Armory Grill – Nashua, NH

The Armory Grill was a Valentine diner, which opened in August of 1950. In 1956, it was enlarged with an addition in 1956. It was owned by Arthur Fekas, who had originally planned on opening two more locations (possibly more Valentines?), but those did not pan out. It was sold and reopened in 1959 as Paul’s Diner, then again in 1960 as the Buffet Diner. It dropped the “Diner” and became the Buffet Restaurant in 1967. It operated under that name until at least the mid 1980s. By 1994 it was “The Mediterranean Place”.

The diner still exists and is located at 25 Canal St., Nashua, NH. It currently operates as Canal Street Pizza.

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The Chester Diner – Chester, NY

The Chester diner opened on July 25, 1962 to great fanfare. It was built by the Manno Dining Car Company. It had a folded plate roofline, and a transitional exaggerated modern/ environmental facade, with large expanses of glass. The interior had a 115 seat capacity, with cantilevered stools and some of the wildest light fixtures I’ve seen.
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The Chester Diner is still with us, and is located at 67 Brookside Ave, Chester, NY 10918. Here’s a lousy Google Streetview shot of the diner as it stands today. I can’t say for certain whether this is a replacement or a remodel, but my guess would be the latter.
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Farewell Capital City

My father made one last trip to the Capital City diner, on this, its last day.
Read the Full Post Here

It was with a heavy heart and a hungry belly that I stumbled into the Capital City Diner this morning. Owner Matt Ashburn, after fighting a long and valiant battle, had announced that D.C.’s only true diner was closing its doors today, and I needed to grab the cup by the handle and have one last cup of joe, one last greasy, delicious breakfast before the grill went cold and the lights went dim along Bladensburg Road and the Trinidad neighborhood was left with a hollow void in its culinary soul. I hope you enjoy this brief photo essay and tribute to Washington, D.C.’s Capital City Diner.

– Michael G. Stewart

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Capital City Diner to close

The Capital City diner, located at 1050 Bladensburg Rd. NE Washington DC, is set to close this weekend.

Friends,

We sincerely appreciate your support, patronage, and– most of all– friendship over the past two years. You’re more than customers; you’re our friends and neighbors.

Although we received positive response to our recent improvements, we also encountered rising costs, a declining economy, and a national chain “diner” restaurant opening almost a stone’s throw away. Now, we must refocus and reformat our restaurant to move forward.

This weekend, we’ll open from 7am until 6pm on Saturday and Sunday so that we can meet up one last time to say good-bye before we close to reformat and improve our concept.

Again, thank you for your support and encouragement, we’d love to see you one last time at the old diner to say good-bye this weekend.

Sincerely,

Matt & the Capital City Diner crew
diner@capitalcitydiner.com

White House Lunch Wagon – Cumberland, Maryland

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The White House Lunch opened in Cumberland, Maryland in 1904, originally sited at the corner of Liberty St. and Baltimore St. In 1905 it moved nearly one block to an address near the corner of North Liberty St and Frederick St. It may have shuffled over a lot or two in 1907 to accommodate the offices of Charles. H. Wolford, but it didn’t go far, remaining roughly at 41 North Liberty Street until 1919.

The Lunch Wagon was owned by George A. Wadsworth and his soon Lloyd F. Wadsworth, who took over the business upon his father’s death in 1908. The lunch wagon was put up for sale in 1919 to James and Earl Bucy, who moved it to the site of the new Kelly Springfield Tire Company plant, which was being built across the river, and a little over a mile away. Construction on the plant started in 1917 and it was opened in 1921, so it’s easy to assume that the diner had a good two year run under the Bucy Brothers before being sold or scrapped.

From the name, “White House Lunch”, I wouldn’t be at all surprised to find that the place was made by T.H. Buckley of Worcester, MA. A date of manufacture of 1904 would put this right in Buckley’s heyday. The description of etched colored glass windows with portraits of great Americans points to Buckley’s style, as well.

Prospect Diner – Hagerstown, MD

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The Prospect Diner opened Thursday, August 22, 1946. It was billed as Hagerstown’s Newest Diner, though the barrel roof design it followed would have been, by that point, ten to twenty years behind what the factories in Jersey were turning out. That said, for an on-site job, it played the “diner” game well, pulling heavily from factory built models, but with the great added twist of the full (structural?) glass brick windows. I can only imagine what this place would have looked like at night, with the entire roof seeming to hover over the heavy base, unsupported by window frames or pillars.
With the design what it is, I’m a bit surprised they didn’t take better advantage of the huge expanses of flat facade, like earlier builders were doing. I guess by 1946, that sort of lettering had more or less fallen out of use with just about everyone but Worcester, but the tiny signs by the front door seem like an afterthought.

The diner was located at 12 N. Prospect St., and has long since been demolished, and another building built on the site.

Trolley to Diner Conversion

What becomes of old trolley cars?, Popular Science asked.
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Many old trolleys were re-purposed into roadside restaurants. A diner-on-the-cheap. Not very many survived, due to their inconveniently narrow width, their already used and abused condition after a life on the streets, and their somewhat disreputable image next to new, factory built diners, built specifically for the purpose. While the one from the article hailed from New Jersey, I’ve found quite a few conversions existed in the early days in Maryland. Generally, as soon as enough money could be scraped together, they were replaced, as was the case of the State Diner in Baltimore, a used 1930s Silk City, which replaced a re-purposed streetcar in the 1950s.
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