 |
For Here or To Go?
Spartanburg's Drive-ins, Drive-Thrus, and Diners
By Brandy Lindsey and Baker Maultsby
Photos by Carroll Foster and Jeffrey Young
ISBN: 978-1-891885-69-3
168 pages, 8x8
200 images
Publication Date: November 2009
$19.95
|
A collection of deeply personal stories and nostalgic
images, these pages represent a treasured piece of Spartanburg's past that has
survived well into its present. So whether you're hungry for local history, or simply craving a burger and fries,
For Here or To Go offers something
you can really sink your teeth into.
Drive-in restaurants b egan
appearing on the outskirts of Spartanburg in the mid-1930s, surrounded by big
parking lots to accommodate customers willing to travel a bit in their cars.
Out "Charlotte Highway"-now known as East Main Street-there was the Fernwood
Drive-In, the Porky Pig, and the Cherry Hill Grill. By the mid-1940s, West Main
Street became the original home to three drive-ins that would thrive for
decades: the Beacon, the Steeple, and the Varsity. Across town, in 1947, a
young man named Wade Lindsey served his first hotdog at a lunch counter on
South Pine Street. And in 1964 the Sugar-N-Space ushered in a new kind of
drive-in architecture with its Googie-style space-age awning for diners to park
under and eat in their cars.
In
Spartanburg and throughout the country, drive-ins such as these became
representative of the era. Movies and music glamorized them, and youngsters
enjoyed the freedom and anonymity of hanging out in a parking lot after dark. Carhops
delivered greasy goodies directly to Dad's freshly washed and waxed Chevy. And
in the evening, teenagers on dates and in groups parked outside under the neon
lights, singing along with tunes from the early days of rock and roll, and
enjoying a burger all the way and an ice cold Coke.
Although
many Spartanburg diners and drive-ins didn't survive into the new century, some
continue to thrive. Others-like Boots and Sonny's, Papa's, Dolline's and
Ricky's-represent the new generation. Sample a little bit of everything in this
colorful tribute to the Hub City's culinary treasures. (Below: DeLuxe Diner)
.
|