North Carolina
9 Old-Timey General Stores In North Carolina
The old-timey general stores in North Carolina have outlasted highways and big-box retailers across a century of change. They remain gathering places at the heart of their communities, where shelves of necessities and curiosities sit alongside front porches that still invite passers-by to slow down.
Walking into Mast General Store in Valle Crucis means stepping onto creaking wood floors where coffee still costs a nickel on the honor system. Shiloh General Store in Hamptonville serves made-to-order sandwiches and homemade whoopie pies with a view of horse-drawn buggies passing on the road outside. E.H. Montgomery General Store in Gold Hill puts bluegrass musicians on the porch of an 1840s-era mercantile that once supplied a gold-mining boom town. Whether found in the Blue Ridge Mountains or the Outer Banks, these general stores anchor their towns and reward anyone willing to pull over and stay awhile.
Mast General Store
The Mast General Store in Valle Crucis has been a major part of this Blue Ridge mountain community since 1883, when Henry Taylor founded it as the Taylor General Store. W.W. Mast bought a half share in 1897, took full ownership in 1913, and ran the store for 60 years under a slogan that needed no marketing department: “If you can’t buy it here, you don’t need it.” The inventory backed up the claim, covering everything from cradles to caskets. A working post office still operates inside the store, a direct line to the days when the mercantile served as the community’s information hub and mail stop. The store earned a spot on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, closed briefly in 1977, and then reopened in 1980 under John and Faye Cooper. Today, Mast General Store is employee-owned with multiple locations across the region, but the original Valle Crucis storefront remains the flagship.
What draws visitors now is the sheer breadth of the place. Over 500 kinds of old-fashioned candy line the shelves alongside outdoor gear, local crafts, books, regional honey, and that famous nickel cup of coffee, still offered on the honor system. The wooden floors creak underfoot, and the porch invites lingering with a view of the surrounding mountains that has not changed much since the 19th century.
Washburn’s General Store
In Rutherford County, Washburn’s General Store holds the title of North Carolina’s oldest continuously operating family-owned retail business. It was established in 1831 by Benjamin Washburn as a tavern and mercantile on the Lincoln-Rutherford stagecoach line. Now in its fifth generation of Washburn family ownership, the store has survived fires, economic upheaval, and the total transformation of American retail without losing its identity. The Washburn family also founded the Bostic Bank in 1917, a local institution that survived the Great Depression while other banks failed, cementing the family’s role in the region’s economic life. The current building, the fourth to house the business, dates from the late 1920s, and the 63-acre Washburn Historic District, including the store and the family mansion, joined the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.
The shelves today hold hardware, gardening supplies, seeds, clothing, cookware, toys, kerosene lamps, and washboards; a mix that has not fundamentally changed in generations. A logbook sits near the counter, signed by visitors around the world, and the sandwiches have developed their own local reputation worth the stop.
E.H. Montgomery General Store
Gold Hill was a booming 19th-century gold-mining town, and the E.H. Montgomery General Store, built in the 1840s, sits on Main Street as the most authentic surviving relic of that era. The 850-foot-deep Randolph Mine and the 453-foot-deep Barnhardt Mine once drove the local economy, and the store supplied miners and their families with goods and a place to gather. Today, the entire street functions as the Historic Gold Hill shopping and dining district, with the Montgomery Store operating as a living museum and mercantile rolled into one.
Vintage items and classic candies fill the shelves, cold glass-bottle Cokes sweat in the cooler, and local honey and apple butter round out the edible offerings. Bluegrass musicians play on the porch, and the store keeps limited hours, Friday through Sunday, which only adds to the sense that stepping inside means stepping into a preserved pocket of the 19th century.
Shiloh General Store
In Yadkin County, the Shiloh General Store reflects the Amish community that settled the area in the 1980s, bringing with them traditions that now feel entirely native to the landscape. Hamptonville first took shape in the late 1700s and officially became a town in 1818, but the stretch around Brooks Crossroads, where the store sits, now hums with a rhythm set by horse-drawn buggies and agricultural seasons. The region falls within the Yadkin Valley wine region, but the store itself keeps the focus on the handmade and the homegrown.
