Paramount Dining Car Company (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Paramount Dining Car Company" in English language version.

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ct.gov

portal.ct.gov

  • Registration Form" Aetna Diner, National Register of Historic Places. Accessed January 29, 2024. "The Aetna Diner is a prefabricated, stainless-steel diner located on its original site at the corner of Farmington Avenue and Laurel Street in the Asylum Hill neighborhood of Hartford, Connecticut. Paramount Dining Cars, Inc. manufactured this custom diner in their Haledon, New Jersey factory in 1947. Paramount utilized their patented prefabrication technique to manufacture the diner in three longitudinal sections known as cells, which were individually transported to Hartford in 1948."

libguides.com

njcu.libguides.com

  • The White Mana Diner, New Jersey City University Jersey City Past and Present. Accessed January 29, 2024. "The futuristic Art Deco-style White Mana Diner was made by Paramount Diners of Oakland, NJ, as was the White Manna Diner in Hackensack. Its founder Arthur E. Sieber began Paramount in Haledon, NJ, during the Depression.... On March 24, 1997, the Jersey City Historic Preservation Committee declared the diner a local landmark. The decision helps secure the preservation of the White Mana Diner and its signage from future developers and demolition."

njmonthly.com

northjersey.com

  • Burrow, Megan. "Rosie's Diner of Little Ferry won fame in '70s TV ads. How did it become a Michigan eyesore?", The Record, July 12, 2022. Accessed January 29, 2024. "Rosie’s Diner, once a gleaming, chrome-plated Little Ferry landmark made famous in paper towel commercials, now sits closed and decaying along a Michigan roadside. The diner, built in the 1940s by Paramount Diner Co. of Oakland, was a favorite stop among truckers and locals looking for a cup of coffee, a plate of goulash or a late-night cheeseburger. But it gained national fame when Procter & Gamble Co. chose it as the setting for its long-running Bounty commercials.... When Ralph 'Tex' Corrado opened Rosie's as the Silver Dollar Diner at the Route 46 Little Ferry traffic circle in 1945, it was one of many such eateries dotting the North Jersey landscape."

nytimes.com

sca-roadside.org

  • Patrick, Kevin. North Jersey Diner Tour, Society for Commercial Archeology, September 26-27, 2015. Accessed January 29, 2024. "The White Manna in Hackensack, and the White Mana in Jersey City are the most famous little, white hamburger diners in the state.... They were both built by Paramount, which designed the circular Jersey City White Mana as a prototype displayed at the 1939-40 New York World's Fair..... The square Hackensack White Manna was the hamburger unit Paramount actually built, and sold after World War II to a new generation of grill men who brought fame to the little hamburgers un-officially but widely known as sliders."

storage.googleapis.com

patentimages.storage.googleapis.com