Komentáře •

  • @donaldrichey5866
    @donaldrichey5866 Před 2 lety +192

    I made my living selling to mom and pop stores for over fifty years in East Tennessee.Some so small they made change from a cigar box.Of the hundreds of stores I sold to the one that stands out in my mind was J D Estep Grocery in Cumberland Gap Tennessee.Mr.Estep was the most pleasant man I ever met. I believe he was the mayor, the water commissioner and anything else that he was asked to do.Most all are gone now, all that's left is just the wonderful memories.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +10

      Awesome! Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @r.nowaczyk8873
      @r.nowaczyk8873 Před 2 lety +4

      Did his store have the ice cream counter? I still visit the Gap often.

    • @donaldrichey5866
      @donaldrichey5866 Před 2 lety +4

      @@r.nowaczyk8873 The best I remember they only sold popsicles, brown cows ect. no hand dip icecream.

    • @RunninUpThatHillh
      @RunninUpThatHillh Před 2 lety +13

      Small businesses are the life life blood of America. We need them back.

    • @donaldrichey5866
      @donaldrichey5866 Před 2 lety +7

      @@RunninUpThatHillh So true but like so many of the things that made this country unique are lost. I am so thankful that I was fortunate enough to experience what was left of a bygone area.

  • @kimsutton2268
    @kimsutton2268 Před 2 lety +100

    Thanks for taking us back to a slower pace of time before Walmart and big chain stores

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @WhispersFromTheDark
      @WhispersFromTheDark Před 2 lety +5

      Exactly! I think if I had a magic time machine and could take people back in time, I would make a mint on the people who would book a 1 way trip.

  • @court5231
    @court5231 Před 2 lety +14

    This one made me tear up a bit! My hubby and I call it "classic America"! Makes my heart ache for it. 🥰😭

  • @trishhinkle7076
    @trishhinkle7076 Před 2 lety +140

    It’s so sad that these days are in the past. The innocence and simple life are long gone. Thank you Donnie for bringing us these videos so we can relieve these days. I think you videos should be on public television with you as the host!

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +7

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @DianeKovacs
      @DianeKovacs Před 2 lety +9

      Ham n cheese loaf and white bread and mustard for me every grocery trip...

    • @corablue5569
      @corablue5569 Před 2 lety +3

      Loved this😊/ thank you for sharing these little moments from your past ❤

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      @@corablue5569 Your very welcome.

    • @patriciabond160
      @patriciabond160 Před 2 lety +1

      @Native American 😀

  • @truthwarrior4412
    @truthwarrior4412 Před 2 lety +49

    Mr. Donnie, you hit a home run with this one! Amen on collecting pop bottles to get a quarter or fifty cents and buy a bottle of pop out of the big galvanized tub covered in ice. The uniform of the day was a white t-shirt and blue jeans. I truly miss those days Donnie. Thanks for bringing it back to life. Take care my friend!

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +2

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend. God bless.

  • @cherylbusch6236
    @cherylbusch6236 Před 2 lety +14

    Yep, I’m a baby boomer that remembers!
    Precious memories….
    Bless you for posting!
    🙏🏻💙🙏🏻

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @cynthiaswearingen1037
    @cynthiaswearingen1037 Před 2 lety +15

    Lord, those days are long gone, but what fun they were! Moon pies and RCs...the flavors of childhood. Flour and meal in barrels, they sold them in a poke sack...Frying pans and Dutch ovens, nestled like strange birds in a nest...good times. Thanks for bringing them back, Donnie. God bless you!🙏💖

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend. God bless you.

  • @bradstoner7226
    @bradstoner7226 Před 2 lety +89

    Thank you again Donnie you brought back memories and made my day a little brighter. I remember the old country store around the curve near my fathers house. Old pot belly stove in the back with a spit bucket beside it and few old chairs for the old men to sit and talk. The store had the usual hoop-cheese glass on the counter where you could get a sizable slice and some crackers for 25 cents. Then there was the old box type coke freezer with glass bottles that you had to open with a cap opener built into the front. He also had a Pepsi one as well. There was a section in the store with fishing supplies as he had seven ponds that for a dollar a day, you could fish all of them. Cricket box was at the back of the store and you heard constant but peaceful chirping all the while. There was the usual giant pickle jar and pickled pigs-feet jar on the counter and behind the service counter on the wall you could get anything from spark plugs to combs all hanging off pegs on the wood stud wall with built-in shelves that had everything from motor oil to chewing tobacco. Then there were basic can goods in small isles in the middle of the store. There wasn't any bottled water back then if we got thirsty we pulled out the garden hose or dipped our hat in the spring behind dad's house. I use to walk around the ponds and the area roads picking up bottles to turn into the store to get enough money to buy candy, snacks, drinks. My favorite was called a "Chocolate Soldier" with a pack of Vienna sausages and pack of "nabs". If I didn't have money for crickets or worms It was no problem, I could lift any old piece of wood and find worms and crickets and there was a couple of trees that sometimes you could pull huge catawba worms from and the fish would love them. We'd catch a mess of fish then take it home and dad would fillet them and cook them and we'd eat like kings those nights. The outside of the old store had a gravel parking lot littered with thousands of old bottle caps. Some from the 40's, 50's and up. There was an old bowl type gas pump on a concrete footing when I was coming up but it like the store are gone now. Some years ago, the owner died and his daughter died a few later of cancer and they let the place sit for 12 years. Someone broke in and stole the old Coke machines, signage, etc. so it went up for auction and what was left sold with the owners home place on the hill above the store. What's left of it is a pile of wood and tin overgrown by trees and shrubs now. Dad's moved away long ago from the place and is in his 80s and I in my 50s. I ride by the old place every now and then and almost cry when I see it like this but then I reflect back on the good times I had there. I can still see me and my friends sitting on the old steps feeding the ducks and watching the hunters and outdoors men come in telling tales of a big buck they saw or a monster bass they caught down at the river only a few miles away. Lord how I miss those days. When I saw this video it brought so much back to me. Thanks again Donnie.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +8

      Awesome story! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing that my friend.

    • @bluegirl777
      @bluegirl777 Před 2 lety +9

      Thank you for sharing your memories. 💛

    • @reesedaniel5835
      @reesedaniel5835 Před 2 lety +8

      That made me almost tear up...😪

    • @stevebruce1235
      @stevebruce1235 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes same here cut from the same cloth we are,miss those days,but no one can take these memories, Lord Bless My Friend

    • @bradr2142
      @bradr2142 Před 2 lety +2

      What a beautiful culture. Thanks for hanging on to it.

