The Rural Life... Life in Christian County Kentucky... And What I Think About It...
The little country store at Honey Grove, Kentucky, was still open when we moved to Christian County, but it has been closed for about five years now and the building stands empty.
As I drive the roads of the county, I see many old buildings that used to be stores. Within five miles of our home, I know four old store buildings and another newer one. Their histories are probably much like the history of the store at Honey Grove: business dwindled to the point where the store could no longer operate.
The little store at Honey Grove was once a thriving grocery. It served a farm community that was separated from town by a dozen miles of dirt road and several streams.
The building itself is about a hundred years old. It was built by its first storekeeper, a Mr. Harned. It originally stood on the opposite side of the road, and its front door was once its backdoor. It has one large room below and an attic above.
The store had a long church pew and rocking chairs both inside and outside, so folks could rest and visit while enjoying a cold drink and a sandwich or snack. A long counter ran halfway down one side of the room. The cash register, two glass-topped showcases, and the meat cutter were lined up on the counter top.
A small kitchen sink at the back of the store provided a place for the storekeeper to wash utensils and for farmers to wash the soil from their hands. Customers were welcome to use the outhouse behind the store.
Miss Eva Shanklin, a widow lady, was the storekeeper for over 50 years, and under her ownership, the store reached its zenith after World War II and then went into a long slow decline. She stocked all the staples of kitchen and home and many things for the farm -- flour, sugar, laundry bluing, washboards, hairpins, quilting thread, motor oil, school tablets, nails, and much more. The grocery truck made a big delivery every week, and she sent to Hopkinsville for the things it didn't bring.
Senior citizens around here remember when Shanklin Grocery had a jukebox and young people met at Honey Grove on Saturday nights to visit and dance. Some walked for miles to get there because they didn't have a car or a bicycle, or even a horse or a mule.
For decades, travelers and locals alike stopped at Honey Grove for an ice-cold drink and a good balogna sandwich. Honey Grove was well known to have the coldest soda chest on this side of the county.
Even in its last few years, the grocery did a considerable business in lunch meat sold by the pound and and in lunch meat sandwiches made to order and eaten within the store.
In the late 1990's, it became impossible to find the traditional 4-square crackers for the balogna sandwiches, and the old chest cooler suddenly quit working one day and had to be hauled out of the building. Looking back, those little tragedies seem to be omens of impending demise.
Times have changed in ways that make it very difficult for country stores nowadays. Good blacktop roads crisscross the county, and many country women go to town daily because they have jobs there. After work, it's easier for them to shop in town than to go to an expensive little country store that may not even have what they want.
Through the years, the grocery at Honey Grove became a convenience store, and finally went out of business entirely. Perhaps beer and lottery tickets could have saved it, but Miss Eva would never have considered it and after Miss Eva's retirement, her daughter would not have allowed it in the the building. It's probably just as well. Honey Grove is an isolated settlement on a little-traveled road and a little store with beer and lottery-tickets would have been a sitting duck for robbers.
I know quite a bit about the store at Honey Grove because I worked there for several years before it closed. I lettered the "Fresh Produce" sign that is hanging above the bench in the photo above.
Over the counters of Shanklin Grocery, I became much better acquainted with the neighbors who stopped in to drink a soda, eat a sandwich, or buy a pack of smokes. I spent a lot of time sitting with the regulars and listening to them talk. That was part of the job, and I learned a lot of local history doing it.
At the time I worked there, Miss Eva had retired, and the store was operated by Mr. B.B. Bradley, an old gentleman who lived in Honey Grove. He ran the store for about six years because he could not bear to see its doors closed. After B.B. passed away, the store closed within six months.
I look back at my three years of working in Shanklin Grocery as a time of bonding with the community, and I'm thankful I had that opportunity. I'm thankful too that I had the opportunity to be one of the last storekeepers at Honey Grove (though a minor one.) It makes me feel that I am a little part of the history there.
7 comments:
I was once in a 5K bike race in Hopkinsville (about 16 years ago, and I believe we passed this store , if not one very similar. I think we may have stopped there to get a pop. I remember thinking what a great little store it was. It's sad to see these kinds of things end. But, as gas prices go up, we may see little stores like this come back. People may want to ride their bikes to the local store to save on a little gas. Wouldn't be ironic if our dependence on man-made machines brings us right back to living without them?
You may have passed the little country store at Square Deal which is west of Hopkinsville but not so very far from the city limits. It's a little white store too. It is still open. Part of the reason it has hung on is that it sells gasoline. That helps. Obviously they made a decision to upgrade their tanks to EPA standards and keep their gas pumps.
I don't think Honey Grove ever had gasoline, but they did sell kerosene at one time.
But yes, I agree that neighborhood stores may make a comeback. I think that would be great.
Hey Gene:
Story telling is an art form. In ways, like a photo. The contrast of a little black and a little bit of white
result in high definition of the in between context. Style and grace push this balance point left or right. This is what makes your's the best! All you need to do is show and tell them what you know? It's a true pleasure, sincerely, KennethF
Chad Jones
The store was owned by family and dear friends. My family lived in honey grove next to the store. Morris,Debbie and Dana lived next door and their son Kelly lived across the road. Morris was my uncle. When I'd go cut tobacco for him I'd go visit Eva,paul and the regular folks that sit out front. Most all of my dads family lived out there. Honey grove to Britmart it was such a tight little community. Those were the days. I miss the layed back times of the country.
I remember being a little girl my mom would stop at honey grove to get a bologna sandwich and a cold coke ..best sandwich I've ever had..My grandma(Gertrude Brewer) lived in britmart and we would take her a pound of bologna ..miss it being there sense I've moved back to Todd co.
I was twelve when my parents moved to Honey Grove from Pennsylvania in the spring of 1988 and the Old Honey Grove store was just a mile up Jeff Adams rd. This little country store was our go to store since we were Mennonites and did not have cars we could easily walk or ride a bicycle to the store. I remember very well finding old pop bottles and taking them to Mrs Eva's for a 10 cents a piece refund.
Soon after moving there I started working for a local farmer named David Jones and the old store was a daily stop for us. We we would always go there for lunch and Paul or Eva would fix us a bologna or pimento cheese sandwich and a pop. We got to know and associate with all the locals and I count it a privileged to be part of history that is Honey Grove. My childhood is just filled with great memories of the old store and the people of Honey Grove! Ardell Hayes recently had the Honey Grove Reunion picnic and I was so blessed to be invited! Loved seeing the community again and reminisce about days gone by! Since moving to Logan County in 2007 my interactions with the community have been limited. Really enjoyed your post! Thank you so much for sharing, Genevieve!
I had a small Tobacco Patch literally right next door. Where I made my first $1,000. I would literally get off a red belly Ford walk down the gravel dirt road to grab me a bologna sandwich and a bottled cold drink. I live in Seattle but last year I took a drive down the old Hollow Road right next to the store and sat there in the to make sure that front reminiscing about the old days of farming. Since then I joined the Marine Corps and now live in Seattle Washington those were the days of Long Summers great people and much friendlier simpler Times.
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