Introduction
Years ago, rural residents depended on a country store that was close enough to reach on foot, wagon, or horse. These stores provided for most of their needs, such as groceries, seed, tools, sewing supplies, and hardware items. Today, most have closed and people drive to the supermarket or Walmart. We have lost part of our 19th and 20th century cultural background. Here are some country stores in central Mississippi and one in Louisiana. I have photographed some of them before but wanted to revisit them and see some new ones.
Florence
Most of the scenery along Hwy 49 between Jackson and Hattiesburg is boring strip mall Americana, very uninspiring. But a few traditional stores linger in dilapidated strip malls like this one in Florence.
D'Lo
D'Lo is a small town a short distance off Hwy 49 southeast of Jackson. It is mostly known for the water park, but there is an old commercial strip downtown. Most of the stores are closed.
Satartia
Satartia is a village off MS Route 3 between Vicksburg and Yazoo City. The last time I photographed the little store in Satartia, a fluorescent light was on inside, but I did not see any commercial activity. This is a 4×5" Tri-X frame taken with a 135mm Schneider Xenar lens.
Utica
This is the Harris Carmichael store on Hwy 27. The building is in good condition but I do not know when the business closed.
6 comments:
These remind me of the country stores in rural Michigan where my grandparents lived in the 70s and 80s. The one nearest their home was "Phil & Ann's." Man do I wish I had photographed it. It looked like a big shed and it had a regular front door and screen door on it. It's long since been demolished.
Thanks for commenting. I like these old stores and try to photograph them whenever I come across one. In Mississippi, winter is best or else bushes and foliage often cover them.
I like the door on the corner store in D'lo! The country liquor store reminded me of the little stores like these that would pop up on the county lines between wet and dry counties in Texas. Sometimes as kids, we would ride over to the county line liquor store with Dad and Grandpa.
The corner door is a bit unusual because the door is at 45 degrees, but the building above was built out to be a full square corner. I will try to find more of these country/town stores.
Look forward to it!
I didn't find anything about the store on the MDAH historic resources inventory, but in the newspaper archives, Dr. J. D. Caver from Wiggins built the store in 1916, "to be equipped with modern fixtures and fountain" to serve as a drug store. He also owned the drug store in Wiggins. Construction began on the corner store in May 1916 and it opened in August. The second floor held doctors' offices and Dr. E. A. Ross practiced in the upstairs. It remained a drug store at least through 1936.
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