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The Appalachian Mountains are among the oldest mountain ranges on Earth. They have withstood the changes of millennia, and over the final weekend of September 2024, the Appalachians sustained a monumental event that forever altered their landscapes, their communities, and the lives of the people who call them home. ...read more
Inspiration | Local Flavor | Mast in the News
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You could say that 2024 has been a year filled with contradictions. The awesome power and determination of water to foment destruction from the gulf shores to the Appalachian Mountains played out around us. The wrath of the storm was followed by rivers of people and supplies, truckloads of hay and rocks, warm hugs and encouraging words. ...read more
Adventure | Inspiration | Local Flavor | Travel
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Each year, Columbia Sportswear teams with Mast General Store to gather gently worn coats and jackets for our neighbors who need them for the coldest part of the year. Columbia has already jumpstarted this year’s collection by donating jackets for Hurricane Helene relief! ...read more
Inspiration | Local Flavor
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... Our favorite foods! Food is universal because everybody’s got ta eat! And the last two months of the year are filled with more than their fair share of family meals, work gatherings, special outings to favorite restaurants, tins filled with homemade cookies and fudge, and the anticipation of food traditions handed down from generation to generation ...read more
At Home | Recipes
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Even before we bought the Mast General Store, we were taken by the beauty of Valle Crucis. We’ve heard people describe the drive out Broadstone Road as traveling through a time portal. In the 1970s, fields in the river bottoms would be filled with tobacco, cabbage, or high with hay to feed cattle that were grazing in the summer pasture. ...read more
Local Flavor | Mast Family Favorites
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The lucky few who have seen the Earth from a different perspective – astronauts - all echo the same viewpoint upon their return. Yuri Gagarin, a Russian cosmonaut and the first human to go to space, commented, “Orbiting Earth in the spaceship, I saw how beautiful our planet is. People, let us preserve and increase this beauty, not destroy it.”
Behind the Scenes | Inspiration
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The mayor of nearby Banner Elk is quoted at a celebration of the E.T. & W.N.C Railroad finally making its way to Boone in 1918…"I remember when the only way a person could get to Boone was to be born there." Tweetsie, as she was known to the locals, opened up a whole new world for the town. Daniel Boone, the town’s namesake, used a series of hunting cabins in the area as he was exploring and blazing a trail for others to follow across the mountain in the 1700s. You can still experience the time of ol’ Dan’l in the cabins at the Hickory Ridge Living History Museum.
Read more ...The Mast Store in Downtown Boone resides in two buildings constructed in the early years of the 20th century. Many a memory was made and shared in the old Hunt’s Department Store, which is the main part of the Boone location. Its Y-shaped staircase has carried thousands of footsteps upstairs to find overalls and footwear. Today, it’s hard to find the old drain pipes for the sinks in the beauty shop once located inside, but what you will find is eager people ready to help you locate just what you are looking for and to share some helpful hints along the way.
Read less ...The Mast Store in Boone is sometimes referred to as the Old Boone Mercantile. It has a long and varied history featuring a virtual parade of businesses. The location is actually two buildings that work together as one, so we'll take a look at them separately.
The red-brick building was constructed in 1922 as the Johnson-Jones Building and was a part of a three-building complex that included a garage (that's now the next door lawyers' offices). When it opened the tenants included the Peoples Bank and Trust Company on the right side of the building, while the left side was occupied by a furniture store owned by J. M. Moretz. The upstairs area was host to the Watauga Telephone Company, which was later purchased by Bell Telephone and moved to a private home in 1928, a lumber merchant, and a dentist.
The Mast Store in Boone is sometimes referred to as the Old Boone Mercantile. It has a long and varied history featuring a virtual parade of businesses. The location is actually two buildings that work together as one, so we'll take a look at them separately.
The red-brick building was constructed in 1922 as the Johnson-Jones Building and was a part of a three-building complex that included a garage (that's now the next door lawyers' offices). When it opened the tenants included the Peoples Bank and Trust Company on the right side of the building, while the left side was occupied by a furniture store owned by J. M. Moretz. The upstairs area was host to the Watauga Telephone Company, which was later purchased by Bell Telephone and moved to a private home in 1928, a lumber merchant, and a dentist.
The furniture area was vacated in 1925 and Boone Clothing, which was also somewhere in the building, moved out making room for the Spainhour-Sydnor Dry Goods Company in the left side of the building. Spainhours was there for a short time before moving across the street into the Horton Building, home to the Horton Hotel now.
