From the time the first handful of night lunch wagons served up their
simple fare on the streets of the North Shore in 1890, residents from
every social and economic standing have frequented these familiar
beacons of hospitality and their descendants, the diners. Over the
course of the sixty years that followed, the area's manufacturing,
transportation, and recreation centers provided the hungry clientele who
helped spur the metamorphosis of the humble lunch wagon into the sleek,
efficient, and friendly eatery known as the diner.
Diners of the North Shore is a fascinating collection of many previously
unpublished images from the golden age of the diner. Bearing names such
as Hesperus in Gloucester, Lafayette in Salem, and Suntaug in Peabody,
these eat-on-the-run oases provided their customers with not only a
square meal but also an atmosphere as welcoming as one's kitchen. From
the primitive Night Owl lunch wagon to the art deco-inspired Sterling
Streamliner, Diners of the North Shore showcases each diner's unique
character, along with the colorful personalities who ran them.