An elegy to the old-fashioned dime store

I called them dine stores when I was a kid. The one down the street from me in a small strip shopping center was a TG&Y 5 10 & 25 cent Store.  When I was 9 and had my 25 cent weekly allowance in hand, I would walk the short distance to this veritable emporium of merchandise on a Saturday morning after watching cartoons, and eagerly anticipate what I could buy with that meager quarter:  magnets, yo-yos, bubble makers, bubble gum, Hershey bars, Sweet Tarts.  And on and on.

I never forgot that first dime store, nor the second one  a couple of years later when we moved to our new house in the suburbs.  There was another small strip shopping center with a Winn-Dixie food store, a Morgan and Lindsay dime store, a barber shop, and a Royal Castle hamburger place (like Crystals and White Castles up north).  Those were the best ham burgers I have ever tasted before or since.  Small square patties on a square bun with grilled onions and a pickle. Nothing finer for a hungry boy who rode there on his bike and could easily eat up to half a dozen of those mini-burgers along with a mug of frosted root beer.

My thirst for reading beyond encyclopedia articles led me to escape to literature by age  Morgan and Lindsay and most ten cent stores back then carried the abridged editions of classics.  I remember buying and reading for the first time “Huckleberry Finn” and “Tom Sawyer.”  It was years later that I discovered just how much lengthier  and influential those novels were in American literary history.   This was right before I moved into Hardy Boys and Edgar Rice  Burroughs territory.

I had a desk with a bookshelf on top of it in my bedroom, and since my library was lacking volumes, I decided to join the Doubleday Dollar Book Club.  Unfortunately, I thought all the books were a dollar, but they weren’t.  You could get three books for a dollar when you joined, with featured selections sent every six weeks or so unless you told them not to send a book that month.  Sound familiar?

Needless to say my 12-year-old literary and intellectual pretensions led me to purchase books I never was going to read (somewhat like today, 60 years later). One of those books I ordered was H.G. Wells’ “The Outline of History,” which, believe it or not, I still have decades later, sitting on a shelf in my den.  Thus my literary/intellectual  book buying career began humbly when I join d  that bargain book club.

I’ve never lost my love of dime stores.  I remember being so saddened when in 1997 our old-fashioned F.W. Woolworth dime store downtown closed.  I have fond memories of Kress and Woolworth stores in the small city where my aunt and grandparents lived.  When my aunt was a teenager, she worked in that Kress on Main Street.  There was also a McClellans’s dime store a couple of blocks away which lasted until 1993, I believe. That store was magical.  I loved going there when I was in my teens.  The first thing I noticed when ai entered were the creaking wooden floors and the smell of hot, buttered popcorn.  Inside were rows upon rows of counters filled with goods.  Counters, not shelves.  I remember buying some supplies for school there including a pencil case, which had room for pencils, pens, erasers and pencil sharpeners.  So cool.

The dimes stores of old are pretty much gone now, replaced by enormous Wal-Marts in every big and little city and town throughout the country.  It’s not that Wal-Marts and their scale and size were a surprise.  Woolworth opened huge mega-dime stores in the 1960s called Woolco l, and they ere very popular and exciting back then.  They preceded malls and K-Marts that appeared slightly later.

Before the pandemic I regularly stopped  in at two local Dollar Tree stores near where I live.   They are absolutely the modern-day incarnation of the old Woolworth’s and TG&Ys of my youth.  I felt  like an adult kid in a candy store as I made my way down all the aisles, up one and then another, shrewdly  looking for the best values and unusual thinga-majigs.  I haven’t  been back in almost a year,  but when things get more back to normal, I’ll return to those Dollar Trees, Big Lots and Tuesday Mornings.  My tabletops and counters are filled with do-dads from those places.

About 15 years ago I wrote an elegy to the last of the small-town, old-fashioned dime stores, that I was aware of, located about an hour from me in a quaint and historic town with a struggling Main Street.  I loved going in that store every time I visited the town.

Here’s the entry I wrote at OD.

 

Walterboro is the kind of place where you truly step back in time. I was there yesterday, having enjoyed a drive past old antebellum houses and tall oak trees in the historic downtown neighborhoods. It was one of those spring days when I HAD to get out of the house and on the road for a relaxing day trip down country byways into the deep Carolina countryside. This little town lies right in the midst of that “deep country.” I can’t explain it too well other than to say it’s usually where I stop on all my drives away from Charleston to really get a “change of scenery.” Back country does that for me. 

Yesterday, the azaleas everywhere in the yards of one rural home after another were full of reddish/pink flowers — at their peak. I love the old farmstead shrubs. They’re often decades old and as huge as the plants can get, so they are a powerful jolt of color in the greening landscape. It was amazing. Everywhere I looked as I drove down sparsely traveled roads I could see azaleas in bloom. People plant them everywhere in the South. 

