Pomeroy's Diner was an eatery in Rosenfeld, Manitoba. It was named after its proprietors, Mort Pomeroy and his father. Mort had disliked the U.S. occupation of Canada but didn't resist it since they had won the Great War. However, when the occupation forces were supplemented by troops from the Republic of Quebec, he resented their arrogant ways when they ate at the Diner. He felt they had no right since they hadn't won the war but were just U.S. puppets.[1]
This changed further when his wife Mary was shot for her terrorist acts. When the United States Army suppressed the Canadian resistance movement in Rosenfeld in 1943, Pomeroy's Diner became a rebel strongpoint. The US Army was forced to destroy the diner and Pomeroy's gang; only Mort's young son Alec survived.
References[]
- ↑ Return Engagement, pgs. 197-199, hc.