By Benjamin Witte
Along an old country road
Tucked away in the green hills of Vermont is a small, quaint town called Hartland, population 3,223. There’s not much to Hartland – a road leading into town, another leading out. Where they intersect is Damon Hall, a 1915 brick construction that now houses the town offices. From Damon Hall, a country road, Route 12, snakes its way through a typical rural New England landscape; past a collection of cottages, farmhouses, a couple of demolition yards. Eventually the old highway crosses with another road, and there, next to a small antique shop, is an eye-catching, odd little structure with a mysterious past and an even more uncertain future.
Propped up on blocks, the rectangular unit, measuring approximately 15 feet by 30 feet, looks something like a funny little house. It’s yellow, with green trim. Around one corner hangs a drooping strand of Christmas lights. The roof of the structure is slightly rounded and, showing clearly on the front, left-hand side is a sign that reads “Famous for Food.” The odd-looking structure, it turns out, is a diner – quite an old one in fact. On its right-hand face is another sign, this one made of paper and attached by a few well-weathered strips of duct tape. The second sign offers a brief though somewhat hazy picture of the diner’s six-decade history.
“This is the 1939 Worchester Lunch Car Company diner #747. Formerly Mindy’s Diner of Somerville, MA. Moved to Auburn, MA. Moved to Bolton, MA. Moved to Hartland, VT,” the sign reads.
A murky history
That, at least, is the history of the 67-year-old diner as understood by its current owner, a Hartland resident named Si Lupton, who bought the old lunch car earlier this year from a campground in Bolton.
Last September, Bolton’s Crystal Springs Campground closed down after 25 years in operation. By no means a major event, the closure nevertheless attracted a brief mention in the Boston Globe, which in an article that ran Sept. 29 also made passing reference to the campground owner’s “office-home, a 1939 diner, formerly Mindy’s of Somerville and Auburn, and now up for sale.” Several months later, after failing to find a buyer for the diner, its then-owner decided to demolish the former Somerville eatery. That’s when Lupton stepped in. He bought the old structure, then had it transported to Vermont, where it’s currently for sale. “I’m trying to find a good home for it,” Lupton recently told the Somerville News. “We’re trying to find a good home to relocate the diner. It’s easy to move. The diner’s moved five times already.”
But beyond Lupton’s thumbnail sketch of the diner’s past, details about its history – how and when Mindy’s made those various moves – are decidedly murky, even among people who, like Lupton, consider themselves diner experts.
One of those experts is Larry Cultrera, a Medford native who over the past 25 years has photographed over 800 diners. Among his collection of photographs is one he took (at the campground) of Mindy’s, snapped on July 24, 1982. In the photograph, the diner appears much as it does now – the same green and yellow color scheme, the same trademark “Famous for Food” sign adorning its front. “It was more like a snack bar, because the interior was missing booths. Also some of the stools were missing,” said Cultrera. The diner, he was told, had at that point been at the Crystal Springs Campground for five years – since 1977.
Two years earlier Richard Gutman of West Roxbury – arguably the area’s foremost expert on diners – also visited Mindy’s. It was at that time sitting in a field out near Worchester, said Gutman, author of the book “American Diner, Then and Now.” But as for how it arrived there, the diner aficionado is basically in the dark. In fact, neither he nor Cultrera have a precise idea about the diner’s pre-1975 background. “That diner,” said Gutman, “is a real mystery.”
What is clear is that the diner was indeed built in 1939. Before its closure in 1961, the now defunct Worcester Lunch Car Company built approximately 650 diners. The company numbered each of its diners, starting, oddly enough, with the number 200. Mindy’s was # 747, meaning it was really the 547th diner manufactured by the company. Both Cultrera and Gutman have copies of the Worchester Lunch Car Company’s original diner designs, including one for # 747. On that document, in the top right-hand corner, is the handwritten word “Somerville,” leading both diner experts to believe that Somerville was in fact the diner’s first home. Cultrera and Gutman also agree that the diner’s original name was Porter’s.