  • @glenjenkins21
    @glenjenkins21 Před 2 lety +39

    I live in north Alabama. There was one in a little community named Hulaco. It operated until around 10 years ago. It was leveled to put in a Dollar General...... There was around a hundred years of history in that old place. I remember going in all the time as a kid. They had literally anything people in the area needed, including the kitchen sink. (they sold hardware too) It was one of the only places around to buy Liberty overalls. There were no Tractor Supply stores then. Thanks for igniting old memories!

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +2

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @erniemckracken1593
      @erniemckracken1593 Před 2 lety

      Dollar Generals stand guard to keep any future mom & pop stores from opening.
      Thats why you find them in the middle of no where, everywhere.
      Profits ?
      They don't care, they are multi billion corporation.
      When there's no competition left, they will make up lost profits 10x.
      Franchise only , from this day forward.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      @@erniemckracken1593 Well put my friend.

  • @dwhunter8904
    @dwhunter8904 Před 2 lety +6

    I really enjoyed that Mr. Donnie. We had a old one room store out on the ridge named "Harless Grocery". Fine people, they knew everybody had a hard living and would swap out stuff or run a tab for people to help them out. Old wooden floor and a glass meat case that had bologna , hoop cheese, pickle loaf and processed ham and a few other things. The would make you a sandwich and cut the meat thick or thin....how ever you liked it. In the back they kept a little hardware stuff like nails, fencing staples and mouse traps and such. Old timers sitting around playing checkers and throwing (swapping) pocket knives. I can still smell the odor of that old store today. Great childhood memories. I'm from West Virginia and we called it pop too. Thanks for the memories once again.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @christikulczyk1439
    @christikulczyk1439 Před 2 lety +16

    I remember being in grade school and walking with my friends to what was actually called the “The Country Store”. Mind you I was born in ‘88 and this place was ancient by the time i was in the 3rd grade. The wooden building was leaning, the floor boards crack echoed through the little building with every step. In the center you could get a cold cut sandwich or ice cream. Penny candy jars with paper bags, old men arguing about what was in the news paper that day.
    Eventually the old store was too far gone and torn down. They built the new Country Store in its place, a shiny new Shell gas station. Gone we’re the penny candy jars, the creaking old boards and the old men arguing about the news. It was replaced with a standard convenience store with a Dunkin’ Donuts on one end and a little pizza shop in the other. My little home town hasn’t felt the same since. Good to know I’m not the only one with these types of memories, sad knowing no generation since will know what it feels like to step into a piece of history like we did.

  • @ForgottenHillbilly
    @ForgottenHillbilly Před 2 lety +11

    There was an old store out by where i was raised like this. The old man lived in the back of it. He had an old cash register that was really just a money drawer that would bling when opened. The counter was an old desk and it had a huge paper that covered the top of it. He would figure up what you owed on that paper with a pencil so it was always wrote all over it. He sold good all beef bologna by the pound and the best cheese to, way better then you find in any box store. He also bootlegged moonshine and colored label liquor also, at the time it was a dry county. Fella kept a double barrel shotgun leaned up against the wall back behind the counter and nobody ever messed with him. I knew a lot of that family and played with some of his great grandkids. After he died some of them tried to update it and ran it for a while. They also got robbed for the 1st time ever and one of the girls was caught selling liquor. They just didn't have what he did i reckon to run it all. They fought over it all the time after a while and it ended up being dozed down, burnt and the rest hauled away. Such a bare looking spot now. The highway was turned into a 4 lane and they took part of it and out of towners have moved in and built up houses all around. My daughter can't believe how it was when i grew up and the things i tell her. It was the good ol' days for sure.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +3

      Awesome story my friend. Thanks for sharing it.

  • @kfiscal01
    @kfiscal01 Před 2 lety +6

    Lord, memories so thick I have to brush them away from my face. These stores were the life blood in my neck of the woods. We all knew each other, helped oneanother, looked after the kids, and when times were rough you could run a tab till things turned around for you. Yep, the old way of life is becoming a distant memory.

  • @rickyhenry4958
    @rickyhenry4958 Před 2 lety +10

    My grandparents ran an old country store till the early 90’s. Thanks for the video and memories Donnie!

  • @FishingWithChris_Tv
    @FishingWithChris_Tv Před 2 lety +31

    This video really hits deep. I didn’t come along until 86, the early millennial generation, but I grew up around the older generation going to the few general stores we had. I always enjoying hearing the old timers stories about work, play, and tall tales. All the old run down farm equipment that some general stores have laying around could tell stories of their own if they could. It’s sad that these stores are slowly disappearing, we have one local one still running in reliance TN called Webbs Store and it sits beside the hiwassee river in Polk county.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +4

      It is sad. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @markpospichal571
      @markpospichal571 Před 2 lety +2

      I was around there for awhile in the early 80's and shopped there. Are the old brothers still alive and running it? Loved that place and the whole area around there.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      @The mysterious Miss X Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @browningbelgium2326
    @browningbelgium2326 Před 2 lety +6

    Donnie, I grew up before plastic replaced glass. before pencil pushing inspectors made it hard on store owners, before people waked up each morning in search of anything that would offend them so they could complain, before Walmart put mom-n-pop stores out of business, before it was against the law for kids to ride in the back of a pickup, and before cell phones were invented. I yearn for days again. Thank you, sir, for this video!!

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @TeachLongbeard
    @TeachLongbeard Před 2 lety +6

    Thank you so much for helping me relive my family and my past. I grew up in the city because of the military but my families are from the mountains of Kentucky and West Virginia. No one but our kin will ever know how great life was and is.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @janeworth3232
    @janeworth3232 Před 2 lety +50

    Love this video because it brings back great memories. The Piedmont General Store was actually Frank Snodderly’s Store when I was growing up in Piedmont. We would walk there from Piedmont Elementary School and get the best bologna sandwiches ever made along with a candy bar and a coke w/peanuts. Thanks for posting this.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +2

      Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @rkow8508
      @rkow8508 Před 2 lety +2

      Jane just wondering how much that cost ?

    • @janeworth3232
      @janeworth3232 Před 2 lety +2

      Rk ow I can’t remember exactly because I’m 70 y/o now. I’m sure it wasn’t much more than a dollar though. As a kid, I don’t think I ever had much more than that to spend. We were only allowed to walk to Snodderly’s a few times during the school year. In the summer, a man named Isadore would walk from Piedmont carrying a suitcase filled with candy, medicines, etc. It was about 12-15 miles to our house. The candy bars were about 5 cents if I can remember correctly. We couldn’t wait to see Isadore walk up our driveway. Such great memories.

    • @fullofgracehomestead
      @fullofgracehomestead Před 2 lety

      They closed down during c v lock ups.

    • @janeworth3232
      @janeworth3232 Před 2 lety +3

      Pure One they are open now. They serve lunch there during the week. I hear the food is pretty good.

