nearly a decade.

As of 2011, the awning still showed signs of its stint in the early 1990s as a Toddle House. The Little Tavern’s architecture suited Toddle House, whose early buildings were a similar cottage style. Their buildings later grew- the current College Park Diner, down Rt. 1, was originally a 1960s Toddle House.
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The interior of the building suffered through the tenant changes of 1990s and 2000s, with the original tilework, custom built Monel backbar, stools and counters being replaced with whatever was cheapest from the hardware store.
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Now, with rapid development of the historic district of College Park, and ownership of the land by the University of Maryland, the historic structure will be demolished to make way for a “pocket park” with parking for food trucks.
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Signs of Anaconda, Montana

Anaconda, Montana is home to the Anaconda Smelter Stack, also known as the Big Stack (for obvious reasons) at the former Washoe smelter.  Standing at 585 feet tall and 87 feet across at the base, the big stack was the world’s largest chimney from 1919, when it was built until 1937, though it still holds the world record for the tallest standing non-steel structure.   photo Anaconda Stacks.jpg

The Big Stack still stands and is visible from nearly all of Anaconda.  The smelter closed in 1980 and demolished in 1981, taking with it 1,500 jobs. In the past 55 years, Anaconda’s population has dwindled by a third.

Top: Bowl!

Row 2:
Lucky Lady Casino,
Wind’s Bakery and Pasties, http://www.windspasties.com/
BPOE 239

Row 3:
Carmel’s Bar and Grill. As of 2014, it was for sale for $299,900 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NY8_kB3jBgU
The former Fuller Drug Co. Building
Travel trailer

Row 4:
Former Gas Station
Peppermint Patty’s Good Food. They’re known for their Pork Chop Sandwiches and gravy fries. Pork Chop Sandwiches are a Montana thing and have to be tried. https://www.facebook.com/anacondaflyingpig
Cutone’s Bar/Flying Dragon Restaurant – Built in 1917. Bar appears to be 1930s. The building is over 10,000 feet, and with all fixtures is currently for sale for $295,000. Cutone’s Bar Listing

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Jeri’s Jumbo Cafe – Pocatello, Idaho

We stopped for breakfast at Jeri’s Jumbo. I had the Chicken Fried Steak, which used ground beef as its base. Good flavor to the meat and breading. The real joy of Jeri’s was the bread. Fresh baked, hot out of the oven, thick cut and toasted, for a bit of crunch to the outside and a soft, warm center. Really a treat.

3122 Pole Line Rd, Pocatello, ID 83201

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Over the hill and enjoying the view?
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It looks like the sign once had a neon elephant on top to match the Jumbo name
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The Sip & Dip Lounge, Great Falls, MT

I’ve been hearing about the Sip and Dip for the better part of my two years out here living in Montana, but it took a visit from Beth Lennon of Retro Roadmap to finally kick me in the pants to drive the roughly 200 miles northwest to get a drink.

The Sip and Dip is inside the O’Haire Motor Inn, a cool motel in its own right – more on that later.

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After the hotel pool shuts down for the day, the mermaids come out.  Walking into the Sip and Dip before Pat came on was a truly bizarre experience, with everyone silently drinking their drinks, staring at the mermaids, transfixed.

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The Fishbowl. It may be Montana, but when at a tiki bar, always go for blue, always go for umbrellas.  I ordered up dinner from the hotel restaurant, Clark and Lewie’s: an enormous pulled pork sandwich, topped with mac and cheese and and even more cheese.  I figured if I was going for the ridiculous drink, I may as well find the culinary equivalent.  Gratuitous?  Yes.  But did it ever hit the spot.

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The main attraction: Piano Pat, who has been playing at the Sip and Dip since 1963.
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Neat features of the O’Haire Motor Inn:  Pushbutton light switches scattered throughout the room so you are never out of reach of every light in the place.  Vaulted Ceilings.  Sand filled cinder block walls for soundproofing, metal seamed ceilings in the halls with glass signage. Patent Pending Handi-Press Iron-A-Way ironing board hidden behind a mirror in the bedroom section of the room, lights and an aircraft control inspired switchboard for handing check in, check out and room cleaning, wall ventilation panels, interior courtyard underground parking

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The sign for the Sip and Dip, also showing the Top Notch Lunch
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Even Tracy’s Family Restaurant on Central Avenue gets into the mermaid theme.
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O’Haire Motor Inn / Sip and Dip Lounge
17 7th St S, Great Falls, MT 59401

The Norris Bar, Norris, Montana

Norris sits at the crossroads of US 287 and MT 84, and is home to the Norris Hot Springs, a gas station, A greenhouse builder, a small post office and the Norris Bar. While I’ve been to the Hot Springs a number of times, this was my first trip to the Bar. I hit it at two, just as the Snorrin Horse Grill was opening. What a bar! What a burger! Beautifully ripe tomatoes and homemade pickles on a perfectly grilled, juicy patty on a sub roll with hand cut fries. And for dessert- a miniature homemade apple rhubarb pie with whipped cream.

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Norris was once a small mining town and terminal of a branchline of the Northern Pacific. Some original buildings still stand
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The Handy Diner – Harrisburg, PA

The Handy Diner, 514 N. 3rd St. Harrisburg PA, was owned by Davis S. Reed and his wife, Sarah K. Reed, who also owned the Palace Diner on Second Street from 1943-1947 and the Riverview Diner at 4105 Front Street. I’m finding a lot of help wanted ads and the like for this one, but no photos or hard opening or closing dates.  It was open under this name from around 1940 to 1947. If anyone has any more on this one, I’d love to see or hear it.