Archive for the ‘food’ Category

Cindy's Diner Wins Indiana Hospitality Award

April 30, 2008

Cindy’s Diner has been named one of the winners of a Hoosier Hospitality Award, and if you’ve ever visited with owner John Scheele and family, you’ll know it’s well-deserved! Recipients are recognized for going above and beyond their normal duties at a hotel, restaurant, attraction, or other tourism destination to provide excellent customer service. The tiny Valentine-brand diner is located on the Lincoln Highway at 830 S. Harrison Street in downtown Fort Wayne.

An awards reception will be held Monday, May 12, at 1:30 pm in the Statehouse Rotunda in Indianapolis. Cindy’s will receive the award from Lt. Governor Becky Skillman. Light refreshments will be served.

Man charged in February's Sleepy Hollow fire

April 22, 2008

The Tribune-Democrat and Tribune-Review report that Pennsylvania state police have arrested Edgar Clinton Wiltrout, 55, of Ligonier, and charged him with arson in a February 23 fire that destroyed The Hollow Tavern along the Lincoln Highway in Unity Township, Westmoreland County. He also was charged with multiple felony counts of burglary, causing or risking a catastrophe, criminal mischief, and reckless endangerment. Damage was estimated at approximately $450,000 with no injuries reported. Wiltrout is in Westmoreland County Prison in lieu of $1 million bail.


Above: A vintage Sleepy Hollow matchbook, courtesy Cyrus Hosmer.

Sleepy Hollow was a popular stop since being built 1939-1940, but suffered after the westbound lanes of Lincoln Highway/US 30 were moved across Loyalhanna Creek.

Postcard: "Modern Cabins and Chicken Dinners"

April 12, 2008

The Lincoln Highway Heritage Corridor headquartered in Ligonier, Pennsylvania, is cataloging its holdings, and recently came upon this postcard that they could not identify as to location or even if it was in PA.

I mention it in my Lincoln Highway: PA Traveler’s Guide but show a different view (a postcard from Russell Rein, in the book’s first edition, page 297). The cabin camp was 30 miles west of Pittsburgh near Clinton, on the rerouted Lincoln Highway that runs through Chester, West Virginia. A building similar to the one at left survives on the north side, and a cabin is in an adjacent residential back yard.

IL Lincoln Highway Visitor Guide available

April 10, 2008

Hot off the presses is the Illinois Lincoln Highway Coalition 2008 Visitor Guide, a 9” x 4” booklet with 84 pages and a fold out map on the back cover. The free guides will be available at many Tourist Information Centers in Illinois plus select Convention & Visitor Bureaus, or request one at no charge by calling toll-free (866) 455-4249. Click on the images below to see them larger.

For more info, contact:
Illinois Lincoln Highway Coalition
200 S. State St., Belvidere, IL 61008
http://www.drivelincolnhighway.com

Fun awaits on annual CA Lincoln Highway tours

April 9, 2008

California’s Lincoln Highway Association chapter offers four one-day tours every year that completely cover the four legs of the LH across the state. The Saturday “van tours” – named because they are done with a caravan of vehicles, each with its oiwn tourguide – were started in 2004, and even though the tours repeat annually, new discoveries are added each year. Paul Gilger, director of the LHA’s mapping program, initiated the tours and serves as lead organizer. He says they’ve had tremendous help from California chapter members as drivers and guides, including Norm Root, Bob Dieterich, Clark Wood, Gary Kinst, Michael Kaelin, Miriam Hull, and Lloyd Johnson. Photos (except the one by me immediately below) are courtesy Gary Kinst; tour maps from the chapter website were prepared by Jimmy Lin. All are ©.

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Above, Looking to US 50 along the overgrown road from the site of Phillips Station, a stage station, resort, post office (Vade), and hotel that was destroyed by heavy snow in 1952. The c. 1960 sign is for the Pow Wow. Look for it on Tour #2 through El Dorado County. Photo © by Brian Butko

1) APRIL 26
1913-27 Central Valley Route
to San Francisco via San Joaquin Valley and Altamont Pass (roughly paralleling I-580, I-205, and Route 99).

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Above: Summit Garage, Altamont Pass.

2) JUNE 28
Sierra Nevada Southern Route
to Lake Tahoe via Echo Summit and the Pioneer Trail (US 50 corridor).

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Above: Sportsman’s Hall near Pollock Pines.

3) AUGUST 30
Sierra Nevada Northern Route
to Verdi, Nevada, via Donner Pass and Dog Valley (paralleling I-80).

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Above: Rainbow Bridge at Donner Summit as seen through LH “subway.”

4) OCTOBER 25
1927-28 Central Valley Route
to San Francisco via Sacramento Valley and across the Carquinez Strait (paralleling I-80).

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Above: Lunch stop at Carquinez Bridges.

