I was hoping that people sending postcards of restaurants would have mentioned the food they ate in those places. That rarely happened. What was far more likely was that they would say when they were returning from their trips. What had put the idea about mentions of food into my mind was the message on the back of one of the linen postcards from my last post. That was the card from Burdick’s Drive-In Restaurant that pictured French-fried shrimp on a plate seemingly floating in the sky over the building. As shown above, the message on the back was far from flattering. But that was not the average kind of message. When visitors did write something about a place’s food, it tended to be quite positive. In other cases, they did not mention food at all but enthused about other aspects of eating places. Reuben’s, New York City, 1941 – “Your mother ate all of her sandwich – Believe it or not – P.S. I ate two” Clifton’s Brookdale, Los Angeles, 1946 – “A very odd restaurant where we had lunch…
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