Documents on file at the Middlesex County Registry of Deeds, however, suggest a slightly different story. In 1939, according to the documents, a Porter’s Diner did open up, though in Cambridge, not Somerville. From 1939 to 1947 the diner was owned by a corporation of the same name – Porter’s Diner Inc., which operated the eatery on a double lot (285 and 286 Broadway). In 1947 the corporation sold the property to another group called the Kendall Square Diner, Inc. One of the shareholders, a man named John G. Meoli, assumed sole control of the corporation in 1952. Six years later, the property changed hands yet again, sold to the Chamallas Brothers, Inc.
But what the Middlesex Country records don’t indicate is whether or not the diner was eventually moved to Somerville. Cultrera, for one, is convinced that Mindy’s, as the diner was apparently renamed at some point, was in Somerville, at least during the mid 1960s. And, Cultrera believes, the diner was located on Mystic Avenue, close to what is now a Home Depot. “I would assume,” he said,” that it disappeared in the late 60s, when they were building the stretch of I-93 through Somerville.”
Unfortunately, confirming Cultrera’s assertion has proven easier said than done. The Middlesex Country Registry of Deeds has no records for a Mindy’s Diner. Nor is there any reference to a diner of that name in the Somerville City Hall archives. In the mid 1960s, the City did issue food licenses to several Mystic Avenue restaurants, but none that bore the name Mindy’s. Maybe while in Somerville the diner wasn’t actually called Mindy’s. It’s also possible that the Mystic Avenue diner Cultrera recalls from his childhood was not the same diner that now sits on blocks in Hartland, VT. As Richard Gutman said, that diner really is a mystery.
An uncertain future
While it’s proven quite difficult to gain a clear picture of Mindy’s past, trying to predict its future is more elusive still. There’s something a bit forlorn about the old diner in its current state. Certainly, after such a varied past, the old lunch car deserves a good home. But who, if anyone, will purchase it?
A fascinating relic of yesteryear, the 67-year-old structure retains elements of what must have once been an altogether charming place to dine. Despite it’s age, the diner’s vibrant red interior still gleams with an improbable shine. Original stained glass still adorns the tops of the diner’s small windows. Inside there are brass light fixtures, a few old ceiling fans and chrome highlighted bar stools, faded a bit, but all in place. Gone, though, are the customers, at least for now. A large hole in the side of the structure is now covered in ragged-edged plywood. No doubt a few critters have moved in as temporary summer occupants.
Si Lupton won’t sell the diner to someone who’s planning on tearing it apart. And, he said, “I’m sure we’ll find a good home for it.” In the meantime, though, time and weather continue to take its toll on old Mindy’s. “My landlord would love to have it out of there,” Lupton admitted. “He’s not too happy with the way it looks. We’re working with a couple different groups, families who are interested in the diner.”
Lupton’s asking price is $24,000. Interested parties can reach him at (802) 457-6149. The Somerville News is also hoping that anyone who might have more detailed information about the diner’s past – particularly as it relates to Somerville – will call us at (617) 666-4010. Information can also be sent to somervillenews@aol.com.
I enjoyed this article. For anyone interested, the Beverly Historical Society's Walker Transportation Collection has a sizeable collection of diner photos and ephemera as part of its transportation-oriented collections.
The Walker group meets on Wednesday evenings from 7-10PM. They are located at the Cabot House, 117 Cabot Street in Beverly. Additionally, there are a number of other transportation-related photos from all over New England including Somerville.
73
JAR
Posted by: JARfromWard3 | July 09, 2006 at 10:57 PM
it's Worcester. Not "Worchester".
Posted by: Ron Newman | July 10, 2006 at 07:20 AM
Ron and JN are like two peas in a Pod. I store my yatch in Worchester.
Posted by: Ron and JN | July 10, 2006 at 08:59 AM
There's a Worchester, Vermont.
Posted by: Ben | July 10, 2006 at 06:10 PM
Gee Ron he's right there is a Worchester Vermont guess your not always right are you?