Inside, the deli counter turns out made-to-order sandwiches, and the bakery case holds homemade whoopie pies that justify the trip on their own. Shelves carry spices, jams, jellies, local cheeses, Amish-baked bread, handmade toys, and even furniture. Outside, the expansive front porch provides the seating, and the view includes the regular passage of buggies on the road, a detail that places Hamptonville in a slower century without feeling like a performance.
Saxapahaw General Store
The Saxapahaw General Store opened in 2008, a relative newcomer by this list’s standards, but its arrival marked a turning point for a former mill town that had been in decline since the Dixie Mill closed two decades earlier. The store occupies part of the restored Saxapahaw Rivermill complex along the Haw River, and its success helped fuel a rural renaissance that earned national attention from leading national publications. The old “Saxaco” gas pump still stands outside, a visual anchor tying the new operation to the town’s industrial past.
The concept inside departs from the traditional general store model without completely abandoning the spirit. The kitchen produces locally sourced breakfast, lunch, and dinner, pulling ingredients from over 135 North Carolina farms and businesses. Craft beer and wine sit alongside organic groceries, and the result is a gourmet restaurant and convenience store hybrid that serves as both a community hub and a destination in its own right.
Madison Dry Goods
The building at Madison Dry Goods started its life around 1908 as the Hotel Sterling and Penn Hardware Company, later housed the T.B. Knight Funeral Home, and in 1929 became the site where the embalmers prepared the victims of the Charlie Lawson family murders, a Christmas Day tragedy that remains one of North Carolina’s most haunting crimes. The second floor now holds a museum dedicated to that history, a draw for true-crime visitors since well before Netflix featured the location on 28 Days Haunted.
The mercantile operates downstairs in a more conventional mode, though the atmosphere carries the weight of the building’s past. Quality-branded apparel and outdoor clothing share shelf space with old-timey candies, jellies, jams, local honey, pickles, ground cornmeal, and glass-bottle sodas pulled from an antique Coke box. Checkers games and rocking chairs require lingering, and the Briggs Family Kitchen hot bar and bakery runs from Wednesday through Saturday for those who want a meal with their history. Madison Dry Goods has drawn visitors to this Piedmont town since 1995, and the combination of mercantile and museum gives it a character that no new construction could replicate.
Lee Robinson General Store
The Lee Robinson General Store opened on Hatteras Island in 1948, serving generations of Outer Banks visitors and locals from its spot along the narrow barrier island. A replica building, constructed in the 1990s, preserved the old-time look after the original structure aged beyond repair. The location, a short hop from the ferry to Ocracoke Island, places the store directly in the path of beachgoers, anglers, and weekenders working their way down the coast.
The inventory spans the practical and the impulse-buy in equal measure: groceries, gourmet items, fine wines, fudge, glass-bottled Cokes, books, magazines, hats, sweatshirts, boogie boards, jewelry, beach supplies, and sunscreen. Bike rentals are available from the store, and an upstairs gift gallery adds a layer of browsing. The combination of necessities and vacation curiosities mirrors the rhythm of the Outer Banks itself, where the line between daily life and getaway blurs.
The Old Store at Grassy Creek
Opened in the early 1900s, the Old Store at Grassy Creek in Ashe County functioned as a post office, a doctor’s office, and a community hub before the term “community hub” existed. Grassy Creek earned the distinction of being the first rural district in the United States included on the National Register of Historic Places, a designation it received in 1976. The store retains much of its original decor, and the walls tell the story of the community through words and photographs, functioning as an informal archive of Appalachian life.
Local foods, crafts, gifts, and Appalachian-made products fill the shelves, with Grassy Creek and Virginia-Carolina High School merchandise nodding to local loyalties. Seasonal operations extend the store’s reach: self-pick blueberries run from June through August, and pre-cut Christmas trees sell from November through December alongside a Christmas tree education center. A large deck with rocking chairs, live music, and community events keeps the store active as a gathering place beyond the retail hours.
Patterson’s Mill Country Store
Patterson’s Mill Country Store in Durham County takes its name from a general store that operated at Patterson’s Mill in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, but the current building carries its own story. Walter Curtis Hudson, a grandson of Richard Stanford Leigh, began constructing the structure around 1918 using salvaged materials pulled from demolished historic buildings across the area. Hudson raised produce, ran a dairy farm, and worked at Liggett and Myers Tobacco company while building what would become one of the most unusual country store buildings in the region: a Craftsman-style structure with broad arches and a wrap-around porch.
