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The Hamburger Wagon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Hamburger Wagon
Map
Restaurant information
Established1913
Food typeHamburger
CityMiamisburg
StateOhio
CountryU.S.
Websitehamburgerwagon.com

The Hamburger Wagon is a hamburger restaurant located on the sidewalk of the Market Square in Miamisburg, Ohio. The establishment was opened in 1913 by Sherman "Cocky" Porter to help feed Red Cross workers and residents of Miamisburg rebuilding from the Great Flood.[1]

The Hamburger Wagon is a small wagon, large enough for only two people to work side by side; one cooks while the other one prepares the buns and handles the money. The wagon, still at approximately the same location where it originated, is rolled away and stored indoors nightly. The establishment has changed ownership hands several times throughout the years, most recently bought by Jack Sperry in September 2008 from Michelle Lyons.[2] Unchanged, however, is the flagship product: small hamburgers cooked by oil in a large skillet and served on a roll with an onion, pickle, salt and pepper. The burgers have a crispness on the outside due to being deep fried.

History

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The wagon was started by Sherman "Cocky" Porter as a way to feed Red Cross Workers and area residents while rebuilding after the Great Flood.[3] Michelle Lyon owned the wagon until 2008.[3] Jack Sperry bought the wagon from Lyon.[3]

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The wagon offers 3-ounce hamburgers on buns with pickles, onion, salt and pepper, plus chips and soft drinks.[3] Cheeseburgers are not offered.[3] The hamburgers have a crispy exterior.[3]

Reception

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The Hamburger Wagon was voted Dayton's best burger joint in 2008.[4] It was also recently featured in the book by George Motz, "Hamburger America: A State-By-State Guide to 100 Great Burger Joints."[5][1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Archdeacon, Tom. "Archdeacon: 'The richest man in town' -- Jack Sperry finds love, a hero and a miracle". dayton-daily-news. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  2. ^ "DaytonDailyNews: Dayton, Ohio, news and information". Archived from the original on 2009-01-24. Retrieved 2008-09-23.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Motz, George (2018-05-29). Hamburger America: A State-By-State Guide to 200 Great Burger Joints. Running Press. ISBN 978-0-7624-9222-0.
  4. ^ ActiveDayton.com Entertainment, News & Information for Dayton,... | www.activedayton.com
  5. ^ Hamburger America: Hamburger Wagon Has New Owner