People dont need maps to find us, says Joe Maranto, 70. I think everybody knows where Meers is. Maranto may be right. Hungry folks from all over the world flock to his Meers Store and Restaurant, all thats left of the former boomtown in the Wichita Mountains. They come for the food, atmosphere, and the opportunity to revisit the past.
This is a slice of Americana you wont find anywhere else, says Maranto, the storeowner of 18 years. The large shanty covered with antique tin advertisements is home of the world famous Meersburger, a 7-inch burger made exclusively from Texas longhorn beef raised on the Maranto familys ranch by Maranto, his wife, Margie, and their son, Houston. Scuzzy, the hound, and many other pets have shared the Marantos home.
People are crazy about the Meersburger, Maranto says. It keeps people coming back to this little old spot in the road.
They come from far and near. A customer from Tulsa, Okla., heard about Meers and its popular burger while visiting the Great Wall of China, Maranto says. People from Pakistan, Germany, Australia, Libya, and places in between have signed their names in the guest book.
The Meersburger is the best burger in the country, says Jeff Smith, a regular customer from Wichita Falls, Texas. I would travel any distance just to satisfy my cravings for it. The secret is the lean Longhorn beef he grinds fresh daily, Maranto says. The meat is leaner than most beef.
A hamburger doesnt have to be greasy to be good, he says. Weve obviously proved that. The menu includes more than hamburgers. The restaurant serves everything from barbecue beef ribs, beef brisket, steaks, and moreseven days a week.
This is beef country, Maranto says. But we have barbecue chicken for the people who dont know any better.
Food isnt the only attraction. The old building has housed everything from a drugstore, doctors office, and newspaper since Meers was founded in 1901 as a gold mining camp. The town boasted 500 people at its peak in 1903.
It better look old and worn, or its not Meers, Maranto says of his building. Its part of the Meers experience.
Maranto does everything he can to preserve the original look inside and out. His customers demand it. When he tried to repair a leaky portion of ceiling, a woman begged him to leave it alone.
It leaked like a sieve, but she didnt want me to take away that little bit of atmosphere, Maranto says. She was more than willing to eat at a table with a bucket on it to catch the rainwater. Maranto repaired the leak, but left the water-stained ceiling portion there.
Because of fire codes, Maranto also had to take down more than 35,000 business cards customers had plastered on the ceiling and walls.
I had people calling me from all over the world asking for some of those business cards when they found out, he says. We mailed out stacks and stacks of them. Mike Wilson of Carnegie, Okla., (pop. 1,582) was sorry to see the cards go. It was always fun to come in and see all those business cards, Wilson says. I think they added a lot of character to the place.
The business cards are gone, but customers can still find something more personal and lasting. Three couples have married in the Meers Store and Restaurant.
Who in the world would want to get married in this old place? Maranto asks. In all three cases, the couples say they fell in love at Meers.