Today, the building operates as an antique mall and museum experience, with the owners’ extensive collections displayed throughout to replicate the look and feel of the old mill-country store that inspired the name. Genuine artifacts fill the rooms, and the unusual architecture rewards a closer look even before stepping inside.
North Carolina’s Porch-Standard Time
These nine old-timey general stores operate on a different clock than the rest of the state, and that is the entire appeal. Whether you’re going for the nickel coffee at Mast General Store or to sign the logbook of five generations at Washburn’s in Bostic, you will slow down to their time. Each of the mercantiles rewards the traveler who understands that the best stops are not the fastest ones. Spring and fall bring the best porch weather, and the rocking chairs are already there waiting.
North Carolina
SIGN: Pass Duke’s Rescue Act to Protect Dogs and Cats in North Carolina
235 Signatures Collected
PETITION TARGET: North Carolina House Speaker Destin Hall and Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Berger
A pit bull named Duke, who spent the first four years of his life chained outside in Windsor, North Carolina, was found emaciated, anemic, suffering from heartworm disease, and living in filth, according to local news. Chained nearby were several other neglected dogs and the skeletal remains of his sister, Minnie, who reportedly died of starvation.
Following the discovery of Minnie’s death, all the dogs on the property were rescued—but many dogs aren’t so lucky.
To help prevent tragic cases like this, North Carolina lawmakers introduced Duke’s Rescue Act, which would prohibit outdoor tethering of animal companions in extreme weather, establish minimum care standards for dogs and cats, and give authorities clearer direction and better tools to help animals left without the care they need.
If enacted, those who violate the law would face a Class 3 misdemeanor for a first offense and a Class 2 misdemeanor for any subsequent offense. It would also provide funding for public education, so guardians responsible for dogs and cats can understand the basic care the law would require.
The suffering Duke, Minnie, and the other dogs on that property allegedly endured should never have been allowed to happen. No dog or cat should be left without food, clean water, proper shelter, or veterinary care — or left chained for years, forced to watch a companion die in front of them.
Sign our petition urging North Carolina House Speaker Destin Hall and Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Berger to help advance Duke’s Rescue Act so North Carolina can pass clear minimum care standards for dogs and cats.
North Carolina
Saving homes or beaches? NC faces tough call on seawall ban
A new report says placing hardened structures along the N.C. oceanfront could help with chronic erosion woes. But they come with plenty of risk.
North Carolina’s love-hate relationship with hardened structures along the oceanfront is heating up.
From the Outer Banks in the north to Ocean Isle Beach in the south, many portions of North Carolina’s 320 miles of oceanfront are dealing with erosion woes that are threatening homes, infrastructure and coastal economies.
Coastal officials have long complained that the state’s ban, although softened in recent years, on hardened structures along the oceanfront like seawalls and jetties leaves them with few options beyond expensive beach nourishment to deal with the shifting sands.
Environmentalists and others say the ban protects the natural beauty and feel of North Carolina’s beaches while reinforcing that there are simply some places that we shouldn’t be developing. They also note that hardened structures often do little but move the erosion woes to other parts of the beachfront.
In June 2026, the N.C. Coastal Resources Commission’s Science Panel released its draft report on the effects of hardened structures on the coast. The report, while not taking sides on the state’s four-decade-long ban on permanent structures along the beachfront, is meant to provide guidance for regulators and policymakers as they debate the emotionally charged issue.
How did we get here?
North Carolina’s existing rules on oceanfront construction are largely based on using a 30-year setback rule. The thinking was that a 30-year window of sand and dunes in front of a structure would give homeowners and local communities a chance to come up with a long-term solution if the ocean started encroaching on oceanfront properties.
But structures these days often last longer than 30 years, and the environmental conditions of the 1970s aren’t the same as those the coast is facing today.
Storms are bigger and more powerful than those of last century thanks to climate change, and sea-level rise is increasing. Sea level is expected to rise by a foot or more by 2050 from today’s levels, amplifying the impacts of tidal flooding and storms that aren’t even tropical in nature.
