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Nova Scotia

Small-town general store finds recipe for success by mixing old and new

The co-owner of one of the last remaining general stores in the province says that she and her husband merge the past and the present to keep their business going.

Shop in Earltown is among handful from bygone era still operating in N.S.

Kayla Conoley has been running the Earltown General Store since 2013 and calls it a labour of love.
Kayla Conoley has co-owned and operated the Earltown General Store since 2013. She calls it a labour of love. (Robert Short/CBC)

Customers who pull up in front of the Earltown General Storecan charge their electric car where they would once have hadtheir horses shod.

The old red buildinghas been a welcome sight for those travelling to or from the North Shore since the 1890s. Its location in the village of 250 peoplemarksthe halfway point between Truro and Tatamagouche.

Kayla Conoley and Brent Halverson bought the propertyin 2013. They're only the fourth owners in its longhistory.

"Brent likes the anachronistic version of the building where we have the windmills over there, the gas signs on the roof," Conoley says. "We try to kind of merge the past and the present, and keeping in mind what we need to do in the future."

That meansconsidering the needs of nearby residentsand supporting the community, shesays. The couplehired the store'sstaff of nine locally, and stock theshelves with maple syrup, beef jerky and even hand-knitted socks produced inthe area.

The Earltown General Store is a red building with a grey roof that stands next to Highway 311, halfway between Truro and Tatamagouche.
The Earltown General Store has stood next to Highway 311, halfway between Truro and Tatamagouche, since the 1890s. (Robert Short/CBC)

"It's gone from wanting just a simple kind of life to something that's larger, but it's good,"Conoley says."It's a labour of love, for sure."

The nostalgia of the old fashioned candy and in-house bakery drew in a steady stream of customers on a recent mid-week visit.

"It's wonderful because there's just, you know, there's a small community feeling and people call you by name when you come in the door," says Ann MacCuspie, who often comes in for bread but stays for the conversation. "Sometimes you'll run into a friend or somebody you know. And so it's, in a way, I wouldn't say a gathering spotbut certainly gatherings do happen."

'Awarm place'

That's part ofthe appeal that Dartmouth-based author and historian Mike Parker says contributes to the longevity of businesseslike thissmall-town shop.

"General stores are a warm place to go," says Parker. "There's something that's welcoming about thatcompared to when you go into a shopping mall or a store and it's very cold and sterile."

Parker wrotea book on the topic that was published earlier this year, titledA Little of Everything General Stores of Nova Scotia - Remembering the Old Days, Old Ways.

There used to be over 1,300 general stores in the province, he says, but today only a handful remain.

The oldest still in operation is Frieze and Roy in Maitland, Parker says, and one of the most remote is Carl's Store in Tusket.

The Frieze and Roy General Store in Maitland is one of a handful of other such shops still operating in the province, according to author and historian Mike Parker. (Frieze and Roy/Facebook)

"I, more than most,probably mournthe passing of general stores," Parker says, "because my family owned and operated a general store, the Bear River Trading Company in Bear River for 40 years."

Mail order catalogues and shopping malls ended the heyday of general stores in Nova Scotia, he says.

Butthe few that have survived are taking on an important role.

"It's a piece of our history, our heritage, our culture, and they're maintaining that."

Conoley says that running her shop comes with its share of challenges: maintaining a building that's more than a century old, navigating the pandemic and most recently, post-tropical storm Fiona.

A selection of goods including local honey, hand-knitted socks and in-house made jams and pickles stock the shelves of Earltown General Store.
Local honey, hand-knitted socks and in-house jams and pickles stock the shelves at Earltown General Store. (Robert Short/CBC)

But the communityrallied around them.

"I did post on Facebook that we are having a hard time paying the bills, and it was amazing how many people came out after that just to stop in for an extra cookie, or like do some Christmas shopping.

We've been able to bounce back, and that feeling of anxiety has definitely gone away," she says. "So that comes with the territory of rural business ownership. You have challenges. You also have great community."

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