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Diners are magical places, spirit realms really; houses made with walls full of souls, stories, and legends. These magical luncheonettes, breakfast nooks, and late-night watering holes have been around forever for a reason: They bring us together.

Feeling nostalgic for diners of the past? Jump into the time machine and take a look at these old photos of diners, all from the 1970s.

Woolworth’s Lunch Counter

u/HWKD65 via Reddit.com

F.W. Woolworth’s, one of the original five-and-dime stores, was just as well-known for its lunch counter as it was for its retail empire.

Keep It Coming

u/AxlCobainVedder via Reddit.com

The joy of a fresh cup of Joe poured from a human, smiling face feels like a thing of the past. Ordering off a screen will never feel like this.

The woman in the photo is said to be Peggy Wright working at Trotter’s Diner in Laguna Beach, California, in 1974, and she’s sporting one of our favorite retro diner waitress uniforms.

Diner Date

circa 1975: A teenage couple smiles as they sit in a booth at a diner, having ice cream and soda floats. There is a brick wall behind them.
Harold M. Lambert/Lambert/Getty Images

What’s a diner without a charming first date over milkshakes?

Kresge’s

u/JeffSHauser via Reddit.com

Much like Woolworth’s, Kresge’s, which would later become KMart, was designed to be a major shopping experience, and included a diner built right into it. 15 cents for a chicken salad sandwich is a steal.

Belk’s

Lunch counter at the downtown Charlotte (NC) Belk’s - early 1970’s photo.
u/AxlCobainVedder via Reddit.com

Keep the department-store-diner hybrids coming. This photo of Belk’s in Charlotte also has one of those handy cigarette vending machines in the corner. Maybe Starbucks inside of Target is the modern lunch counter in a five-and-dime?

New York Prices

A short-order cook in a coffee shop on the Upper West Side (NYC) in the late 1970s. Photo by Stephen Harmon
u/AxlCobainVedder via Reddit.com

For the 70s, this New York diner had some pretty steep prices. $3.50 for a burger? That’s not too different from the stuff we’ve got going on today. New York, am I right?

Clean and Spacious

My dad (far left holding the cup) finishing up his 2 burgers, fries, and a large drink that he got for a $1.00 in a local diner. ~ 1970
u/Im_Not_Mr_Fantastic via Reddit.com

It’s wild to see a time when diner floors were spotless and people weren’t crammed into tiny booths. Those cups look eerily like some famous fast-food cups we have today.

Battle Scars

u/GrouchyPossibility7 via Reddit.com

Nobody said running a restaurant was easy. This counter looks beaten down from a lifetime of fighting plates and elbows.

Part of a Balanced Breakfast

A man seated at a table in a diner exhales smoke while sunlight streams through a window. New York City, 1974. Photo by Harold Feinstein
u/AxlCobainVedder via Reddit.com

Cigarettes and coffee, as they say, is the breakfast of champions. Bonus nutrition points if somebody takes a photo of you this awesome.

Get Cozy

1970s Connecticut Diner
u/lamprey187 via Reddit.com

No actual building? No problem. Open your diner in a train car.

Aruba, Jamaica, Lums Restaurant

Lums Restaurant - Nassau, Bahamas 1970s
r/OldSchoolCool via Reddit.com

Lums, a diner chain from Florida, made its way to Nassau in the 70s. Nice to see some diners on island time.

Turkish Diners

A diner in Nevsehir/Turkey, 1970s
u/leblebimix via Reddit.com

Though the look and vibe of an American diner is completely different, the concept of a diner existed all over the world in the 70s. Imagine looking as cool with a mustache as this guy. I cannot.

Tokyo Drifting

Tokyo Diner in the late 1970s
u/ReKang916 via Reddit.com

Here’s a diner in Tokyo in the 70s, even though it has very much the vibe of an American diner in the 50s. Nice milkshakes, boys.

DJ Jukebox

in the 70s these were at many diners & restaurants
u/cartooncritic69 via Reddit.com

Remember when you could control the tunes? Those were the days. Great for pranking.

Meet the Writer

Wilder Shaw is a staff writer at Cheapism who has written for publications like The Washington Post