As environmental conditions grow more challenging, oceanfront homes are tumbling into the water. In Rodanthe and Buxton on the Outer Banks, more than 30 homes have collapsed since 2020. Closer to Wilmington, sandbags now line stretches of beachfront in North Topsail Beach, Figure Eight Island and Ocean Isle Beach, offering the last line of protection for million-dollar homes.
‘Maintain a cautious approach’
With pressure mounting on officials to come up with some solutions to disappearing beaches, the science panel was asked to look into shoreline management, both in N.C. and other states, and examine the pros and cons of different measures − particularly the use of oceanfront hardened structures.
“Recent erosion impacts in several North Carolina oceanfront communities have brought shoreline management issues back to the forefront, prompting questions about whether alternatives to beach nourishment should be considered to address chronic erosion,” states the report.
But the science panel makes it crystal clear that hardening the shoreline to prevent the natural movement of beaches and dunes landward will likely lead to, first, a narrower and then likely a disappearing beach in front of the structure. Groins and jetties, while helping the beach adjacent to them, also end up “starving” beach areas downdrift of the structures. The volunteer panel, however, also noted that securing the shoreline could offer coastal communities an economic lifeline.
“The panel therefore recommends that North Carolina maintain a cautious approach to any expansion of the use of hardened structures and that any major reconsideration of the state’s oceanfront management policies include a broad and comprehensive assessment of the physical, ecological, recreational, and economic consequences of expanded use, including consideration of who will likely benefit and who will likely suffer adverse effects, prior to policy modification,” the report states.
Legislators getting involved
As erosion threatens more oceanfront properties, infrastructure, and the coast’s vital tourism industry, legislators are taking notice and proposing solutions.
A bill working its way though the N.C. General Assembly could permanently change the face of the state’s coast. Senate Bill 1009, would lift the state ban on hardened structures, including seawalls, jetties and terminal groins, low-slung structures built perpendicular to the shoreline that helps trap sand in areas of high erosion, such as near inlets.
Proponents of the legislation say times along the coast have changed, and state policy needs to match the new realities that residents, visitors and local officials are dealing with along the oceanfront.
While current rules push beach communities to favor nourishment, enhanced dune systems, and other “natural” approaches to shoreline management, some say more permanent and immediate solutions are sometimes required.
Beach nourishment isn’t cheap, with even small projects costing millions, and can be a regulatory challenge if you have to find compatible beach sand that is often in short supply. In places like the Outer Banks, officials have said trying to maintain more than 80 miles of beachfront simply isn’t feasible under current rules and regulations. And to be truly effective, nourishments have to be repeated every few years due to natural erosion and storm-related events − heaping more pressure on state and local budgets that already face a lot of funding priorities.
Environmentalists and coastal advocates say installing hardened structures to control erosion means picking winners and losers along the oceanfront, since they will end up taking sand from other parts of the beachfront. There also can be environmental impacts, such as the loss of habitat and beaches for nesting sea turtles and shorebirds.
Greg “Rudi” Rudolph, a member of the science panel, said there’s no “magic bullet” for North Carolina’s oceanfront erosion issues, with each possible solution carrying pros and cons. He also said many of the shoreline management tools need to be done in conjunction with each other to offer a truly effective long-term solution, such as a groin and periodic nourishment.
“There are trade-offs, there are benefits, and there are costs,” Rudolph said. “That’s what makes this so challenging.”
Reporter Gareth McGrath can be reached at GMcGrath@usatodayco.com or @GarethMcGrathSN on X/Twitter. This story was produced with financial support from Journalism Funding Partners. The USA TODAY Network maintains full editorial control of the work.
North Carolina
Severe thunderstorm warning expires in central NC areas
RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) — The National Weather Service issued several severe thunderstorm warnings for various areas of central North Carolina on Sunday afternoon.
The final warning was allowed to expire at 4:45 p.m. for Northwestern Harnett County, Northeastern Lee County, Southwestern Wake County, and Southeastern Chatham County, according to the National Weather Service office in Raleigh.
Forecasters said the warning was triggered by a severe thunderstorm east of Sanford, moving east at 10 mph.
The warning said the main threats from the storm are 60 mph wind gusts and nickel-sized hail.
Scroll below for the latest central North Carolina weather warnings and advisories:
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