  • @scottyg.4199
    @scottyg.4199 Před 2 lety +4

    Another great video, thanks so much Donnie. Brings back great memories.
    About 70 years ago, I was 10 in south Texas. There were stores in the poor neighborhoods made from a one or two room house. Wooden shelves around the walls had all sorts of items priced higher than the large stores, but walking distance from the homes. They weren't a gathering place like you talked about, just a way of getting what you needed. Mostly soda water & candy for us kids.
    My older brother & I decided we wanted to be men & chew some tobacco. While our folks were gone, we walked down to one of these stores, bought some chewing tobacco & started chewing it on the way back. I swallowed too much and was sick by the time we got back home. Then I had to tell Momma what happened. She let it go, said I had punishment enough already. I didn't try that again until my teens.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @moonshinerphd9523
    @moonshinerphd9523 Před 2 lety +31

    This brings back memories, collecting pop bottles so we could have a little walking around money, if we didn't spend it after cashing them in. I remember my parents at the grocery store buying a carton of drinks and mixing them up, you can't do that now.
    Thanks so much Donnie!

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @Houndini
      @Houndini Před 2 lety +2

      My area. If you a drinking type you could buy moonshine in them old pop bottles with cap on it & all. Worst car wrecks I ever seen was a hauler car running from law lost it & almost cut it in 1/2, Hit 1 them old concrete bridge sideways. He was good 10 mins ahead of them but didn't know it. I know guy real good. About killed him but last I heard he was still alive.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      @@Houndini WOW!

    • @reesedaniel5835
      @reesedaniel5835 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Houndini Real clever way to conceal the moonshine...😁😉

  • @donaldwells2102
    @donaldwells2102 Před 2 lety +21

    Thanks Donnie, you brought back some good memories. That was the highlight of the day, walking down to the store to good some goodies. A dime would get you a dope and a candy bar and I was a happy fellar.That was what I call the Good Old Days. 🙂

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes it was. Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @UnStrungHero
    @UnStrungHero Před 2 lety +23

    We had a little store like that in the town I went school in. We didn't go often because we lived out of town, but you could buy anything in there. The people that owned it were pretty old. They lived in the back of the building. Somehow, I always thought that was a good idea because you had no drive to work.

  • @coinslotsandjoysticks2572

    We still have 2 old stores here, and were blessed to have em. Cause when you walk in you think you went back to 1950 , really. It's still the same stuff hanging and sitting around. Same family still owns them

  • @homesteadingpastor
    @homesteadingpastor Před 2 lety +7

    THANK YOU FOR SHARING THIS VIDEO!!!! Mr. Donnie I was raised during these times as well. I was born in 1967 and oh how I miss the good ole days so bad. My Grandaddy was the owner/operator of one of those little country stores for over 35 years. It was one of the main places that folks would hangout at especially on Saturday’s. He had the post office in his store and you could buy pretty anything you needed from there. From a Pepsi Cola to Hoop Cheese to a fan belt for your car to fresh fish displayed on ice in the front of the store to gasoline , motor oil, bologna, candy, chewing tobacco etc etc etc 🙌🏻👍🏻🙌🏻👍🏻🙌🏻👍🏻

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @mikemcnamara1831
    @mikemcnamara1831 Před 2 lety +4

    Donnie Laws, this is one of my favorite episodes. I remember walking to the "fillin station"/store, cashing in bottles and buying an ice cold Chocolate Soldier. Thanks for the good memories.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @hillbillydan4721
    @hillbillydan4721 Před 2 lety +15

    Well Mr. Donnie, you've opened up a floodgate of some of the best memories of my life !! When we stayed at Grandma and Grandpa's in the summertime we would get to go down to Swamp Branch post office, gas station, and a country store all in the same building !!!! We always got a 6oz coke and a moon pie, that was the biggest treat !! Thank you once again for taking me back down memory lane !!!

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @jillconnelly8206
      @jillconnelly8206 Před 2 lety +1

      When we have vacationed in NC & Tennessee mountains and visited family, there were some little family owned stores as being discussed here with a ton of character and I hope there still are some being ran this way. I'd love to move to a little remote area & own a small store and serve needs of people around, maybe some would still prefer this to Amazon LOL I'd hope so,...I remember the bait in the little stores, too not only the crickets and worms, but the tanks with circulating swirling water filled with different size minnows you dipped out. Seems like every little store had a resident mascot overseer: an old porch dog 🐕 or 2

  • @StarDreamMemories
    @StarDreamMemories Před 2 lety +16

    I love 💗 the backroads!
    Before my husband and I got married we took a trip across the plains the North route to the continental divide. Just exploring and seeing what we could find. I figured we'd camp the whole way....well I found out just how much he doesn't care to tent camp. 😂 I learned traveling off the big routes is so much more calm and relaxing. We found out things we'd never know, talking to local folk.
    Love this video. It does bring back memories though my mom and dad's parents were city dwellers. We had family in the country.....and that's not country anymore!

  • @TennValleyGal
    @TennValleyGal Před 2 lety +21

    I'd forgotten those pleasant Sunday afternoons where we'd walk to the store. We didn't have any money but that didn't matter. We had some place to go and friends to see. Thanks, Donnie, another good trip down memory lane.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +2

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @jillconnelly8206
      @jillconnelly8206 Před 2 lety

      Hey you've got that right, we were looking at photos of neighborhood back in 70s and everything seemed a little bare or sparse, most in our community didn't have budget during those years for landscaping, new cars, all the accoutrements of today's modern suburbia. But we didn't focus on it, what we had to live without we just did it & made the best of life. I always tell my daughters (born in 85, 89 and 2000) we got school clothes in fall and when school let out for summer, you had cutoff shorts from your school clothes/jeans, pants. No Hollister, Abercrombie, American Eagle, Forever 21 needed LOL All we had in Ocala, FL 1970s was Sears, Penneys, & KMart

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      @@jillconnelly8206 Awesome! Thank you! Thanks for sharing that my friend.

  • @clockendfarm
    @clockendfarm Před 2 lety +4

    I was lucky, the one in my li'l town stayed open a lot longer than some did, well into the 1980s, by adding a little old breakfast, burger & sammich shop in the back with about 4 tables. I remember it actually made the local newspaper when the price of penny candy went up. :-) Time was, you could get 5 pieces of hard candy for a penny, then it was 2, then 1. The place still had an old disused hitching post and water trough from the horse and buggy days. In the 1970s we kids talked w/ the owner & helped clean up and refurbish them so we could stop there on horseback and let our horses have a drink while we grabbed us a Co-Cola. The owner, with help from local farmers, changed the leathers on the old hand pump and we did our part by replacing the old rotten hitching post, keeping the trough clean and filled and sanding/repainting the pump. If I'm remembering right, we ended up making this a 4-H project, and it did benefit the community - hikers and bikers used it too. People helped each other out in those days. They were good times, and I miss them.

