Thursday, February 25, 2016

Treasure Chest Thursday: Flue Cover

Treasure Chest Thursday is a daily prompt at Geneabloggers encouraging bloggers to create a post with the main focus being a family treasure, an heirloom or even an everyday item important to the family.

Flue Cap Davis Store Shenandoah, VA  http://jollettetc.blogspot.com

This flue cover is all that remains of the Davis Store, once a vibrant little enterprise built by my great-grandfather Walter Davis and operated by his sons Millard and Orvin, my maternal grandfather. For over 20 years, the store served the community of Shenandoah, Virginia.

Davis Store 1920s Shenandoah, VA  http://jollettetc.blogspot.com
Davis Store in the 1920s
corner of Sixth St and Pennsylvania Ave, Shenandoah, VA

Lucille Davis running the Davis Store 1940s http://jollettetc.blogspot.com
My grandmother Lucille Rucker Davis behind the counter
Davis Store 1940s
The flue cap probably went with this stove.
Even after the store closed in the 1940s, the apartment continued to house renters until recent years. Eventually asbestos made the building unsafe; termite damage made it not even worth flipping. Besides, the corner lot was too valuable for other uses. On April 16, 2015, the building was bulldozed.

Davis Store demolition April 16, 2015 http://jollettet.blogspot.com
April 16, 2015
photo courtesy of Jan Hensley
That I have any souvenir at all is by sheer luck. I was chatting with my cousin who casually informed me that the old store building was being torn down that day. She said it with all the enthusiasm accompanying a report of the day’s trip to the grocery store. For me, it was big news that demanded she get over there right away and take a picture at least. However, my cousin had no love for the store building; she actually lived in the apartment as a child, and the memories of a cold building with poor heat and no hot water have not left her.


Davis Store demolition April 16, 2015 http://jollettetc.blogspot.com
April 16, 2015
photo courtesy of Jan Hensley
I seldom post on Facebook, but I did that day – a mini tribute to the old store on its passing. Jan Hensley, a dedicated researcher of families in the Shenandoah Valley and one with whom I have collaborated, saw my post and scurried over to the corner of Sixth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue to snap a picture. She even spoke to one of the workers and asked if there were anything worth snatching from the rubble. He thought a minute and soon brought out the flue cover.

This winter scene is a common one for flue covers. A pristine model is currently for sale on eBay for $13.75. This illustrates the paradox of many heirlooms: they are worthless and priceless at the same time.


© 2016, Wendy Mathias.  All rights reserved.

5 comments:

  1. Worthless and priceless at the same time, so very true. How amazing that your post was seen in time to get yourself a remembrance of the store.

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  2. Wendy, Jen sounds like a wonderful friend! She saved the day. You could not save the building but you have a token and photographs.

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  3. I like that phrase, "worthless and priceless"!

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  4. I too like that phrase "worthless and priceless". I think this particular flue is definitely priceless for you and your family!

    betty

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