Those days are long gone. It's sad to see how over the years this destination has gone from a favorite -- to scrap metal.

Years ago, the restaurant was originally known as the "Silver Dollar Diner" in Little Ferry, New Jersey. it was built in 1946 by the Paramount Dining Car Company. and first opened in the 1940s.

The diner was used as the setting for many TV commercials over the years. Companies like Sanka coffee, Pepsi, Ethan Allen Furniture, and Sony used the New Jersey diner location for their advertisements. The diner was made most famous by the Bounty paper towel commercials that were filmed inside the diner during the 1970s. In the ads, clumsy patrons would knock over beverages, and Rosie the Waitress (played by Nancy Walker), would clean up the mess using Bounty paper towels -- the "quicker picker-upper".

Here is one of those Bounty commercials:

The diner's owner, Ralph Corrado Jr., sold the land that the diner sat on to an auto glass store that was located right next door. The new owners did not want the diner. The "most famous diner in America" was offered to the Smithsonian Institution, but they rejected Corrado's offer.

Michigan artist Jerry Berta had been producing ceramic replicas of classic diners. The original Rosie's was one of his inspirations. When he found out that the New Jersey diner was for sale, he purchased the diner and moved it to it's 14 Mile Road location in Rockford, Michigan. Berta paid $10,000 for the 24-by-60-foot building. Work crews sawed the diner in half the week after it closed in 1990 in New Jersey. The diner was then loaded on flatbed trucks for the move to Michigan. The restaurant opened at its Rockford location on July 5, 1991.

Rosie's Diner was featured in the 12th episode of the first Season of "Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives", with host Guy Fieri, on July 30th, 2007.

Sadly, Rosie's Diner closed on October 2nd, 2011. The property was sold through an online auction for a winning bid of $125,000. The new owners haven't really done much with the property. For awhile the car dealership next to it would use it for special sales.

At one point a Montcalm County photographer, Danna Johnson, wanted to restore the diner, but that never materialized.

I drive past Rosie's just about every day. The windows have been busted out since last fall and the building is just falling apart. My guess is that some time in the near future it will be classified at "scrap" and hauled away to be crushed into a big rectangular block of metal.

It's so sad to see this diner fade away after having such an interesting history behind it.

There is a Rosie's Diner Facebook page. Many have posted pictures of the diner from over the years. You can see what the diner looked like at it's best and also recent pictures on its deteriorating state. Years ago, many people would have pictures of their classic cars taken in front of Rosie's Diner.

I miss you Rosie's Diner! Anyone want to buy this place and bring it back to life?!

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