  • @annettehowell6957
    @annettehowell6957 Před 2 lety +25

    When I lived in Kentucky quite a while back, there was a combination general store, feed store, post office. We'd go into town and everybody would be there, hanging out, buying supplies. It was a good way to see your friends. At the end of the day, we'd head back to the farm. It was a big deal to go into town. Times sure have changed. Thanks so much for all your wonderful videos. They sure do make me feel blessed to have experienced a different time.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @kindnessmakesmesmile6583
      @kindnessmakesmesmile6583 Před 2 lety +2

      Annette, thank you for sharing this! I agree with you. I also feel blessed to have had these childhood experiences. 😊😊😊

    • @myleslong5584
      @myleslong5584 Před 2 lety +1

      My first job was riding/throwing on a trash truck serving parts of Warren,Barren and Edmundson Counties and we would nearly ALWAYS stop at one of those country stores for lunch break. The owners would always hook us up fat with some freshly sliced ham n cheese sandwiches…and slick em! And all soda was referred to as “Coke” whether it was Pepsi or Root Beer or Sprite (which is White Coke).

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      @@myleslong5584 Awesome!

  • @maybesomeday2596
    @maybesomeday2596 Před 2 lety +7

    “This generation don’t have a clue…the baby boomers understand it”…truth. I really appreciate your stories and thanks so much for holding each photo long enough to get a good, long look…time enough to pull out the detail and evocatively connect to your narration. So much editing today looks like a slide show at three-times speed, as if everything’s gotta be presented in snippets and quick flashes. Then again, seems that’s the attention span of most folks these days.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @jessemullins2769
    @jessemullins2769 Před 2 lety +18

    This is awesome Donnie it hits close to home my grandparents had an old country store with one gas pump out in the middle of nowhere. And believe it or not they had pizza and ice cream. And everything in between.Great memories. Thank you so much.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @mulekickhandmadeguitars8465

    In rural Iowa, back in the 50's, we had a country store on a gravel road about 2 miles from our farm, named Dixon's Store. At that same time period, there were the same corner mom & pop stores in large numbers all around in every Des Moines neighborhood. No matter where a family lived, there was a store within walking distance.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +3

      Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @garymckee448
      @garymckee448 Před 2 lety +3

      I from East Tennessee but now I work in Omaha and I stay in Council Bluffs, Iowa is a good place to live.

    • @thorawilson1466
      @thorawilson1466 Před 2 lety +2

      I small ohio city too. Every neighborhood had a school, a couple of churches, a bar and a sundry store.

    • @hollyhock3945
      @hollyhock3945 Před 2 lety +3

      Iowan here too. There are a couple still standing in our area. One is empty but a designated historical site. The other is a well-kept art studio or home. The amish do have country stores that we visit regularly...close, but not the same.

  • @kskollections2142
    @kskollections2142 Před 2 lety +8

    I am not old enough to have lived in the era of this type of store, although I wish I had. What I remember from my childhood is going down to the farm store (now called a convenience store) that was down the street from the dairy and buying penny candy. This was one of the things that I loved about going to my grandma’s house on the weekends. I always loved Saturday morning when the milkman would come and grandma let me get a bottle of chocolate milk! We also had a small corner store at the corner of the railroad tracks across the street that I would got to and buy candy. It’s astonishing now that I could go there by myself any time of day as a child in 1st grade and be completely safe. I sure miss these times!

  • @kimberlyholt2241
    @kimberlyholt2241 Před 2 lety +9

    We need more people to carry on the tradition of little country stores! So today's generation can get a glimpse of the past. 💐

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @davids6533
      @davids6533 Před rokem +2

      I try to feel like the younger generations would care, but so far all I can see is people with cell phones in their faces letting the world I knew just keep on crumbling. It's so nice to occasionally find videos like these where people remember the good days. To read through the comments and see that I'm not alone in my thoughts and feelings helps a lot.

  • @jackkeeble9272
    @jackkeeble9272 Před 2 lety +7

    Great memories! 58 years ago I would go with my dad to run his trap lines. He always stopped at a old country store and get me a R C!🤗 thanks Donnie, your fried from Maryville

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @chas92
    @chas92 Před 2 lety +8

    I am 30 years old and live in the city now. Huge difference from where i grew up and lived most of my life. Some of my favorite memories to look back on is of my mom stopping at these little old ma and pap stores and getting me a brown paper bag full of candy and an ole' time favorite carbonated glass bottled drink. My mom or I also knew the owners at times from our childhoods seperately as well so it wasn't quick stops ....haha... It was like a reunion everytime going in. I miss that.... To this day i would rather go to an old little ma and pap store over any of these new ones. You can still find a few like you mentioned , but the people inside the stores is what you really treasure and the people you went with to these stores . Thank you for sharing, I sincerely almost cried just from the memories brought back to my mind. I know i am considered young still.... But there has been so much change... I think where i grew up and lived in old fashioned places...then moved to the evolved city places... It feels like i time traveled to the future. I feel as though i have an old soul and it misses the simple but welcoming Ma and Pa stores.

  • @loisreese2692
    @loisreese2692 Před 2 lety +13

    @DONNIE LAWS Hello, Mr. Donnie. Thank you for another trip down Memory Lane I love your stories. I'm a Gen Xer (53 y.o.). Mom and Dad were born and raised in a small town in PA's anthracite coal region. When we'd visit my grandparents, my favorite thing was to walk up to the 5 and 10 my Mom worked at before she married my Dad. All kinds of little toys (paddleballs, puffy stickers, Super Pinky balls, etc.). You name it, they had it. Sadly, it's been torn down now, but your memories brought back my own. I appreciate that so much. Thank you, Donnie. Take care, and God bless. Half-Yankee Lois.
    Edit: corrected a word

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @andrewstravels2096
    @andrewstravels2096 Před 2 lety +17

    My grandpa lives in Mount Vernon, Ohio which is in the rural part of the state. All throughout my life we used to drive around the area and see some sites like parks, waterfalls and Amish Country. Occasionally when we drive down the country roads we’ll see an old general stores in the small towns with a few hundred people. Most are boarded up, but a few are still open. I’ve never been in one, but there still cool to see. I love going to Mount Vernon, it gives me some time to take a step back, enjoy the simple rural life and get away from the busy suburbs where I live!!!