Several more apparel businesses cycled through including Harris Brothers (later Harris-Gaither), the Fashion Shop, and an alterations shop and Lillian Mae Beauty Shoppe moved in and out before Belk-White took over the space in 1935. Belk's in the early days had many partners throughout the state and would allow their partner's name to be attached to the store, like Belk-Leggett or Belk-Hudson.
In the meantime, the Peoples Bank went insolvent in 1933, a victim of the stock market crash in 1929. It was one of two banks in downtown with the other, Watauga County Bank, located just diagonal from this location. One of our long-time lawyers in town said that his wife got the marble countertop where the tellers would count change when the bank's assets were sold off. She used it to make mints!
When Belk-White moved in, the two rooms on the bottom floor were joined for the first time, but the store's stay was short. It moved into a new building right across the street in 1937. Around that same time, the building was sold to Roger McGuire, who moved in his Rudemar Beauty Salon and re-opened it as McGuire's Beauty Salon. Other tenants in the building around 1938 included the Quality Shoe Store and Bare's Fair Store, which was managed by Guy Hunt (he figures prominently in this location's history).
A fire on the roof of the building damaged the upstairs apartments and Bare's, but Boone Photo, the beauty shop, and the shoe store suffered very little damage. In 1940, an RCA recording studio is opened, and in 1941 Kermit Dacus moved his radio shop into the building, possibly in the recording studio. He also starts broadcasting from WDRS, a bootleg radio station. Later, he moves the radio shop and station to the shops at the Appalachian Theatre. In 1943 Dacus was arrested on federal charges of operating an illegal radio station.
The relationship between Guy Hunt and G. T. Bare of Bare's Fair Shop dissolved in 1943. The Fair Shop moved out to another location on West King Street and Hunt began operating Hunt's Department Store in the same space previously occupied by Bare's. After repairs from a fire that damaged the shops on the second floor, also in 1944, Hunt's took over the entire building and operated for decades before selling the building to the Coopers in 1987. The Mast Store opened in 1988.
As an aside, while performing building maintenance and putting on a new roof, evidence of the fires was discovered in the upstairs shoe/outdoor department. It was also evident that repairs were made quickly because some of the roof joists were barely – if at all – attached to each other when crossing a span. Yikes! Another side note, the small window on the front of the building between the two entry doors was once a door. Behind it, a staircase led to the second-floor apartments/businesses.
Now, let's take a look at the Candy Barrel side of the Mast Store in Downtown Boone. It was built as a separate building by W. R. “Ralph” Winkler in 1927. The original thought was to use the building as a garage and showroom for vehicle sales, but before the building was complete, he had changed his mind. It was instead leased to the J.B. Dick & Co. 5¢ & 10¢. The second floor was occupied by well-appointed apartments.
In 1933, the Johnson & Stuart Store moved in; it was another five and dime. The Lovely Lady Beauty Shoppe moved in as well, probably on the second floor. Then, in 1938, the W. W. Mac Co. dime store was in the space, and it was followed by the M. M. Company, a piece goods shop, in 1943.
By 1945 another store moved in – Colvard Auto Parts. It changed its name in 1948 to Blue Ridge Supply Co. The International Resistive Company (IRC) used the building as a training location in early 1954 before completion of its factory on Greenway Road (Did you know that IRC made some of the components that were used on the Space Shuttle?). Then in April of 1954, Craven Furniture moved in after a fire destroyed its building in another part of town. The business was sold shortly thereafter, and the new owners held a “name that business” contest resulting in Centre Furniture operating in the building until 1959.
The decade of the 1960s saw a lot of turnover in the building. Keplars Soda Shop was on the first floor in 1960 and closed in 1961. Western Auto used the store as a toy annex for the 1961 Christmas season. Several rummage sales were held there in 1962. Blue Ridge Shoe Company used the space for training before opening its manufacturing plant on Greenway Road near IRC in 1963.
From 1963 through the mid-1980s, businesses occupying this location are difficult to track but includes Mountaineer Town & Campus. The Candy Barrel moved into the building in 1988. At that time it was a separate business owned by another couple in the Valle Crucis community. The upstairs part of the building was the mercantile department for the Mast Store. In 1997, the Mast Store made the Candy Barrel a permanent part of the store's collection of goods.
PHOTO CREDITS:
*Belk-White photo is a screenshot from the 1936 H. Lee Waters Film showing people in Boone and the surrounding area.
