St. Louis landmark restaurant and music club since 1972

★  Our staff is 100% vaccinated!  ★

About Us

A St. Louis Landmark with great food and music since 1972! We’re known for our Famous Burgers, homemade soups, fresh salads, classic appetizers like toasted ravioli and cheddar cheese balls, vegan options, and 18 draft + 60 bottled beers. We have hundreds of display cases filled with pop-culture memorabilia. We showcase live music in our famed Duck Room. We offer video games, pinball, a photo booth, darts, and we’re great for kids. Food ’til midnight, bar ’til 1:30am

Landmark St. Louis Restaurant & Music Club

We opened on Sept. 8, 1972. In the 1970s, St. Louis’s Delmar Loop neighborhood had seen better days. “We wanted to open a welcoming place that was about music, pop culture memorabilia, and great food to share a beer over,” say owners Joe Edwards and Linda Edwards. “We wanted the unique atmosphere to make conversation easy and enjoyable. Within a week of opening we realized we also needed to help revitalize the Delmar Loop area.”

In the beginning we just had a hot dog machine and served peanuts and beer nuts with our excellent beer selection, especially for the time. In 1974 we expanded our tiny kitchen to make room for a grill to cook what would become our famous burgers. “I felt St. Louis wanted a great burger, and I was hoping to provide it,” Joe says.

We had a tune-spinning Seeburg jukebox from day one. “I had a collection of 30,000 records that I rotated in and out of the jukebox. I wanted people to experience music they might not hear otherwise,” says Joe. That jukebox, which people from all over the country started coming to hear, was the beginning of our music history. It was named #1 Jukebox in the United States by Billboard and Esquire and #1 in the World by the BBC.

Blueberry Hill 1973
Blueberry Hill 1975

Music History Gets Made Here

In 1985 we opened the Elvis Room to bring live music into Blueberry Hill. It was the next step for us and for helping to make The Loop the live music center of St. Louis. Fast forward to 1997: the legendary live music room the Duck Room is born. “We cut a hole in what is now the Piano Room,” Joe says, “put a Bobcat in there and dug five feet out of the basement ground in order to lower the floor. I wanted the room to have high ceilings and a big stage.”

Chuck Berry, The Father of Rock & Roll and the first person inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, inaugurated our intimate, 340-capacity new Duck Room and played 209 consecutive monthly concerts there. Joe tells the story of how that came to be: “Chuck and I had been good friends since the early ’80s. One night in 1996 he was reminiscing about the smaller clubs he used to play when he was just starting out and how much he would love to play an intimate club again in contrast to large stadiums. There was a split-second pause. We looked at each other and said ‘Let’s do it.’ That’s how Chuck Berry came to play once a month at Blueberry Hill in a legendary concert series.”

Many bands play on the same historic stage Chuck Berry did for so many years. Acts such as Ed Sheeran, the Lumineers, John Legend, Nelly, and Grandmaster Flash have brought the house down. Music history really does happen here.

In 2017, we mourned the passing of Chuck Berry. “He was the father of Rock & Roll, played 209 monthly concerts in our Duck Room, and was a dear friend above all,” Joe says. “Goodbye, my friend.”

Live Music in the Duck Room

An Unforgettable Atmosphere

“I came for the music and stayed for the terrific atmosphere.” – Big Lebowski star John Goodman

Your eyes will be popping when you see our pop-culture and music memorabilia collections! We’re like a museum you can wander through with a beverage. Joe personally collects and fills our nearly one hundred warm glowing display cases. “When I was seven I started collecting comic books, records and baseball cards,” Joe says. “At 10, I started collecting toys, sheet music, and oak furniture. At 12, it was vintage lunch boxes. At 16 I started collecting classic Wurlitzer juke boxes.”

If that’s what Joe was collecting as a kid (and storing for future display at Blueberry Hill!), just imagine what he’s collected since.

Joe’s most popular collection might be the hundreds of photos of him with music superstars and movie icons along with four U.S. presidents.

What will be your favorite collection? Star Wars? The Simpsons? Howdy Doody? Elvis? Pac‑Man? Vintage Pez dispensers? The largest collection of Chuck Berry artifacts and historic memorabilia on display in the world? We’d love to see you here and have you tell us which ones you like!

Blueberry Hill Dining Room
Pez Dispenser Collection

Popular, Large Artistic Window Displays

Linda Edwards designs large scale installation art in Blueberry Hill’s outside corner display window, a 12’ x 12’ space facing the street. Her visually striking displays are often humorous and topical and are frequently off-the-wall.

For example, for St. Patrick’s Day she turned the large display space into a bachelor’s apartment and every single thing in it was green: the big easy chair, the lamps, the beer bottles, the books, every single tchotchke. She called it “The Bachelor Pad of Paddy O’Furniture.”

