(2014 by Bruce)
Over 60 Older Hamburger Joints in and near Warrensburg
108 West Pine
Alex’s Steak House
Anderson’s Café
Ball’s Dinette
Breeze Inn
Buente Town Hamburger Shop
Burger Bar
Burger King
Campus Inn
City Coffee Shop
Coleman Confectionary
Corner Café, Holden at Culton
Dep’s
Dog N’Suds, Bus 50 east
Estes Hotel, South Holden
Ewing Restaurant, South Warren
Flemings
Franx Cafe
Fryears
Granary, West pine
G & S
Hardees, 50 at 13
Hart’s Hamburgers, East Pine
Heroes
Hunt’s Dairy Bar
Joe’s Drive In
Ku Ku
Lamb’s Restaurant(s) both
Library
Lil Duffer
Ma Brown's Q&S
McDonalds
McDonalds Fountain (1950s)
Milborn’s Drive In
Mule Barn in the basement of the student union
Old Barney’s
Old Dairy Queen, 2nd Old Dairy Queen
Old Holiday Inn
Pete’s Tavern
Petersons Drive In
Plaza Crème
Riggle’s
Rundle Drug Store
Shobe’s
Sky Haven Restaurant
Sonic
The Annex
Tip Top Café
Top Hat
Tracy’s Diner
University Inn
Valley Inn
Walker’s Café
Warrensburg Country Club
Webb’s Café
Wendys
West Pine Café
Wilson’s Café
Some Pizza Places
Johnny’s
Tim’s
Village Inn
Pizza Hut (3)
Pizza House and Abode
Harts Hamburgers, Warrensburg, MO |
Forrest Riggle
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Forrest Riggle, Restaurant Owner, Mules Basketball Supporter Warrensburg, Missouri |
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Riggle's Restaurant, Maguire Street, Warrensburg (Buente Town) With Bob Warnick left and Margaret June Warnick next to Bob. ca late 1940's
Riggle's Restaurant, Warrensburg, MO
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East Pine Pub Today, Warrensburg, Missouri |
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KU KU Hamburger Drive-In Warrensburg 312 North Maguire |
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Ma Browns Q-S Lunch (Quick Stop) Warrensburg, Missouri Courthouse Square Old Barney's Today |
Earl Coleman's Orchestra, The Top Hat, Warrensburg, MO Sept. 1, 1943 |
Central Yesterday
Comments About This Article





I would love to have one of the Russian salads they used to serve at Walker's!





Wilson's was out on Highway 50. It was where we went in the early 80's for B's 'n G's (biscuits and gravy)..usually around 1:00 in the morning. They had the BEST biscuits and gravy.





What about that pizza place on the south side of town? I remember having my first taco pizza there in 1982.





Webb's cafe was on the corner of Business 50 & Washington. There was an A & W Root Beer before Dog N' Suds located approximately where Burger King is. And for the best Bar-B-Que every served in Warrensburg it was Breeze Inn.





Great article but I believe you meant Walker's Cafe, not Wilson's Cafe. I don't remember Wilson's but Walker's was downtown on the corner a block from the Courthouse. I also remember Milburn's. Thanks for the memories.





What about Taco Tico?





Nobody writes about Barney's. That was the favorite dancing place in the early '70s. Shree Loya





I proposed to my wife at Riggles and worked at Peterson's Drive-in and Ball's Cafe. I also spent a lot of time in Ma Browns.





Lamb's Cafe was my favorite. Open most hours of the night and later when it moved on the north side of Bus. 50 24 hour service, it was the favorite place to get coffee. Theirs was the first in Warrensburg to install a filter on the water and remove the "bad" taste from the local water, making the coffee the best in town.





How about the "TOP HAT" on Highway 50 east; Anderson's at the old hotel on South Holden, just up the hill on south side of the railroad station; Mother Brown's Tipsy Tea Room and last but not least Lambs at the junction of Highway 13 and 50.





This was a wonderful trip down memory lane, thinking about Hart's Cafe with its wooden booths, and, if I recall correctly, the Mule head at the door (not a real one of course). There was in the 1970s a great tea joint downtown, where I had my first plate of spaghetti. But let's talk about the BARS: The Granary, the Library. Dr. John singing "Right Place, Wrong Time" while a patron streaked the place. Some great Thursday evenings spent downtown.





Liddy's, Taco Grande, and Fosters little wooden barbecue hut.





Joe's, home of the Warrensburger, is missing!





How about the Warrensburger, Tim's Pizza, and the Tee Haus?





How about the "Q and S (Quality & Service) Bar," fondly known as "Ma Brown's." Laura Brown had cheese and crackers for a dime and Stag beer for 15 cents.





My favorite was a coffee house downtown that served flaming sundaes and great deli sandwiches with carrot cake. This was during the late 70s and early 80s.





I agree with the remarks about Walkers. Walkers fed me for several years while attending "Central Missouri State University" as it was known back then.





In the late 1950s, the Tip-Top Cafe served those fabulous half-moon shaped fried pies topped with ice cream. It still makes my mouth water to think about it after 50 years.





And, the West Pine Cafe, The Plaza Creme, the fountain at Buente Bros. Drug at Pine & Holden, and Coleman's store in the basement of the house at College & South.





I don't see The Bungalow listed. I'm not sure which one, but someone had fried pies for a nickel.





I would also add Walker's Cafe downtown, and Milburn's Drive-in at Young & Maguire. All and all, you did a terrific job





The thing I remember most about the campus in the early 70s were the unofficial street vendors and their hamburgers available til midnight along Hwy 13 south of Ellis Hall





It filled in a lot of years
Love the picture of the group of young couples taken at Riggles in the late 40's- assumed it was a stock photo with models until I noticed the caption!
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone remember the name of the small steakhouse on Business 50 East where a band called 'Nostalgia' played in the early-mid 1980's?
ReplyDelete