*Hunt’s Department Store in Downtown Boone, Looking West, courtesy of the Palmer Blair Collection, Sarah Lynn Spencer, Digital Watauga Project (Hunt's Department Store and Blue Ridge Supply, circa 1952)
*Hunt's Department Store with stucco facade, probably taken in the 1950s.
*Downtown Boone Looking West on King St., courtesy of the Palmer Blair Collection, Sarah Lynn Spencer, Digital Watauga Project (Craven Furniture, Blue Ridge Supply, and Hunt's Department Store, taken circa 1954)
*After the Snowfall on King St., Boone, NC, Circa 1956, courtesy of the Palmer Blair Collection, Sarah Lynn Spencer, Digital Watauga Project (Hunt's and Centre Furniture Co.)
*Wagon Train in Boone, Ca. 1973, courtesy of the Linda Miller Collection, Digital Watauga Project (Mountaineer Town & Campus Men's Apparel)
*The Mast Store in Downtown Boone circa today.
Mast Store is grateful for the research of Dr. Eric Plaag. His efforts helped us share a richer history of this location.
Read less ...Boone is the Heart of the High Country. Home to Appalachian State University, it and the surrounding area has cultural offerings usually found in much larger places, but ours has hometown appeal.
Boone is the Heart of the High Country. Home to Appalachian State University, it and the surrounding area has cultural offerings usually found in much larger places, but ours has hometown appeal. Read less ...
There are so many questions to wonder about these days. Like, who was the first person brave enough to eat a chicken’s egg? Or why do some people think cilantro tastes like soap and others can’t get enough of it? How did certain colors come to represent the Volunteers, Paladins, Hokies, etc.? Or a burning question that we like to argue about, who thinks the college conference re-alignment is a good idea? And that question can lead to so many other questions. ...read more
Local Flavor
Annex - Valle Crucis | Boone | Columbia | Greenville | Knoxville | Roanoke | Original - Valle Crucis | Waynesville | Winston-Salem
Did you know the State of North Carolina’s official folk dance is clogging? Yep, the North Carolina General Assembly adopted clogging as the state’s folk dance and shagging as the state’s official popular dance in an act executed on July 20, 2005. That’s recent history, but the roots of clogging extend to the country’s colonial period and even before. Photo courtesy of Joe Shannon's Mountain Home Music and Lonnie Webster. ...read more
Local Flavor | Travel
Asheville | Annex - Valle Crucis | Boone | Hendersonville | Knoxville | Roanoke | Original - Valle Crucis | Waynesville
Fall is here! The bridge between summer and fall is full of delicious possibilities: the last heirloom tomatoes and sweet corn linger, pears and sweet potatoes start to arrive, and more apples than you can name can all be found at your local farmers’ market. ...read more
Local Flavor | Gardening | At Home
Asheville | Annex - Valle Crucis | Boone | Columbia | Greenville | Hendersonville | Knoxville | Roanoke | Original - Valle Crucis | Waynesville | Winston-Salem
There are so many questions to wonder about these days. Like, who was the first person brave enough to eat a chicken’s egg? Or why do some people think cilantro tastes like soap and others can’t get enough of it? How did certain colors come to represent the Volunteers, Paladins, Hokies, etc.? Or a burning question that we like to argue about, who thinks the college conference re-alignment is a good idea? And that question can lead to so many other questions. ...read more
Local Flavor
Annex - Valle Crucis | Boone | Columbia | Greenville | Knoxville | Roanoke | Original - Valle Crucis | Waynesville | Winston-Salem
Did you know the State of North Carolina’s official folk dance is clogging? Yep, the North Carolina General Assembly adopted clogging as the state’s folk dance and shagging as the state’s official popular dance in an act executed on July 20, 2005. That’s recent history, but the roots of clogging extend to the country’s colonial period and even before. Photo courtesy of Joe Shannon's Mountain Home Music and Lonnie Webster. ...read more
Local Flavor | Travel
Asheville | Annex - Valle Crucis | Boone | Hendersonville | Knoxville | Roanoke | Original - Valle Crucis | Waynesville
Fall is here! The bridge between summer and fall is full of delicious possibilities: the last heirloom tomatoes and sweet corn linger, pears and sweet potatoes start to arrive, and more apples than you can name can all be found at your local farmers’ market. ...read more
Local Flavor | Gardening | At Home
Asheville | Annex - Valle Crucis | Boone | Columbia | Greenville | Hendersonville | Knoxville | Roanoke | Original - Valle Crucis | Waynesville | Winston-Salem