One year for Halloween, she turned the display space into a creepy dentist’s office with an old-fashioned dentist’s chair and unsettling dental tools like rusty drills. In a live performance on Halloween, she had someone play the Dentist, and Blueberry Hill customers could come in and sit in the chair and “get their teeth worked on” while drinking their cocktails.

She’s also turned the space into fun scenes popular with children like Trimming Santa’s Tree. Set in Santa’s living room, she had Santa and five elves enter the room through the fireplace. Then the elves decorate Santa’s Christmas tree while Santa sits in his rocking chair, going over his hand-written list.

In honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Day, she created a powerful display of cabbage patch dolls, both black and white, sitting around a small, child-size birthday table, having cake and wearing birthday hats. In the background, a sign made with paper party napkins and streamers says “Happy Birthday, Martin.”

Eager passersby stop by to see what Linda’s latest display is. She has delighted people with over 200 different displays over the years including Rosemary’s Baby Shower, Witches’ Night Out, Easter Bunny’s Kitchen, Sleep Research, Victorian Valentine, Elvis: From Tupelo to Graceland, Zanesville Ohio Wax Museum, Frankenstein’s Jewish Wedding, The First Thanksgiving, O Little Town of Bethlehem, Mrs. Santa’s Kitchen, Heaven’s Gate, Puppet Pub, and Sisters of Our Lady of Chantilly.

One of the 10 Great Streets in America

St. Louis’s Delmar Loop has come a long way over the past 50 years. From the day Blueberry Hill opened (1972), owner Joe Edwards knew he had to work on revitalizing the neighborhood. His creative vision, risk-taking, and civic leadership have helped transform The Loop into one of the most vibrant districts in the United States.

Joe has a dedication to historic preservation. He has renovated numerous historic buildings in The Loop, including the beautiful 1920s-era Tivoli Movie Theatre (1995). He encouraged one-of-a-kind specialty shops and cultural institutions to make The Loop their home.

Joe started the non-profit St. Louis Walk of Fame in 1988 and now there are more than 150 brass stars and biographical plaques of famous St. Louisans lining the sidewalks of the Delmar Loop.

He led the way for The Loop to expand eastward when he opened the world-renowned Pageant concert venue (2000). Unique shops and restaurants have sprung up around it since then and The Loop has grown.

He also opened Pin-Up Bowl (2003), an intimate bowling alley and cocktail lounge featuring 8 lanes of bowling and display cases filled with bowling collectibles and vintage pin-up figurines and toys.

He envisioned a hotel that would be The Loop’s very own and built the four-diamond Moonrise Hotel (2009). On its rooftop bar, he created the world’s largest man-made rotating moon, a sight to see. The hotel is filled with fascinating display cases of whimsical and rare space-related items. Which will be your favorite? The lunar-themed toys, sheet music, jewelry, or figurines? Or one of the rarest items of all – a patch taken to the moon on the Apollo 11 voyage, the very first time humans walked on the moon?

He added Peacock Diner (2014) to the street, a classic, colorful diner filled with interesting peacock ephemera and classic diner memorabilia. Peacock Diner’s huge 11-ft animated neon sign won Best New Sign in the World.

When he debuted Delmar Hall concert club (2016), an 800-capacity music hall, Joe enhanced The Loop’s reputation as the live music center of St. Louis.

Magic Mini Golf (2023) wows everyone with its 18 holes of indoor miniature golf, 2 indoor shuffleboard courts, and 5-car indoor Ferris Wheel!

With Blueberry Hill as its epicenter, the Delmar Loop has been designated “One of the 10 Great Streets in America” by the American Planning Association and we’re sure you can see why!

The Pageant

This 2,000+ capacity concert nightclub has built a reputation as one of the best music and comedy venues in the United States.

St. Louis Walk of Fame

All along the sidewalks of The Loop, over 150 brass stars and biographical plaques honor famous, nationally recognized St. Louisans like Nelly, Tennessee Williams, and Tina Turner.

Magic Mini Golf

18 holes of indoor miniature golf, two indoor shuffleboard courts, 5-car indoor Ferris wheel open all seasons/weather! Perfect for unique private events! Amazing 27-foot tall award-winning neon sign and marquee!

Moonrise Hotel

Joe Edwards' boutique hotel in The Loop has a captivating lunar theme and a rooftop terrace bar with skyline views! It has a huge rotating moon on the rooftop!

Chuck berry Statue

Chuck Berry Statue: Be sure to snap your photo with this historic 8-foot statue of the Father of Rock & Roll, St. Louis native Chuck Berry, doing his famous Duck Walk. Hail! Hail! Rock & Roll!

Pin-Up Bowl

8-lane bowling alley and cocktail lounge display cases filled with bowling collectibles and vintage pin-up figurines and toys.

Peacock Diner

This classic diner has a huge colorful neon sign that's a must see! It won Best New Sign in the World!

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