Early Grocery and Retail Stores of Garden Home

This article examines the grocery and retail stores of early Garden Home:

Tom Shreve, 2023.

1936 aerial - heart of Garden Home from the OER Station to the Johnson Texaco

1936 aerial – heart of Garden Home from the OER Station to the Johnson Texaco

Nichols Store

See Lumen H. Nichols and Ann M. Nichols.
See Memoir of Dorothy Lois Upchurch (1919-2009).

The original store in Garden Home, the Nichols Store was operated by Lumen and Ann Nichols. In 1882, the store gained the original Garden Home Post Office, so the store was constructed some time before 1882. Dorothy Lois Upchurch guessed the store could have been built as early as the 1850s. The single-story Nichols Store was located on or near the location of current-day Dairy Queen, also the site of the White Store.

Ginny Mapes notes in Garden Home: The way it was that “Chris Jager moved the old Nichols building across the road to the Huffaker place” which was located just west of the school property.  He then built the two-story white building on that SE corner of the intersection of what became Garden Home Road and Oleson Road (current-day Dairy Queen).

White Store

See Mildred Stevens.
See Memoir of Dorothy Lois Upchurch (1919-2009).
See History of Garden Home written by students in 1962.

The two-story White Store was built by Chris Jager on the site of the single-story Nichols Store. This structure had an exterior porch with steps, upper balcony, and louvered windows. These features are visible in the 1911 Garden Home School student body, but are absent in later pictures of the White Store.

The White Store went by many names and owners over the years, but doesn’t seem to ever have been formally named the White Store. Garden Home residents called it the White Store because it was painted white, in contrast to the Red Store just east down road.

  • Nichols Store and Post Office (1850s to 1930s). Owned by Lumen and Ann Nichols. [source]
  • Jager’s Store (1930s). Chris Jager provided care to Ann Nichols, including running the store, for a number of years. Ann Nichols adopted Chris Jager, and when Ann Nichols passed away, Chris Jager inherited the store. [source]
  • Larsen’s Store (1930s to 1936) [source]
  • Upchurch Store (1936 to 1944) [source]
  • Throckmorton’s Store (1944 to 1950s) [source]
  • Wilson’s Grocery (1950s). We have a photograph from the early 1950s where the sign clearly reads Wilson’s Grocery. [see photo gallery]
  • Garden Home Grocery (burned in 1956). The sign now reads Garden Home Grocery.

Red Store

See Vivian DuPue Bosley.
See Erich and Burnace Porshman / Bryse-Harvey and Nahstoll CENTURY Home.
See Clark Stephens.
See Garden Home Post Office.

The Red Store was located on the south side of SW Garden Home Rd kitty-corner to the cannery (currently the Old Market Pub and Brewery). For a few years, interrupted by Prohibition, a tavern stood adjacent to the Red Store (to the west) [source].

The Red Store was also called the Red and White Store, because it was part of a chain of stores called Red & White Stores. The Red and White Store on Greenburg Rd was also part of the Red & White Stores chain of stores.

The Red Store was the store closest to the Garden Home Junction of the Oregon Electric Railway. Given the location of the Red Store right by the train junction suggests the Red Store opened sometime near or after 1908 when the station opened, but we don’t have a definitive date on the opening of the Red Store other than it was before 1911. From aerial photos by Otto Arndt, we can see the Red Store building still stood in 1957, although the store itself went out of business in the 1930s.

Dorothy Upchurch recalled that [the Red Store] was owned by the Smiths and housed the post office, and Marge Smith was the postmaster.

Red & White Store

See Eickmeyer Red & White store on Greenburg Rd.

The Red & White Store was located on SW Greenburg Rd at a Oregon Electric Railway station.

Seed and Feed

See Mildred Stevens.
See Carolyn Ernstrom Welch.

Aerial photography reveals that the Seed & Feed was partially constructed, but missing a roof for the second story in 1954 photos, but the roof was complete by 1957 fly over.

Carolyn Ernstrom Welch recalls the Seed and Feed store:

1949 or 1950 – Roy and Mina Ernstrom bought the Garden Home Feed and Seed Store on the corner of Garden Home Road and 74th Street from Mr. and Mrs. Williams. They kept the store open for only a year or so, and Roy Ernstrom started a Body and Fender shop (car repair shop) in the same building. Within the next six years, Roy built another concrete block one-story building and rented it to a mechanic (Tom). There was also a barber shop around 1957 (I think called Ray’s Barber Shop) on the Garden Home Road side of the main building. The Elks Club bought the main building in the early sixties for their lodge and then eventually sold it to another party. This bright blue building currently houses Scotty’s. I don’t know if Scotty’s owns the building.

The Seed & Feed building now houses the Dugout Sports Bar and Grill and Grove Custom Homes upstairs. Prior tenets include Scotty’s Bar and Grill, Local Leaf Dispensary, and the Elk’s Lodge. George Babbitt recalled: Scotty’s building housed Roy’s auto body shop and Ray Wilson’s barber shop.

Lamb’s Thriftway

See Colin Lamb and the history of Lamb’s Garden Home Thriftway.
See Garden Home Market Place (formerly Lamb’s Thriftway).

Forrest Lamb opened Lamb’s Thriftway in Garden Home in 1957. The two aerials photographs in the gallery below were taken in 1954 and 1957 and much changed in those short three years:

  • Lamb’s is constructed (with a new gas station on the corner).
  • Gust Johnson’s Texaco station is replaced with a new building.
  • The White Store becomes an empty lot (having burned in 1956).

The 1957 Thriftway included strip mall and a gas station. Businesses in the strip mall included The Big Tomato, the pharmacy and Post Office, and a hardware store. The photos in the gallery below were taken in 1994 and 1995, just before these structures were demolished to build the current day structure in 1996. In the first photo in the gallery below (with the Big Tomato sign), you can see a white and yellow sign behind the strip mall – that’s where the Lamb’s Thriftway new 1995 grocery store was located (current day building).

In 1996, Colin Lamb (son of founder Forrest Lamb) built a new, larger building for the grocery store just east of the original building. The original strip mall building was replaced with a larger strip mall.

In 2015, Colin sold the grocery store (but not the building or land). The grocery store continued on for several years branded as Garden Home Marketplace, before the parent company went out of business. As of this writing (2023), Lamb’s Thriftway has become Trader Joe’s grocery, Dogtopia pet daycare, MudBay pet supply.

 

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