photo of the week

No More Moon Pie

The grocery building stands as a testament to a bygone age.  That it hasn't been torn down speaks to our respect for the past.

at Tarry

Sunday, August 24, 2014
Pine Buff, Arkansas

Author’s Note:

Back in July of 2012 we visited tiny Tarry, Arkansas.  It was never big, but, according to reliable sources, it was “bustling” at one time.  The significant survivors in Terry are Thomas Grocery and Clowers Gin.  It has been many a year since the last Moon Pie left the store in the hands of a happy customer and decades since Tarry Gin spit out its last bale of cotton.  Nevertheless, the pair remain worthy subjects for LA photographers.

This was not the first time I had photographed the old store, but on this occasion, I took my time.  In this re-run, I have included a picture of the store which was not in the original Corndancer story.  Way back in the day, I bought a sody-water and Moon Pie a few times at the store.  It wasn’t a big deal then, but now it is.  Funny how things transmogrify from insignificant to important vestiges of one’s trek through life.  I hope you enjoy this story retold.

Joe Dempsey 

PS: At the Weekly Grist companion to this story, you’ll see a fine old barn near the store, but well concealed from normal traffic.  Not many get to see it.  Look at Weekly Grist and see it.   J.

the store at Tarry

Dating Back to 1922

The grocery remained in business until late in the 20th Century.

To Tarry at Tarry

First Published on Sunday, July 22, 2012
Pine Buff, Arkansas

While Tarry, Arkansas, was never a metropolis, back in the day — we're talking the first half of the previous century here — it was a bustling L.A. (lower Arkansas) town.  Tarry had four stores, a school, a big gin, a lodge, a nice spring-fed fishing pond nearby — and probably an officially recognized town drunk.

That was back in the day. Today, with the old town bypassed by the main highway, you've gotta be going there to get there so to speak.  A couple of the stores, long empty, and the gin building still stand.  The feature of this story is Thomas Grocery.  Back in 2009, we wrote about West Grocery, the other still-standing store.  Find a another story on West Grocery at Weekly Grist for the Eyes and Mind.

We know for a fact that Thomas Grocery was alive, well, and selling goods in 1922.  We strongly suspect that the store had been in business long before that.  I stumbled across the Thomas Grocery in the early sixties, not long after my arrival here in LA.  I dropped in on several occasions for an RC Cola and a Moon Pie, one of the basic Southern food groups.  We are told that the business ceased operation in the late eighties or early nineties.  For its age, it appears in good condition.  In its time, it was the post office, school bus stop, and gossip central for the community.

It's the same old story.  The social and business dynamics of mid and late twentieth century lifestyles pulled down the left turn signal, whipped into the passing lane, and zoomed around small town America at warp speed.  Unfortunately, more was left behind than stores, schools, and businesses.  A lot of values that were drummed between the ears of children in Tarry and millions of other small towns were summarily abandoned — and today we are paying the price for that.

tarry-a

Clowers Gin

Not far from Thomas Grocery, at around three stories tall, what's left of the former Clowers Gin still stands, guarded by a healthy growth of LA weeds.  Like most other unused buildings of any size, it is now a stopgap repository of jettisoned personal property, parked there before being finally junked, sold, or stolen.

As most people know, a gin separates cotton lint from cotton seed.  It spits out seed on one side and lint on the other.  But there is a third by-product known to me as "cotton trash," which consisted of stray leaves, boll parts, sticks, weeds, rocks, Prince Albert cans, or whatever else made it into the cotton trailers.  A blower system in the gin picked up said trash and blew it to a trash pile, usually a hundred feet or more from the gin, where it was ignited.  Those things would smolder for weeks and stank to high heaven.  The pipes below are what's left of the trash transfer system at Clowers Gin.

tarry-c

Benign and Utilitarian

Although these tubes have the ominous appearance of paintball cannons that hurl projectiles the size of a volleyball at the neighbors, the original purpose was benign and utilitarian.  See the explanation in the paragraph above the photo.

What was Tarry is gone and won't come back.  Tarry, like hundreds of thousands of similarly now decimated American communities, had something to offer that you can't buy.  Hopefully, there is enough of it still floating around in the gene pool to make a difference.  We simply need to nurture the genes.

PS:  The fishing pond survives today.

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Photo Notes

Nikon D300, ISO 200, tripod mounted, Nikkor VR 18-200mm f3.5-5.6 G ED; Thomas Grocery, 1/160@f10; gin, 1/250@f11; exhaust tubes, same as gin.

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at Weekly Grist for the Eyes and Mind:
a few looks at an unusual old barn,
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