This historic building was built circa 1924 as the McCulloch-Dansby Funeral Home and by 1940 was known as the Hillier Funeral Home after the director. (The first floor was the home of the business, with second floor used as a small apartment for the family and presumably extra storage)1 having just added air conditioning a year prior.
In 1945 it moved out and the McCulloch-Dansby name was revived as it reopened a few years later as the McCulloch-Dansby Appliance Store which by 1949 was going as McCulloch-Dansby Complete Home Furnishers Company (specializing in small appliances).2 Around 1957 McCulloch-Dansby Complete Home Furnishers Company moved out and The Scribe Shop, a shop specializing in writing supplies and printing, moved in by May 1957.
In 1965 the business was renamed "Wallace Printing Company and the Scribe Shop", reviving the former name which was previously used as a different business by the same owners prior to the company. The Scribe Shop name was dropped by the late 1960s, but the owner, Madge Wallace, kept the store. She later sold the business (but kept the building) until it closed in spring 1985. From then on appears to have been vacant until January 1996 when Square One Bistro (serving primarily Italian cuisine) opened (by now the address was 211 W. William Joel Bryan Parkway, the road was renamed in the late 1980s or early 1990s). In early 2009 by local restaurateur Charles Stover purchased the restaurant as was what he wanted, a small fine dining establishment.
However, as it turned out, the Square One Bistro building in horrible shape: wiring was antiquated (the building was built in the early 20th century, expansions to the building were powered with extension cords) and the plumbing was in poor shape (pipes went up before going down--which has all sorts of potential problems, including grease build-up and sewage backups), and Stover had to spend an astronomical amount to fix those problems.
Unfortunately, this renovation marked the beginning of the end. While Stover Boys and Square One were both profitable (Square One's wine list grew from 10 to 110, and offered class and variety like no other area restaurant did), the problems stemming from Square One's renovation caused the owner to go into debt and it just got worse. Instead of turning profits and fueling what could be a prosperous chain bound for great places, the profits were funneled into debt payoffs. According to an old The Eagle newspaper, in October, Square One closed down and converted to the lower-end but more profitable Stover Boys brand, but it was far too late. Stover Boys was crushed under debt by late 2010, and the Westgate and Downtown Bryan location shuttered.3
After the shuttering of Square One Bistro, the building was reopened in Summer 2011 as Square 1 Art Studio with lofts above. It appears that the art studio closed around 2020, but it reopened as The Tipsy Trinket (a wine bar) a few years later, though that also closed in December 2023...and today is the Bryan location of Elevated CBD Smoke Shop.
1. This was according to a comment I got in the old version of this page and corroborated with newspaper archives.
2. The name appears to be a coincidence, as the store had existed since 1919.
3. From personal interviews.
UPDATE 05-15-2025: Massive post overhaul done (slight update to the name, used to be just called "Square One")