Unfortunately the meticulous and extensive genealogical records of the Sunrise Diner, spanning several centuries and even some decades, were tragically lost in a sausage grease can kicking incident. What remains below are merely a few greasy scraps that our team of forensic philologists were able to recreate. In due time we hope to display more of our illustrious past in the Diner itself.
While unclear when the Diner made it's way to the new world, below is one of the earliest photos we were able to restore as well as what experts believe to be the first review of our legendary breakfast sandwich.
Truly a time of meteoric success the 50's are when the Sunrise Diner came into it's own and became the household name we all recognize and cherish. Numerous unlicensed ads were run in prestigious pulps across the country as agencies such as Leo Burnett and Sterling Cooper outdid each other just for the chance to get the word out about the grooviest restaurant around.
They said you can't pack everything into a box truck, drive 13 hours, set up for 4 days and then run a restaurant in an arid alkaline desert for a week and we said "hold my egg carton". We got all the muffins in the PNW, a coffee machine that did time and a jukebox bursting with 50's tunes, time to rock n' roll.