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  <title type="text">Explore Baltimore Heritage</title>
  <updated>2026-04-30T02:28:04-04:00</updated>
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  <author>
    <name>Explore Baltimore Heritage</name>
    <uri>https://explore.baltimoreheritage.org</uri>
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    <title type="html"><![CDATA[The Blue Top Diner: A Lost Diner In Canton]]></title>
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<img src="https://explore.baltimoreheritage.org/files/fullsize/4c59ad50c658b51e2f12789fe455ca0f.jpg" alt="[Untitled]" /><br/><p><span style="font-weight:400;">Walking along Boston Street, people will run into a small store called “Canton Market.” Acting as both a convenient store and sandwich shop, Canton Market serves up a variety of sandwiches such as their cheese steak sub and their turkey club.</span><span style="font-weight:400;"> Canton Market is not the first locally owned casual dining spot in this location. Before Canton Market, this lot was home to the Blue Top Diner. </span>
</p><p><span style="font-weight:400;">Bill Tangires, former owner of the Blue Top Diner, started his career working for his father’s business called “Jim’s Lunch.”</span><span style="font-weight:400;"> Bill Tangires continued to work in the food industry and prepared meals for industrial plants.</span><span style="font-weight:400;"> Afterwards in the mid 1960s, Bill Tangires founded the Blue Top Diner.  The Blue Top Diner served diner classics from burgers and vegetable-beef soup, to coffee and chocolate meringue pie.</span><span style="font-weight:400;"> The Blue Top Diner was even recommended in a Baltimore Sun Article alongside the famous Double-T Diner.</span><span style="font-weight:400;"> </span>
</p><p><span style="font-weight:400;">The Blue Top Diner served a variety of people until the year it closed, including “factory workers, truck drivers, dock hands, business people” and even then Maryland senator Barbara Ann Mikulski.</span><span style="font-weight:400;"> In the late eighties, Bill Tangires sold the diner property to Alan Katz, a restaurant chain owner.</span><span style="font-weight:400;"> A Baltimore Sun article detailing the closing of the Blue Top Diner stated, “An avid investor, he [Bill Tangires] hopes to become a stock analyst with a discount brokerage house, perhaps with the First National Bank company.”</span><span style="font-weight:400;"> Although Bill Tangires left the restaurant business to pursue finance, the property of the diner still remains a part of the food business today.</span></p><p><em><strong><a href="https://explore.baltimoreheritage.org/items/show/700">For more (including 4 images) view the original article</a></strong></em></p>]]></summary>
    <published>2021-04-14T13:41:42-04:00</published>
    <updated>2026-04-17T19:53:28-04:00</updated>
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    <author>
      <name>Sydney Kempf</name>
    </author>
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