The Hillsboro, Mo. Hardees closed, permanently, on Sunday, November 27,
2022.
Hillsboro is the official seat of Jefferson County.
I moved to a rural
property, just outside Hillsboro, in 2006. Hillsboro was established for the
sole purpose of being a county seat, on property alongside a natural spring in
the 1830s. Prior to that, the only fully established towns were along the
Mississippi river. There is no industry in Hillsboro. No hotels or Starbucks or
department or big-box stores either. In a county of 226,739 people, the sixth
most populous county in the state, there are only 3,473 Hillsboro residents.
Most of the county’s population lives to the north, just outside and within
comfortable commuting distance of greater St. Louis. Many of the businesses and
offices are county government related. The courthouse, the jail, the health
department, the official administrative offices, many law firms and bail bond
shops are all located in a few block radius of the intersection of Highway 21
and State Route BB (Main Street). When I first moved to the area this
intersection was the location of the only fully operational traffic light in the
town. Also at that intersection is/was the Hardees. Prominent in that location
it was a popular meeting place for lawyers, their clients, local administrators,
and officials, especially in the morning hours. A place to grab a cup of coffee
a biscuit and to have a little away time from more sterile, less genteel
offices, cubicles and desks. It was also a locally recognized landmark, a
meeting place for exchanges of dogs, kids, etc. For us, Angel and I, it was for
16 years, an almost-convenient, nearby place to grab a burger or cup of coffee.
I once saved the life of a small dog there, a story I shared, and eventually
published in a little blog article I wrote called
“Oscar: A tale of Karma, Unfulfilled” . At one time Hardees was a regular weekend treat. I loved the sausage and egg biscuits, and the rarely crowded dining area was a cozy, quiet place to read in peace. I haven’t done that very much the last several years. Reasons. Reasons that included but not exclusively, changes in personal habits, covid, general laziness. The last three years, during the pandemic, the dining area remained closed for a while, and like many other fast food franchise outlets, staffing suffered.
“Oscar: A tale of Karma, Unfulfilled” . At one time Hardees was a regular weekend treat. I loved the sausage and egg biscuits, and the rarely crowded dining area was a cozy, quiet place to read in peace. I haven’t done that very much the last several years. Reasons. Reasons that included but not exclusively, changes in personal habits, covid, general laziness. The last three years, during the pandemic, the dining area remained closed for a while, and like many other fast food franchise outlets, staffing suffered.
Angel and I would still sporadically utilize the drive-through to pick
up a quick lunch, a Famous Star with Cheese, and a medium order of French fries.
Even as recently as this Monday evening, it was considered a viable option.
Little did we know, the place was, by then, already shuttered. Gone now are the
weekend mornings spent inside at the order counter, a book under one arm, a cup
of coffee, a sausage biscuit on a tray. Gone now are the covert eavesdropping
occasions, listening in on the discussions of an upcoming trial or hearing or
deed transfer. Gone are the days of the drive-through breakfast pick-ups and the
subsequent short drive to my favorite Hillsboro shady spot at the nearby city
cemetery. . . . I wax nostalgically this morning about the nation-wide decline
of small-town America. . . I shed a private tear for the fading away of things
familiar. I grieve, a certain, sadly familiar, casualty of living a long life. A
silly thing to be sentimental about, I suppose. Life will go on. The building, I
am sure, will be repurposed or torn down within a few months, to make way for .
. . something else. Hillsboro already has a McDonalds, A Taco Bell, a Subway, a
Dairy Queen. . . There was a lot of low-information speculation on Facebook this
morning, dubious mentions of disgusting, roach infested, poor service and
anecdotal references to bad coffee, possum meat, and rude employees. . . I
personally never witnessed any of that. For me it was just a handy place to grab
some nourishment and a moment or two of respite from the daily grind.
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