West Stanly The Magazine Winter 2020 | Page 3

“The Shop” Stanfield on the Corner of West Stanly & Main By Lisa Geraci T he garage on the corner of West Stanly and Main stands as a tribute to Stanfield residents. Memories are painted across the off-white brick and displayed on the lawn in the form of vintage cars, signs and gas pumps. The old service station itself is transformed along with the town as buildings disintegrate, painted billboards fade, and generations faze out. Stanfield history is slowly being savored in this iconic garage with the help of owners John David Smith and his wife Sally. The building, which the Smiths plainly call “The Shop,” was originally erected in 1929, the brick laid as a masonry project by Stanfield High School brick-class students long before the school was demolished in 1977. It was called Love’s Garage, John remembers. “Back in the day, it was a service center that sold gas. Claude Love, the original owner, had a roof that stepped down, a flat kind, like so many of the buildings down here in Stanfield. This truck garage right here used to be just a window. There was a porch that came out and underneath; it had visible gas pumps. I mean the old glass top, gravity, clear tanks. You could see 10 to 15 gallons of gas sloshing around up top. There were two, probably 10-feet high.” John recollects a childhood filled of sweeping dirt floors for extra coins and playing pool with his buddies –for a time period the garage doubled as a pool hall. The nostalgia of Love’s Garage always fascinated him, John recalls. “When Bill Shoupe bought this place from Carl’s daughter in-law in the 70s, I started aggravating the hell out of him for it. While I helped Bill knock the roof off, I pestered him every day about selling it to me. Every year I kept on him. And, finally one day, he asked me if I was ready. I was like ready for what? And he said he was ready to sell.” Ever since the Smiths became the new owners back in 2002, they were committed to not only keeping the history of the garage alive, but also incorporating mementos of the small town into the building decor. Outsiders may be mystified why they are drawn to the old service station, but for Stanfield residents the symbolism presented in “The Shop” is a little more transparent. The front has vintage Sinclair signs embellishing the walls and little dinosaurs grazing through antique painted brick. The West Stanly Street side is decorated with Tigers trotting between old gas pumps and standing beside lost ESSO signs. John states, “I split it up. I put Sinclair on the front of the building and Esso on the side. They were my two favorite gas stations growing up. We lived in the country when I was little, they had an ESSO station there. It was a little bitty block of a building, Homer Talley’s service station. The Tiger advertisements and the ‘Fill up with the Tiger’ on the gas pump, I really loved. But then, when we moved to town, I hung around the Sinclair Station right here on Main. They fixed my bike tires, and who can forget old Bud Honeycutt? We would do our thing, drink drinks and sit around. I couldn’t make up my mind which service station I wanted to make, so, I made them both. I just did it because the Sinclair station was long gone, and Homer’s old Esso was torn down.” WEST STANLY – THE MAGAZINE | WINTER 2020 3