Each tour starts and ends at the Holiday Inn “Sacramento I-80 Northeast,” 5321 Date Avenue, I-80 Madison Avenue exit (site of the LHA’s 2002 conference). The hotel has a secure parking lot, with many restaurants and gas stations nearby. Departure 9 am sharp, estimated return 6 pm. Cost is $40 per person per tour and includes a driver and tour guide, and refreshments. Each tour stops for lunch but the cost is not included. Click here for complete information on the CA LHA site.

Indiana LHA meeting to honor Art Schweitzer

April 8, 2008

Here are details on the Indiana Lincoln Highway Association Spring Meeting, Luncheon, and Silent Auction set for Saturday, May 10, 2008 at 11:00 a.m. CDST. Location will be Teibel’s Restaurant, US 30 at US 41, Schererville, Indiana. It is being held in conjunction with Illinois LHA. Among the highlights will be honoring long-time LH researcher and devotee Art Schweitzer, who tirelessly researched the nearby Ideal Section. Also, Cynthia Ogorek will be signing her new book, and guest speaker Trish Eccles will speak about the Indiana National Road Byway Application Process. Print and complete the form below to register for the meeting and meal.

IN LHA meeting notice for May 2008

NYC's vintage Cheyenne Diner closing

April 1, 2008

Yet another diner in New York City is closing, leaving few of the classic stainless steel diners that were once so common in Manhattan. An article in the New York Daily News states that the Cheyenee Diner, 33rd Street at 9th Avenue near Penn Station, is on land leased from a nearby diner owner who has decided building apartments is better than leasing to a competitor. Though 9 blocks south of the original Lincoln Highway / 42nd Street, the Cheyenne was the last old-time, factory-built diner near the cross-country route. Its last day is this Sunday. UPDATE: Now closed, this article says it’s for sale for $7,900.

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Spiros Kasimis, 44, is only the third owner, having had it 18 years. He says the diner was doing well and that people still prefer burgers and bacon over healthy fare, but couldn’t compete with spiraling real estate values:

“The day of one-story structures in Manhattan is over,” he said, adding that he’s looking for a new location in the Hell’s Kitchen-Chelsea area.

Originally called the Market Diner, the 1946 Paramount-brand eatery features neon on the outside and Native American artifacts on interior walls. Another article from am New York debates if the structure can be moved. It’s popular with locals who lament the increasing replacement of community gatherings spots with more commercial uses.

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The above photos are courtesy Flickr blog feature. Click on each image for the original post. Map (blue line is original LH, red dot is diner) from the LHA Driving Maps, available from the Lincoln Highway Trading Post.

More images from Stone's in Marshalltown IA

March 27, 2008

A couple more great images from Randy Stone: the dining room with a bust of Abraham Lincoln, and the storefront in 1909. His family owned the restaurant along the Lincoln Highway in Marshalltown, Iowa, for more than a century, but they closed due to changing economics. Read my earlier blog posts here, here, and here.

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Tunnel Diner in Jersey City slated for demolition

March 26, 2008

The Lincoln Highway Heritage Corridor folks received word that the Tunnel Diner in Jersey City, New Jersey, is slated for demolition. This classic factory-built diner (1950s interior, 1960s redo outside) at 184 14th Street is along the later Lincoln Highway, once it was rerouted between New York City and New Jersey due to the opening of the Holland Tunnel in November 1927. It had closed in 2007. The cover of the album Tunnel Diner (by Steve Mackay and the Radon Ensemble on Qbico Records) shows one of the diner’s most memorable features, a vertical neon sign. The diner reportedly appeared in the 1996 film City Hall about the accidental shooting of a boy in New York City, with a cast headed by Al Pacino, John Cusack, Bridget Fonda, and Danny Aiello.

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Anyone know more about the closing and scheduled demolition?

Stone's and today's business landscape

March 22, 2008

Randy Stone followed up the post about his family’s business — Stone’s Restaurant in Marshalltown, Iowa — with some great insights about the challenges in recent years. He also shared wonderful photos that we’ll spread out over a few posts.

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“The restaurant had fallen on hard times so my part of the family quit our jobs in Illinois and returned to Marshalltown in 2002 to try to salvage the business. We got great support from news media, loyal patrons and many others but could not make ends meet. The last thing we wanted to do was compromise quality or change the nature of the business from what it had been for 100+ years. We put in a new kitchen, upgraded the menu, and generally tried to make it a place grandma would have been proud of. Unfortunately, I think fast food and chain operations have flourished while independant businesses have suffered. At least that seems to be the nature of things in this part of the woods. Great times while they lasted though.

“In the last few weeks we were open, I met a gentleman from Pakistan who had heard about the lemon chiffon pie from friends over there and, while visiting a company in Marshalltown, stopped by to try it. I was also looking through some old guest registers recently and found one from the 40’s that actress Zasu Pitts had signed. She used to appear in W.C. Fields movies. We also have a card that the old cowboy star, Tom Mix had signed. Both Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt gave speeches off the back of trains at the railroad depot that used to be across the street from the restaurant.”

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Above: Randy’s grandparents.