Ashbaugh's
Grocery Store
Don Rodgers
Having been born
and raised in Emmitsburg to the age of nineteen, I still
consider it to be my hometown even after being away for
over forty-five years. But, I don't live far away and
return often. Going through town recently, one of my
thoughts was about the stores that were there when I was
growing up. Although the town has more inhabitants than
it did forty-five years ago, it has fewer
"stores". It may have more business's but they
don't sell goods, they sell services. This isn't unique
to Emmitsburg -- times change and big stores have wiped
out most of the small ones not only in Emmitsburg but
all over the country.
Anyhow, my thoughts strayed to the grocery stores
Emmitsburg had when I was growing up in the forties and
fifties -- Clarence
Frailey's, Bill Rowe's, Bernie
Boyle's, American Store, and
George
Ashbaugh's.
Since we lived just four doors from Ashbaugh's, that is
where I spent a lot of my time. In the winter, heat was
supplied from a pot bellied stove behind the meat case.
There were four or five chairs around the stove and you
could come in from the cold, sit in one of the chairs,
lean back and put your feet up on the stove. I don't
think any of the other stores could boast of a
pot-bellied stove. You could sit in there, drink pop,
talk or just listen. There was usually someone coming in
to buy a little something and, of course, we knew
everyone in town anyhow so you would at least say
"Hi" to them. Most of the time the counter was
tended by George, Helen or Tick although Harry, Ruth and
Georgette took their turns also.
Most of the items were behind the counter and you ask
for them and they would be set on the counter. A large
roll of paper at the end of the counter was used to wrap
freshly sliced lunch meats and cheeses. Lunch meats
consisted of bologna, Lebanon Bologna (summer sausage)
and perhaps a ham loaf. Prices were tallied on a brown
paper bag and money rung up on a brass cash register.
George also sold fishing and hunting gear and, when
fiberglass rods first appeared on the market, George
told me he could bend it in a circle tip-to-end and not
break it. That was hard to believe and I said I would
buy it if he could do that -- he did it, I bought it
and, believe it or not, I still have the rod.
Of course there was the candy case -- it had a big
curved glass with a crack in it and a piece of adhesive
tape over the crack. The crack was there as long as I
could remember and was most likely caused by too many
kids leaning on the glass. It held quite an assortment
of candy and, for a nickel, you get a nice little bag
full.,
In the summer time, the ice man (I don't remember his
name except that I think his first name was Quincy)
would pull up in his Model T pickup and deliver ice. He
delivered ice all over town from the ice-plant next to
East End Garage. We would run to the back of the truck,
throw back the tarp covering the ice, and get one of the
slivers that had chipped off of the 50 or 100 lb blocks.
He probably delivered ice in the winter also but I
wasn't out there looking for ice chips in winter. When
the ice plant shut down Ashbaugh's built a small ice
house in the corner of the building and sold ice from
there.
I'm sure the other stores all had their charm but for me
Ashbaugh's Store will always be the one I remember most
vividly. The buildings that housed the other stores are
all still in use but Ashbaugh's building is now gone.
Have your own memories of
Emmitsburg grocery stores of old?
If so, send them to us at
history@emmitsburg.net
Read
Betty Garners reflections on Emmitsburg Grocery Stores
of Old
Read
other Stories by Don Rodgers
Back
to Previous Page >
|