  • @garyglanville1158
    @garyglanville1158 Před 2 lety +9

    Thank you Donnie. You always bring my childhood days staying with my grandparents in the summer. in Tennessee. We would go to the small country store in Dayton Tenn. it had painted on the door screen a loaf of Sunbeam Bread. We would get a Mayfield fudge cycle and like you a pound of boloney and bread. Maybe a Moon Pie too. A Nebi Orange soda pop we would slide through the cold water in the cooler to get it out. We thought we were really something. And the folk that ran the store were so nice. And if we got lucky a Southern Rail Freight would come through town. One of Gods gifts He only gave to people is their memories. Thank the Lord for that. And thank you for wakening up old brain cells that have not thought about such things. You are a blessing. God Bless you.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome my friend. Thanks for sharing.

  • @georgesilverhawkstrailcame2297

    Thank you my friend Donnie Law, for this trip down memory lane. The atmosphere in these little Country Stores was (is still I'm sure in those that remain) wonderful... I'd say cozy. And right now I can still remember how wonderful they smelled inside... the candy, breads, pipe tobaccos, them smell of freshly cut lunch meats and other good smelling stuff.
    All my best to you my friend...

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @cherylatkinson7479
    @cherylatkinson7479 Před 2 lety +6

    Brings back good memories. You're right Donnie this younger generation doesn't have a clue us baby boomers do. We lived in a much simpler time back then. I remember several country stores growing up Hills Grocery was one of them. They had anything you wanted from a butcher shop that had the best meats to farm supplies and everything in between. And it was on a state highway. There are a couple still around this area. I love the photo of all the men around the stove warming their backsides too!

  • @allisynlitton8373
    @allisynlitton8373 Před 2 lety +6

    Thankyou Donnie for your stories, it's fascinating to me as I'm from Australia , Irish imagrants, your story about the old remedies that the ole woman use to use struck a cord and had me giggling because my mum used alot of that stuff. I really love the old ways, I wish we could bring back the horse and cart. Stay safe beautiful friend xx

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @lisapop5219
    @lisapop5219 Před 2 lety +5

    My family moved up to Detroit during the war and that's where I was born. We had the corner store that I haven't really seen anywhere else I've lived. We did everything just like you did, from mom calling us and saying we need to go to the store, taking in bottles, etc. They were all mom & pop and were the place for the neighbors, they even gave credit (if they knew you) in a little notebook. Lots of neighborhood kids got their first jobs there even if they didn't have anything for you to do but sort the bottles. They didn't pay much but it was something. I had one on either end of my block but that was unusual. But generally had them around a mile apart. I think the people that moved up brought the spirit of the country store to at least this corner of Detroit. It's all gone now. I left in 92 when I was 18 and have never experienced it anywhere else

  • @jessicastoke777
    @jessicastoke777 Před 2 lety +3

    I had the pleasure of experiencing the good old days in my young years. Out in the country where my Daddy lived there were 3 stores like this and we would walk to them. We also had Sunday dinner at my Great Grama's and the entire family would come. Us kids would play by the creek while supper was being cooked. Best times of my life.

  • @tnwildcam
    @tnwildcam Před 2 lety +11

    Still 1 or 2 around here, but like you said, they're rare these days! I remember getting that bologna too😄. Enjoyed this video very much sir, have a good day!

  • @mikel917
    @mikel917 Před 2 lety +10

    That touched my heart strings, I have those same types of memories. My grandaddy owned a country store on route 22 outside Roanoke Alabama. That was the 1960s, I was a little fellow. I remember the cookie jar, the orange sodas and the old poster ad with a 1950s football player (can't remember what the ad was for). One time a farmer pulled up and was getting gas. He was hauling a young bull that got rowdy. I remember my dad wrestled with that bull and grabbed its horns. It was strong haha. But my dad helped get it under control. I remember the smell of gas around the pumps and the beautiful white sandy dirt of the Cumberland plateau. So many wonderful memories! Thanks so much for the video!

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @jillconnelly8206
      @jillconnelly8206 Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for sharing, I'm glad I came here this morning, I needed some cheering up, things seem so dismal these days and not much nostalgia-worthy anymore it seems. This is when you realize you are getting OLD 😎

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      @@jillconnelly8206 Ant that the truth. Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing that my friend.

    • @mikel917
      @mikel917 Před 2 lety

      @@jillconnelly8206 Me too! I started hiking and exploring kinda like Donnie several years ago. It's inspiring to get out and see the beauty of nature and some of the nostalgic things on the forgotten routes of Appalachia.

  • @arnoldseay9118
    @arnoldseay9118 Před 2 lety +6

    This brings back so many memories. Some of my first memories are of my dad bringing me to the little country store. In winter the ranchers and farmers would gather around the big pot belly stove and spin yarns or talk about livestock. There were brass spittoons here and there that the men would spit snoose into while they chewed and talked. My dad would give me a few cents to buy a pickle out of the big old pickle barrel and crackers out of the cracker barrel. If I was lucky I had enough to buy a bottle of pop. Later as I got a little older I would load my old wagon up with pop bottles I would find along the road and get a few cents to buy a candy bar and pop. I now live in Idaho and the only place I can find these little stores are in the most remote little towns and they just aren’t the same anymore. Great video.

  • @mannycolavito8918
    @mannycolavito8918 Před 2 lety +7

    Great video Donnie! It's a shame that these little country stores are gone, with all of their history and memories. Now in the country we have these Dollar Stores popping up. Things have sure changed!

  • @ktm42080
    @ktm42080 Před 2 lety +6

    I got a big smile hearing this! My great grandfather ran one up here, he had the molasses barrel in the cellar and folks would bring a mason jar to fill. I remember gathering the green Coke bottles for the nickel a piece and I felt like a businessman. Hahaha!

  • @melissavancl_2090
    @melissavancl_2090 Před 2 lety +4

    My grandparents owned a country store. Had everything from groceries, meat counter and 2 gas pumps out front. This was mid to late 1970's when they bought this store. Us kids all worked there. Learned how to respectively deal with people and money. Wonderful memories. Thank you again for your wonderful videos.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @EliTheMac
    @EliTheMac Před 2 lety +5

    i’m so happy you posted again today mr. donnie, good to see you doing well!

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Thanks, you too! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @jeff1313
    @jeff1313 Před 2 lety +14

    I miss these old stores, when I was a kid it seemed there were dozens of these places all over Eastern Kentucky. They had every and anything you needed, and usually a couple things you didn't know you needed til you stopped in. Someone was always playing guitar or people gossiping about local news or some fellers playing checkers just like you said. Everyone knew each other or knew someone they were kin to at least. They were some of the most welcoming places you'd ever go. Whether you were buying or just stopping by they were glad to see you. But by the time I was 11 a Wal-Mart showed up downtown. Thats was the beginning of the end. By the time I was 15 almost all those little stores were gone. Luckily there's still a one locally left, I stop in every chance I get.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +2

      Awesome! Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @sonyafox3271
      @sonyafox3271 Před 2 lety +1

      There’s still The Old General Store in Rabbit Hash, they rebuilt it, I don’t know how many times. They still have a few of the Old Country Stores in Eastern Kentucky they are just few and far between and, off the beaten path. That, I do know. You need to do some online research and you will see, you just put in General Stores in the search bar.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      @@sonyafox3271 Thank you friend. There still is a few around. Thanks for sharing.

