Kevin Ashford showed up with his camp chair at 9 a.m. Tuesday, first in line for the last day of business at the Burger Pit on Blossom Hill Road.

”I’d like to get the last Steerburger,” said Ashford, who was proudly wearing a Burger Pit T-shirt that he said he got 15 years ago when he turned 50. “I was here Saturday and ordered two full mushroom burgers, so we had those Sunday and Monday. I guess I’ve been eating Burger Pit all week.”

He was told Monday there were only about 20 Steerburgers left, along with six ribeye steaks. That was the same day the restaurant — the last remaining location of the iconic South Bay chain — ran out of takeout containers. The milkshakes were done, and the phone was already disconnected, too.

Kevin Ashford sits outside the Burger Pit on Blossom Hill Road, waiting for it to open on its last day of business, April 23, 2024. The chain started in 1953, and that Blossom Hill location opened in 1964. (Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group) 

By 11 a.m., more than 30 people had joined Ashford in line a full hour before the Burger Pit would open for business for the last time. A note posted on the door said the restaurant would stay open until all the supplies were gone — which would be much earlier than the regular 8 p.m. closing time.

Scott Tashiro was another early arrival Tuesday. A customer for decades, he was there Friday, too, and both times, he walked the two-mile distance from his home near Hillsdale and Cherry avenues with the assistance of a cane.

Going to such lengths may seem a bit extreme, but that’s what people will do for a favorite restaurant. And it’s doubly true for one like the Burger Pit, a 71-year-old tradition for many families. The Blossom Hill location had been open since 1964, meaning it hosted several generations of birthday dinners, post-Little League lunches and first dates for students from nearby Pioneer High School.

A sign of the Burger Pit on Blossom Hill Road on Wednesday, April 17, 2024, in San Jose, Calif. The last of the South Bay's Burger Pit restaurants will close on Tuesday, April 23. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
A sign of the Burger Pit on Blossom Hill Road on Wednesday, April 17, 2024, in San Jose, Calif. The last of the South Bay’s Burger Pit restaurants will close on Tuesday, April 23. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

The main course at family restaurants like these isn’t found on the menu next to the steaks, salads and burgers. It’s the memories.

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And those memories will continue to be made at other favorites that are still around and new ones that have recently opened or have yet to come. But none of them will have a Steerburger.

SIGN OF THE TIMES: So what’s going to happen to the Burger Pit sign and its neon “B” shaped like a steer’s head? The plan is for it to make its way to History San Jose’s collection. But Ken Middlebrook, Collections Curator at History San Jose, tells me there’s been a hiccup since the property owner wants to keep the sign’s pole and cabinet where it is in case a new one can’t be installed.

So, the lettering and neon tubing are going to be removed and the search will begin for a new sign cabinet to put everything back together the right way. And don’t forget that the rest of the stuff at Burger Pit is going on sale starting Wednesday morning at 9 a.m., with the sale running every day through April 30 at 1349 Blossom Hill Road.

COURT OF HONOR: After retiring and moving to the Villages community, Wendy Ferguson was looking for a way to give back to the community. She found one in 2004 when she was the driving force behind the Villages Tennis Club Scholarship, a financial aid award given to Silver Creek High School tennis team members who were continuing their education at college.

Ferguson calls the work to raise money for the scholarship a “labor of love,” with contributions ranging from as little as $15 to as much as $4,000 that came from beyond just the residents from the Villages but as far away as Portland, Ore. She once wrote letters to several famous tennis stars, but never heard back.

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