Still With Us – Jimmy’s Diner, Auburn, Maine

You’ve probably all seen the postcards of Jimmy’s No. 1 Diner, sitting at a right angle to a white, later brick gas station. I can find newspaper records of Jimmy’s going back to at least 1934, so it’s an old one. I’m not sure whether it’s factory built or an on-site construction with sensitivity to what was coming out of the factories at the time (i.e. Nick’s Good Food Diner in Front Royal, VA) . The differences in the shape and type of windows in the first post card, from tall, narrow ones on the left (diner) and the wider ones on the left (addition) make me think that it could have been an off-site construction. It was remodeled several times, encased in brick, covered with a roof, windows changed, and entirely obscured. The gas station was enlarged, bricked over, and sprouted an extra story. I’ll be back up in Auburn in a couple weeks, so hopefully I can see if there’s anything recognizable through the windows.
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There was a second Jimmy’s Diner at 188 Court St. Auburn, ME as of 1938. James LaRou opened Jimmy’s gas station in 1928 and later branched out to at least one other diner and five other gas stations.

Five Point Diner- Tamaqua, PA

This is an unusual 1940 O’Mahony. It looks like the diner was a fairly standard pre-war monitor roof Monarch model. The roofline looks like it was a square-cornered model, but a later-production one, after they dropped the trapezoidal transoms. With the remodeling and the imprecise nature of the linen postcard, though hard to be 100% certain of that. The postcard is from c.1955, so it’s entirely possible that the stainless over the windows was a later 40s or early 1950s update (along with other aspects of the facade), covering those windows for a more streamlined look.
What makes it really unusual is its siting and the treatment of the entry. It is sited as though it were a flatiron building, on a long, narrow finger of land projecting into a five-way intersection (hence the Five Point name), with an extended end vestibule, projecting three windows further from the beginning of the diner proper. The end-vestibule looks to have a combination of curved glass and glass bricks for the corners, but without a proper photo, it’s difficult to say for sure.

The diner has suffered at the hands of remodeling and usage change. The counter and fixtures are gone, but the original ceiling is still visible. The exterior has been bricked over and a peaked roof has been dropped overtop the diner, but the fantastic stainless front door belies the building’s diner pedigree.
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Piccadilly Diner – Winchester, VA

The Piccadilly Grill of Winchester, VA is currently a small storefront lunch counter- stools only, white facade- very much like the Snow White Grill, just down the block. The same block used to be home to the Piccadilly Diner, presumably the forerunner to the Grill. The Piccadilly Diner was a 1930s Jerry O’Mahony Monarch diner.
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Front Royal Diner

This Mountain View diner, formerly the Mount Vista diner, among other names, is now Virginia Auto Group Used Cars. It is located at 1718 N. Shenandoah Ave., Front Royal, VA. The small town of Front Royal used to be rich with diners, and was formerly home to the Eat Well diner, a brightly painted homebuilt, this one, and the Fox Diner, a ’50s Donut Dinette- a small metal diner- concept chain that used to have locations through the Southern states. There was also the Royal Dairy, a fantastic old lunch counter / restaurant. The Eat Well is long gone, the Fox was demolished several years ago, and the Royal Dairy was gutted.

The former Mount Vista Diner (by the 1990s known as Sandy’s Diner) is 1957 Mountain View #489. It opened in Crownsville, Maryland and was moved to Front Royal c. 1963.

The first picture was taken in the early 1990s, the second was taken yesterday.
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The Mighty Midget Kitchen

The Mighty Midget in 1980. It was built by a Glendale, California based firm post-war from a section of bomber fuselage. Apparently they built seven of them, and this is the only one to have survived.

From the 1940s through its closing, it cooked standard grill fare- burgers and hot dogs. It did a stint post-move and post-restoration as a Barbecue place, and now is part of a German Doner restaurant.
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And 30 years later. It closed in 1994 and was moved to the current site in 1996. The stone gas station which is used to sit next to is now a pie shop.
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Silver Diner – Laurel, MD

This was the second diner in the Silver Diner empire, and the first of many to be built on site. It was put up in 1990. The old Rockville location, now sitting vacant, was their only “true” factory built location.
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Just a little bit down the road is a great piece of neon, which, by the way, still works. Giant Food Grocery Store. It’s pretty great for a chain of this size to still keep around a little bit of their history.
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Cesar’s Diner – Arlington, VA

I recently posted a link to an old post about this place on my facebook page, which were taken back in 2007. Back four years ago, it was known as the Deluxe Diner. The “Diner” part of the sign looks like it’s the same as it was in ’07, but the first name has been swapped out in a matching typeface.

It’s an on-site construction, but I like its lines. It plays the regular diner games, but with some interesting twists, like the two story end-vestibule , slatted windows and canted roofline.

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Toddle House- Bethesda Maryland

While on the topic of the Toddle House chain, mentioned in the post about Peter’s Carry Out, let’s take a look at the other Bethesda location, which came in in the early 1990s. They took over the Wisconsin Avenue Little Tavern location after that chain went out of business. They also took over the College Park Little Tavern, around the same time. The architecture and layout of the Little Tavern shops was perfect for a Toddle House takeover- similar Tudor cottage style, similar counter/backbar setup. As a Toddle House, this location didn’t last very long. It has been a Golden House Chinese restaurant for over ten years. At the time these pictures were taken, Golden House had already taken over one of the Silver Spring Little Tavern locations.

The Little Tavern neon was removed, and the tubes re-done to read Toddle House, in a matching color scheme. This was one of the better repurposings of a former Little Tavern.
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Neon underlighting. Stainless gutters.
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The universal sign of the coffee cup.
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The take out vestibule was an old add-on to the existing porcelain enamel structure. Since Golden House took possession of the building, the back wall of the structure has been removed (along with the interior of the shop), so now this take out glass box forms the exterior wall.
What this location looks like today, as the Golden House.
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The other Golden House, one of (if not) the last purpose-built building by Little Tavern, put up in the 1970s. The overall lines are the same, but the detailing is much simpler, with less specialized parts than the earlier taverns. This location operated 15 years or so as the Golden House before being demolished in 2008.
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The College Park Little Tavern’s awning still bears the ghost of the Toddle House name.
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