    • @jeff1313
      @jeff1313 Před 2 lety

      ​@@sonyafox3271 I believe what you call eastern Kentucky and what I do are bit different lol. I had to look up Rabbit Hash, because I had never heard of that place. Turns out why I never heard of it is because it's about a 3 hour and 40 minute drive west of me. So basically a 7+ hour drive to what I think of as more mid Kentucky and back home. Glad they rebuilt after the fire though, the outside reminds me very much of a store/bait shop that used to be a little ways past Hellier. If I'm ever that way I'll have to stop in, thanks for letting me know about the place.

  • @cybrpypr
    @cybrpypr Před 2 lety +3

    I loved this video. Thank you for making it for the ones of us who couldn't wait to ride in their Uncle's old pickup truck down to the general store and hear him and the store owner go over each pocket knife in the display case as to what each of them thought was the best knife and why. I would sit and drink my big red and eat a Chic-O-Stick just soakin' up the pocket knife knowledge. Really appreciate this walk down memory lane for me.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Awesome, your very welcome my friend. Thanks for sharing.

  • @MrIslandman59
    @MrIslandman59 Před 2 lety +5

    Thanks for sharing that Donnie, it made me remember a story my mother told me. 10 years before I was born, my mother and father stopped for gas and a soda at a country store in Hilliard, FL. on their way back to Jacksonville from an overnight in St Marys. When they walked in the store about a dozen people were glued to the radio as the announcer was describing the attack on Pear Harbor.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @terryfinley7760
    @terryfinley7760 Před 2 lety +4

    I would give anything to go in one of those old stores with my granddaddy again. The smell of candy in the big jars. The old Coke ice boxes where the drinks were hanging and you had to work them down the slot to get them out. The old pot belly stove, and all the old timers standing around talking.
    The days before the ball cap! Love the old hats…I still wear them!

  • @mannycolavito8918
    @mannycolavito8918 Před 2 lety +7

    Donnie, you ought to do a video on Old Time Gas stations! I remember as a child that when I used to go to the gas station with my Dad to get gas in the car that they used to give you a small gift. One time I remember getting a toy car. That made my day. Folks used to get other items as well when they got gas as well. And you could pump your own gas or have an attendant come on out and pump your gas for you and check your oil level and clean off your windshield. Things have surly changed.

  • @MarkWYoung-ky4uc
    @MarkWYoung-ky4uc Před 2 lety +29

    Donnie thank you for sharing this. I remember when every community in Stokes County had at least one country store and some had several. The town of Walnut Cove once had 4 in the city limits as well as 2 grocery stores. They were not only the grocery store, they were the hardware store and gas station as just about all sold gas. At one time, many of them served as polling places on election day. Now most are a thing of the past.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @mwblackbelt
      @mwblackbelt Před 2 lety +1

      @Mawk W. Young
      Walnut Cove is still a really great place

    • @MarkWYoung-ky4uc
      @MarkWYoung-ky4uc Před 2 lety +2

      @@mwblackbelt Thank you ma'am. It's been my home for 59 years.

    • @mwblackbelt
      @mwblackbelt Před 2 lety

      @@MarkWYoung-ky4uc I used to live in Walkertown. Spent lots of time around there and on the Dan River

    • @MarkWYoung-ky4uc
      @MarkWYoung-ky4uc Před 2 lety

      @@mwblackbelt O yes I've been in and through Walkertown many times.

  • @mishalea
    @mishalea Před 2 lety +4

    I remember the one we had we called Dittie Wise's, I think her name was actually Katie Wise. But it was right beside where we got mountain spring water. My favorite things were the swedish fish and bottle grape sodas! Oh and bottle caps & juicy wax bottles. Yes sir, the good ole days. Some of those photos reminded me of when we didn't always have to wear shoes into stores!😮😉 Have a great week!😊👍

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @conniehightower7396
    @conniehightower7396 Před 2 lety +7

    I really enjoy your videos. You're right this new generation don't know what they are missing. God Bless you and your family. Keep up the good work!!

  • @joyce9523
    @joyce9523 Před 2 lety +7

    This story brought tears to my eyes, I remember me and my two brothers would Hunt and save bottles to trade back to the stores, and boy do I remember them bologna sandwiches they don't even taste as good as they did back then, My two brothers is gone now, what hurt so bad is that I lost a child when she was 21and I just sit and think God iwish she could have grew up like I did, Them was the good old days yes it was, But I know she's in paradise now what could be any better, the old days, Or paradise, Thanks Mr donnie for the memories ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +2

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend. God bless you.

    • @joyce9523
      @joyce9523 Před 2 lety

      @@donnielaws7020 always a pleasure with you me donnie

  • @rogerhuber3133
    @rogerhuber3133 Před 2 lety +2

    Donnie, I love your stories. This one really struck my heart. I grew up in Maryland and my buddies and I would walk the 2 miles to our local store picking up soda bottles along the way. We'd trade them back to our store for a soda and some Atomic Fireballs and a Tastykake pie. Then we'd walk around the area collecting more bottles for the trip home while waiting for a train to go by. We'd sit on the braces for the abandoned water tank and tell lies to each other until time to go back home.
    Our store was a bigger one than most with 2 buildings and a wooden coal/sand/gravel trestle serving one building they sold feeds and all sorts of building supplies in. The other was a magical 2 storey place with nearly everything in it from chewing gum to stoves, wash tubs, hardware and everything else one needed for around the house.
    We'd trade the new bottles for an ice cream from the horizontal freezer with tons of Orange Fugicles and an Almond Smash for the walk home. Great adventures for us kids in the 1950's and early '60s. Thanks for always exciting my old memories. Maryland or Tennessee it was all the same back then.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @dr.sminty7781
    @dr.sminty7781 Před 2 lety +5

    Donnie, thanks for posting this. Love your videos. They always bring back good memories. I knew of such two country stores in my youth. Those times are gone and those stores have long faded away.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @mrs.g.9816
    @mrs.g.9816 Před 2 lety +6

    The closest to a general store I've ever been in was a candy, grocery and newspaper store in the town of my birth, Ossining, NY. Comic books (like Casper and his friends) were also sold. The floor was wooden and the pressed tin ceiling had ceiling fans. A sweet old Hungarian couple, Mr. and Mrs. Palko, ran the store. They had a great penny candy counter, and I had a choice of collecting the money from pop bottles I brought in, or selecting some candies. Before I was ten years old, I usually chose the candy, and walked away with a small paper bag of candy and a comic book. So nice to while away a Sunday afternoon in my favorite "hiding place" up in the crook of a tree, eating candy and reading.

