
The Root Beer Barrel in Douglas, Michigan, first opened in 1952. Pam LeBlanc photo
Hotdogs taste better when you order them from a roadside stand shaped like a giant barrel, as I learned when I stopped at the Root Beer Barrel in Douglas, Michigan.
The stand, built in the 1950s, closed in the mid-1970s. It stood vacant for 25 years, its wooden staves rotting and weeds growing at its feet.
The owner planned demolish it, but the Saugatuck-Douglas Historical Society stepped in. The organization purchased the oversized barrel for $1.
A Save the Barrel campaign ensued, and fans of the former root beer and hotdog stand pitched in more than $11,000 to refurbish the roadside attraction.

Chris LeBlanc picks up his order at a barrel-shaped roadside stand in Douglas, Michigan. Pam LeBlanc photo
Restoration began in 2011. Volunteers removed lead paint, dismantled the pieces, and moved it to a workshop. There, the long wooden strips that form the barrel’s walls were repaired, sanded, and sealed. A new steel base ring was crafted, too.
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The stand reopened in 2016 and today caters to beachgoers on their way to nearby Oval Beach.
I ordered a root beer float and a chili cheese dog, and ate them at a wooden picnic table in the shadow of the towering barrel.

Pam LeBlanc ordered this chili cheese dog from the Root Beer Barrel in Douglas, Michigan. Photo by Pam LeBlanc
When the concession stand first opened, customers could buy a regular hotdog for a quarter, a hamburger for 35 cents, a foot-long hotdog for 40 cents, a root beer for a dime, or a float for 20 cents.
You’ll pay more today, but it’s still worth it for the smile.
The stand is open Memorial Day through Labor Day.