Hatfield Road House -- Hatfield MN
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
Assisted by: Groundspeak Regular Member DAILLFARM
N 43° 57.450 W 096° 11.743
14T E 724994 N 4870975
The Hatfield Road House (formerly the Hatfield Bar & Grill) serves the locals and occasional tourist in the small community of Hatfield, the 33rd of 100 of the cities described in the book LITTLE MINNESOTA
Waymark Code: WMW5AR
Location: Minnesota, United States
Date Posted: 07/11/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Math Teacher
Views: 1
Created From:
 LITTLE MINNESOTA - 33 - posted by DAILLFARM

The Hatfield Bar and Grill (now known as the Hatfield Roadhouse) is the THE place to eat dinner when in Hatfield (there is no lunch service). The Hatfield Roadhouse supports all the local charities, and everyone in town eats here.

See: (visit link)

Regarding "LITTLE MINNESOTA":

Since 1973, all incorporated towns were declared officially to be ‘cities’ by an act of the Minnesota Legislature. Ever wonder about those ‘little cities’? This series of 100 waymarks will take you to all corners of the great state of Minnesota to visit the 100 smallest of the incorporated cities in the state. All have a great story to tell.

This is the 33rd of 100 of the cities described in the book LITTLE MINNESOTA. The city of Hatfield was first surveyed in 1882 and incorporated in 1919. It is currently the home to 54 persons. Why the name Hatfield? In 1879, on an extremely windy day, one of the men on the railroad grading crew kept retrieving his hat from a field, and jokingly named the area Hatfield. The name stuck and the station of the Southern Minnesota Railroad evolved into the city of Hatfield.

In 1933, the Hollyhock Ballroom opened its doors and put Hatfield on the map. A veritable who’s who of the music industry played the Hollyhock until its closing. By the 1940s, acts like Duke Ellington, Tommy Dorsey and Guy Lombardo had played the Hollyhock. Through 50s, 60s and 70s big names such as Neal Sedaka, Lawrence Welk, Bobby Vee, Jerry Lee Lewis, Conway Twitty and the Beach Boys had performed. Local acts, however, made up the usual performers and sometimes upwards of 1,500 young people were in the crowds on Friday & Saturday nights. The Hollyhock was razed in the 1980s.

This series of waymarks is tuned to getting people to visit these wonderful small communities before they disappear completely. To validate your ‘find’, please post a photo of you with your GPS at the coordinates and please relate a little tidbit about what you learned about the town and its people that is not in this narrative or the book. You can learn more about ‘LITTLE MINNESOTA’ by logging on to (visit link)
Overall Rating?:

Buffet Style: yes

Serves Alcohol?: yes

Business Hours::
Tuesday 4–9PM Wednesday 4–9PM Thursday 4–9PM Friday 4PM–12AM Saturday 12PM–12AM Sunday 3–8PM Monday Closed


Address::
340 2nd St
Hatfield, MN


URL: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
NO DRIVE BY WAYMARKING! We want a photo of the restaurant (inside or out) and what you ordered from the menu or your favorites and how you would rate it.
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Recent Visits/Logs:
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Benchmark Blasterz visited Hatfield Road House -- Hatfield MN 07/15/2017 Benchmark Blasterz visited it