  • @jamesrobertson9761
    @jamesrobertson9761 Před 2 lety +6

    We had the “White Store” in Whittier North Carolina. It still stands directly across the road from the new post office. It’s an antique/consignment store now. That’s where we would go with Papaw to get whatever was he needed that particular day. We usually got an RC and a moon pie o try candy bar. Your videos make me feel good Mr Laws.

  • @terryqueen3233
    @terryqueen3233 Před 2 lety +5

    Well Donnie you know that brought tears to my eyes. Wishing them days wer back. I can member walking to the store above the house with a six-pack of Coca-Cola and one of them metal carriers and that was the deposit for the bottles I was bringing back and I done the same thing with my little wagon except it didn't look as good as the one in your picture and doing the same thing to get enough bottles for Penny Candy. Yessir them were the good old days and I wish they were back. Thanks for the best memories I've had in awhile. Have a great day and take care of yourself Donnie. See yle

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @terryqueen3233
      @terryqueen3233 Před 2 lety

      @@donnielaws7020 yeah Donny I haven't been on CZcams in awhile I have to drag myself away from it for a while or I would just sit and watch it all day it's kind of addictive and that's how I stay on top of my addiction. Have a great day Donnie

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      @@terryqueen3233 I understand my friend.

  • @phyllispitts6656
    @phyllispitts6656 Před 2 lety +7

    I love these little ole mountain/country road, mom & pop type stores! Seems like they had the best candies and snacks. I remember collecting pop bottles growing up. It be me my brother and a couple of friends. We’d take ‘em to a little store not too far from where we lived. We’d trade ‘em in for candy and another bottle of pop that we’d share. It wasn’t in the mountains, but it was still enjoyable.

  • @gerardhiggins1
    @gerardhiggins1 Před 2 lety +7

    Your stories trigger memories of my own childhood. Everything from the General Store to the pop bottles, to the baloney and Kool Aid, is the same as my experience growing up. That's why I love your videos so much. I only know of a hand full of these stores still around in Atlantic Canada today. But those that are left sell everything from bullets to beef jerky and baloney of course. Jokingly we call them the small town Walmarts. Because they have just about everything you'll ever need lol.

  • @johnhughes6074
    @johnhughes6074 Před 2 lety +6

    Once again, outstanding Donnie !

  • @CelebratingAppalachia
    @CelebratingAppalachia Před 2 lety +2

    Great video Donnie! I have fond memories of 3 little stores in my area that haven't operated in many years. The buildings are still there, and when I drive by them I'm always reminded of stopping at them with Granny and Pap and begging for candy and a coke 😀

  • @ElsaMae99
    @ElsaMae99 Před 2 lety +2

    A tear in my eye and smile on my face, the good ole days, not forgotten

  • @rotatothesmoothbrainandtar6189

    This video actually made me smile, and my heart sing. Just a couple weeks ago there is a general store that just opened up in a small town called jack fork and it's not very far from where I stay. After this video it makes me wanna find out about the general store.🙂

  • @BL-no7jp
    @BL-no7jp Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for sharing the better times in the Appalachia where some of these stores still exist in the mountain villages in the Cumberland plateau. Back in the late 50’s and early 60’s, these little wood floor stores with the coal burning small pot belly stoves and the old men gathered around certainly gave these stores character, like a community center. Sometimes, the bull was as tall as their stories, with lots of laughter. I would buy orange crush and chips. My grandfather would send me to get plug tobacco for him. I can still smell the aroma of these country stores. They were the life line for many poor folks who needed credit until pay day. Others charged their seed and canning supplies for food. I can never go back to the past but listening to you is the closest thing to those wonderful glory days of rural America.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @starjunkie5328
    @starjunkie5328 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember the same thing, Mr. Donnie. Every Saturday morning, rain or shine, my brother and I would begin a collection of any pop bottles we could find along the roads or even job sites, school houses, etc. Our stores were Litwacks and Herschtel's. If we had .30 or .40 cents we were rich. Always bought bubble gum and little cakes, maybe a root beer to share if we had enough. Great memories of the 60's. Thank you for this great memory.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @jasonrunyon2663
    @jasonrunyon2663 Před 2 lety +3

    Brothet Donnie, you brought a big smile to my face this morning. Especially when I saw them old squirt pop bottles, and when you mentioned getting balogna and kool aid. My Dad always calls it poor man's steak. Even to this day. Ain't nothing like fresh balogna and mater sammich with some kool aid. You made my day!!!! Thank you very much!!

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @robderham1958
    @robderham1958 Před 2 lety +3

    I just stumbled upon this. Although way before my time, I get a sense of just how great it must have been by listening to your voice and how you tell a story. I wish I could jump into the scene and experience it myself.

  • @sarasullivan4897
    @sarasullivan4897 Před 2 lety +2

    When I first came to my area, there were two little stores close by, miles off the main roads, a d that was our entertainment and socialization. One even had a large fireplace with rocking chairs scattered around. People even had charge accounts.

  • @annstephens3698
    @annstephens3698 Před 2 lety +2

    Wonderful memories Donnie! I remember taking Grandma's bottles to the store. My favorite was the Orange Crush or Cherry soda. I'd bring her back a loaf of bread or a dozen eggs. There were 3 stores within walking distance of where she lived. Yes, GOOD memories...

  • @cynthiaennis3107
    @cynthiaennis3107 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for sharing these great memories with us. 🙏🏼 I remember my mom, who would be 98 this year, God rest her soul, who also used to remember standing in front of a pot bellied stove to keep warm & told me how they had ice boxes & that the ice went in the top & their were trays or drip pans underneath to catch when it melted. She was old enough to be my grandma, but she was the very best mom I could’ve ever had! Such hard times my parents, adopted ones, had when they were growing up! There are still some country stores around here & there & especially on Cape Cod! One old country store had small bottles of pop & my favorite was Birch Beer! Those were such special times! Thanks for the great memories! 💙🙏🏼🦋

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      WOW! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @joespradley5350
    @joespradley5350 Před 2 lety +3

    I growed up in one of those stores, the house was un the back, good memories!the store now is about to fall apart,sad!

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Awesome, but sad. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @hermitbob7304
    @hermitbob7304 Před 2 lety +2

    Grandparents lived in Patriot Ohio. At the bottom of the hill about a mile, was Cecil Miller's general store. Back in the 60's and 70's Grandma used to walk us kids down there and get some real penny candy and maybe a bottle of pop. Still remember how those old wood floors creaked and the big ladder used to get items from the higher shelves.