Porter was the orginal name of the diner on Washington Street across from the Holiday Inn, its still there. Up to the early 1960's it was called "Porter's Diner" a very popular truck stop, not to mention in and area at the time of Hood's, United Farmers and Whitings Milk, all three milk companies plus Tower Root Beer was right across the street.
Posted by: Again Ben | July 10, 2006 at 09:13 PM
I am not positive but the diner at McGrath was it the Star Diner ? I sort of remember Somerville Lumber in a small building next door and there was a wild bar there as well. This diner could have been the one in Davis Square where the t-station is now, does anyone remember?
Posted by: Jim Smith | July 10, 2006 at 09:18 PM
There is no "Worchester" in Vermont, either. That state also has a Worcester.
In any event, when the subject is diners, the only Worcester that counts is the one in Massachusetts.
Posted by: Ron Newman | July 10, 2006 at 10:24 PM
Is that the original beach chair in front of the dinner with the barrel for a headrest the same one Sister Dr. Mrs. McCarthy used to sit in on a daily basis sipping her XXX Holy Water?
Posted by: Snowflake is just asking about the relic and her relic! | July 11, 2006 at 09:39 AM
If you take a close look at the pole in the background behind the dinner in the photo. You will see the silhouette of Ron Butters swinging from the pole at his first attempt and founder of the then new sport of "bungie jumping"!
Posted by: Zoom in and see! | July 11, 2006 at 09:45 AM
How would like to get out of paying fines? How would like to have the freedom to store as much garbage as you can on your own property without anyone telling you otherwise? Or how about the ability to hose off dumpster scum and wash it into the street and watershed drainage system? And have the freedom to create terrible smells, Or perhaps you would like to grow an infestation of RATS and mice in the middle of a residential zoned neighborhood. Or have a bunch of noise and people who make noise and break beer bottles on neighborhood streets come over to your place every night for a loud head banging party?
Well I have great news for all of you who would like to do this and stay out of trouble at the same time. All that is required is a Somerville business permit. It is virtually a license to treat your neighbors like dirt! The great thing about Somerville is that you can even get a permit that is normally not allowed except in a business or commercial zone even when your business is located in the middle of a residential zone and surrounded by homes. Think of the freedom. You don't even have to respect the community. Don't you just love this beautiful city? It is not hard to get the permit either. IF parking spaces are required you can easily get a waiver or move your dumpster and spray paint a while line around it. Then simply put your dumpster back, you don’t actually have to allow people to park there. There are lots of other tricks like this. If you like to learn more about them and other shady ways to get your Somerville permit so that you can treat your neighbors like dirt too just ask the rest of the Somerville business community.
Posted by: The easiest way to get out of paying fines | July 11, 2006 at 11:37 AM
Yes that person is right. It easier to get a business permit for that sort of stuff than it is for someone who buys a house without a driveway to get permission to get a curb cut so that they can park at their own home.
what gives?
Posted by: right on | July 11, 2006 at 11:42 AM
Google hits:
"worcester lunch car" = about 18,700
"worchester lunch car" = 3
Advantage Newman.
Posted by: Brittain33 | July 11, 2006 at 12:36 PM
Vermont has a "Manchester", a "Colchester", a "Rochester" and a plain-old "Chester". Nowehere, however, is there a "Worchester" shown, unless it is some little known burg or subdivision or neighborhood (like Podunkville near Worcester, MA).
Newman's da man!!!
Posted by: Can't get theyah from heeyah... | July 11, 2006 at 01:07 PM
The Somerville News should buy the lunch car and turn it into its new office. Then you'd really have one up on the Farm Team!
Posted by: Gabe W. McNeil | July 11, 2006 at 01:09 PM
Snowflake,
What an observant human you are!!!!!!!!
It IS the very same chair.
Good for you Snow. Maybe you can offer your investigative services to the Somerville Police. I heard they are in dire need of someone with keen observational powers.(or at a minimum, someone who can see what is right in front of their nose!)
Thanks for the mention,
Dr. Mrs. McCarthy
Posted by: Dr. Mrs. McCarthy | July 11, 2006 at 02:15 PM