On the main street of the little town, before going to get a barbecue supper, I did a little shopping at the bookstore, but with sadness. It seems as if every other store on main street is abandoned and empty. There are lots of small businesses struggling to make it, and the town has revitalized the main thoroughfare, fixing up empty store fronts and getting them ready for new occupants — hopefully — if they even decide to locate there at all. Maybe one day these main streets will have a real renaissance when people finally get tired of the strip shopping centers and malls. I know this is a very quaint and optimistic thought.

But what saddened me was the closing of the last old dime store there in the town, a real old-fashioned ten-cent store that had been there who knows how many years. It was everything I remembered from the 5&10s of my youth: cabinets and cases of goods, shelves against the walls, candy in glass cases, hardware, clothes, school supplies, knick knacks of every variety. I would stop in there every time I made a visit to the town to just take in the atmosphere and go back in time. This places is about as far from a Wal-Mart or CVS drugstore as anything can be these days. 

The employees were all elderly. I remember them well. I figured they were a family of brothers and sisters, all in their 70s and 80s. Four of them. They were there every time I dropped in, year after year. They always greeted me and asked if I needed any help finding anything. There was usually only at most one other customer in the store, but it didn’t matter to me. I just wandered around selecting odds and ends to purchase, just to be buying something from them. I didn’t need anything, although the ceramic corn cob-shaped and colored corn-on-the-cob holder I bought for a couple of dollars a few years ago has been one the most most useful items in my kitchen. Looking at it makes me want to go to the store and buy fresh corn-on-the-cob and roll it in the corn holder in melted butter, then salt it up good and eat it. There is not much better eating in the summer. Such are the little things you could buy at that store. 

Remember those little globes with the pencil sharpeners in them at the base? I got one of those too. It’s on my desk at work. I used to get those when I was a kid. I was always fascinated by maps and globes and learning about countries by reading the encyclopedia. I’d also buy pens, index card file holders, post cards, and notebooks. The clerks would ring the purchases on a rather dated cash register and place each item carefully in one of those old fashioned thin brown paper bags. You don’t see those much anymore.

But now it’s all gone. No more visits to the dime store from the past. I peered rather gloomily on a sun-filled afternoon in the front store windows to see a large empty space with only a few shelves remaining along the far walls of the building. Empty. The store seemed so small, too, when it was no longer cluttered with bins and shelves full of goods. 

I mentioned how sad it was to see that place gone when I was purchasing a couple of books at the bookstore a few blocks down the street. The clerk there just nodded and didn’t say another word.

 

 

 

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February 7, 2021

My favorite book is Huck Finn. <3

February 7, 2021

@sleepydormouse I always thought “Tom Sawyer” was easier to read.

February 8, 2021

@oswego You mean the vernacular? Tom is a great book but I like Huck better. I just like how of a rebel he is.

February 8, 2021

@sleepydormouse  Of course, I meant the abridged versions I read as a kid.  “Huckleberry Finn” is a masterpiece of American literature, and as you know, is taught in many college Lit courses.

February 8, 2021

@oswego Of course. 🙂

February 7, 2021

Woolsworth and Kress seemed like a wonderland for kids with so much inventory. My dad and I used to eat at the lunch counter at Kress when I worked downtown. Downtown Augusta was the center for all things back then. We had a little hamburger shop next to the movie theatre called Snappy’s which sold ten-cent hamburgers similar to Krystal, but long before we ever heard of them. I used to love them. My dad used to work in the building next to that which was the second highest building in Augusta at 10 stories. He was on the tenth floor and I would love to go down to Snappy’s and get something to eat. It’s amazing how much things have changed…

February 7, 2021

@solovoice  What memories!  My dad worked in what was the tallest skyscraper in New Orleans then at 23 stories.  It was a very interesting building and my dad was on the 17th floor.  Even had elevator operators.  Can you imagine a job like that, going up and for a tall building every day in a cage-like contraption where you could actually see the cables?  I thought it was all pretty impressive though I was nervous sometimes in that ancient elevator! .

February 7, 2021

I worked at Winn-Dixie when I was in NAwlins.  Unfortunately, it wasn’t a happy experience (manager was a regular jackass.)  I never got “into” dime stores, but I certainly had the love of books at an early age.  I don’t think I bought them though, so they must have been library books.  Can’t remember any specific titles, but I do know that I spent many days just reading.  And I still do😁

February 7, 2021

@ghostdancer  My favorite lawn mowing customer’s husband was a regional Vice President for Winn-Dixie in the 60s in N’Awlins. My father got him to get me a temporary 2-week job between college semesters bagging groceries at a Winn-Dixie.  I thought it was ridiculous, but that’s the way my father was.  Needless to say when I called the store they must have thought I couldn’t be serious and the manager was a bit indignant until the regional vp subsequently  called and berated him saying to give me a job there even if for only  two weeks.  I was really embarrassed and was not so popular  at the store.  *sighs*  But I did learn a few things about bagging  groceries. 😌

February 8, 2021

@oswego  I learned a few things about bagging groceries while I was there too.  Haven’t forgotten them either — I can still bag with the best of them, which comes in handy during these COVID days when you can bring your own bags but the baggers aren’t allowed to touch them.