  • @keithmaxwell2169
    @keithmaxwell2169 Před 2 lety +1

    I miss them old time's the World was much Simpler and Safer Back then thanks for the Memories Donny

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @sonnyjordan1911
    @sonnyjordan1911 Před 2 lety +1

    Love this video brings so many memories the years fly bye I am 65 now I can still remember them days thanks so much

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Glad you enjoyed it my friend. Thanks for sharing.

  • @Houndini
    @Houndini Před 2 lety +6

    Was there anything they didn't have stuffed somewhere in them old small stores? I don't think so.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      So true. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @Houndini
      @Houndini Před 2 lety

      1 I am thinking about. I could walk in looking for a left handed threaded crankshaft to flywheel bolt for a 1934 Terraplane. Oh wait just 1 second I think I got it. About 50 seconds they be back, That be 1 dime. That is $ wrote on it we got back in 1935. And would that be in 1976.

  • @annmiller154
    @annmiller154 Před 2 lety +4

    Nothing beats a fried bologna sandwich !

  • @TNgrandee3
    @TNgrandee3 Před 2 lety +1

    Yes, we do understand and remember. Watching your videos and listening to your voice almost brings this old lady to tears because I am so overwhelmed with homesickness for a time long ago. When we cross River Jorden someday.....

  • @louparry7721
    @louparry7721 Před 4 měsíci

    Yes sir, these stores were priceless . As you say, they served many different purposes. You didn't need a news paper all you had to do was spend a little time there and you would hear the latest local news. If you needed someone to help you do repairs you 'd find him there. Those stores were also social meeting places. Thanks for bringing this subject up. Sweet memories, your friend , Louise

  • @howdy627
    @howdy627 Před 2 lety +6

    My grandpa had a store , don't tell no one he had a moonshine still close by ,

  • @Catlife247
    @Catlife247 Před 2 lety +4

    Everything that means anything is fading away before our very eyes...

  • @keithcurtis166
    @keithcurtis166 Před rokem

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane Donnie,
    Life was so much simpler back then,
    It was southern Oregon & the 1960’ for me.
    This made me miss my grandparents,
    They were a source of love information & wonder.
    I still remember sitting on an old clothes hamper,
    as my grandmothers soft hands washed my hands & feet.
    She used a basin of water to wash to wash off the days dirt,
    From running & playing on the farm all day.
    Thank you again Donnie, you are a treasure…

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před rokem

      Awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing your memories. Your very welcome.

  • @roberthicks5704
    @roberthicks5704 Před 2 lety

    Hey again Donnie. I am a born and raised North Mississippi boy. I'll be 70 in September. I very well remember going to the "store" with my grandparents on Saturday when I stayed with them. I can still hear that old screen door slamming...the big containers of Jack's cookies...and the bottle drinks in the " old Coke cooler. Those truly were the good ole days. Thanks for the memories.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @kelisha6304
    @kelisha6304 Před 2 lety +3

    Hey! Love your videos! You describe my childhood! The picture at 1:23 looks very familiar. Was it taken in or near Craig County, Virginia?

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      No all Tennessee my friend. Thanks for sharing.

  • @garytaylor2084
    @garytaylor2084 Před 2 lety +1

    My great grandpap ran a store in the mountains in Northern Pennsylvania. Later on he sold the farm and moved in to a house in Kaylor, PA. I remember stopping at the store nad getting a pop from the coke a cola cooler on the porch. Glass bottles swimming in ice. Thanks for posting this memory.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @kennethboydsr3966
    @kennethboydsr3966 Před 5 měsíci

    My brothers and I collected pop bottles in the 60’s it’s hard to say how many miles we walked.Good memories thanks for these old stories .!!!!

  • @johnpoole8321
    @johnpoole8321 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for trip down memory lane Donnie. It was amazing seeing all the soda bottles and moon pies and things from my childhood. I still enjoy heating by my wood stove. Saves money nowadays as well.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @cjsrescues
    @cjsrescues Před 2 lety +1

    Walkers store right outside of Lafollette on old highway 25 had the best sandwiches. Donnie, I'm so homesick right now. Watching your videos has just put me in such a nostalgic mood. Thank you.

  • @speckledhen409
    @speckledhen409 Před 2 lety +2

    Donnie you are a fabulous storyteller. It was a gentler time and oh don't we miss those days! I too went looking for pop bottles and nothing felt better than a pocket of coins. Some days it was a hard choice to pick my treat but usually it was an assortment of penny candy and a Mounds Bar... still my favorite! Did anyone get sent to the country store with a note to buy cigarettes for their parents? I did and I must say I never enjoyed that jaunt to the store to buy them. Carrying home a gallon of milk was the worst! Thank God we have these memories to share of an America that nutured our youth. Thanks for your channel.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @searcymasonry
      @searcymasonry Před 2 lety

      i remember buying the ' mallo ' cups . like two huge reeses cups except chocolate / marshmallow . also sometimes bought the metal jumping bugs . they had a shiv of spring steel underneath that momentarily adhered to a glob of tar , then they jumped or flipped over when the tar let loose .

  • @janmcelvain8370
    @janmcelvain8370 Před 2 lety +1

    I have the fondest memories of the old country stores. The slamming screen doors with a bell to boot. I'm proud that they were part of my life.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for sharing my friend

    • @Ar0691
      @Ar0691 Před 2 lety +1

      Screen Door Slamming shut really got me!!!! LOL. Poor Grandma (whose nerves were frazzeled from screen door slamming) would come out on the porch and say "Y'all youngins go play out in the woods and stay off the porch!" LOLOLOL

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Ar0691 Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @albertsnow8835
    @albertsnow8835 Před 2 lety +1

    The old country store in the farming communities is what kept people alive. The store owner would give credit to the farmers for a portion of their crops. The amount of credit depended of how much land you had and what you were planting. Seed, fertilizer, food, fuel, furniture, dry goods and much more was found in these old mostly two story stores. My father and grandfather would buy dynamite and caps with just a signature in a log book. I bought shotgun shells for 7 cents each when I couldn't buy a full box as a 10 year old boy. No restrictions. We lived so far out we had a peddler that came by every day. He had a green 1950 Chevy pickup with a homemade store on the back. Meat, eggs, milk, bread and other foods and candy and fruit and vegetables along with needles and thread. If he didn't have it just ask and if he could find it he would have it the next day. The peddler was import because the store was several miles away and cars were in use taking men to work. Some rode tractors to the store. Those old days are gone but I still remember them till now. I wish everyone could experience those days. We would have a much better country today if they did! Thanks for letting me rattle along.

    • @donnielaws7020
      @donnielaws7020 Před 2 lety

      They helped a many a family in their time. Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @tammymoore6126
    @tammymoore6126 Před 2 lety +1

    My grandparents had one of these stores in Gilkey NC. My daddy would always say we trade here or there. Mr Laws you are a blessing