Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Former Western Auto

This picture was taken in October 2025 by author.

If you follow my website I used to have a list of businesses on Harvey Road, though I discontinued it a while ago. Today we're going back and re-adding and expanding those entries, starting with 204 Harvey Road, which is currently Advance Auto Parts. The story goes back to Western Auto, however.

When Western Auto opened in 1986 at Townshire1, it wasn't a stranger to the community, a previous Western Auto Associated Store had existed at 300 East 25th Street in Bryan from the 1950s to 1970s. The new corporate-owned store at Townshire, subleased the space from Texas Central Hardware (which moved in 1982, but struggled to deal with the large 60,000 square feet Sears left behind), and dealt exclusively with auto parts (the corporate stores had dropped the broader selection). It also used the Sears auto bays, something that Texas Central Hardware wasn't able to use.

Within a few months of Western Auto's opening, however, Central Texas Hardware shuttered, leaving Western Auto beside itself. In 1990, it left for a brand-new building at 204 Harvey Road, the subject of this post. While older Western Auto stores had a broader selection of appliances and home & garden supplies, the corporate-owned stores by this time were exclusively auto parts, something both the 1986 and 1990 store had.

Although the Western Auto name is gone, the store opened at 204 Harvey is still open today. At the time of the opening of this location, Western Auto was owned by Sears, Roebuck, & Company (it bought Western Auto from its old owners Wesray Capital in 1988), which of course had a large full-line store at 1500 Harvey Road at Post Oak Mall. The biggest difference between the current store and the original Western Auto is that it had an automotive service center, which was a decision by Sears (competition with Sears Auto Center, perhaps?) and affected the local store in 1997 when it was converted to a new name (Parts America) among a major closure round of Western Auto, and in 1998, Sears gave up entirely by selling both Western Auto and Parts America to Advance Auto Parts, and in 1999, the store was rebranded again to Advance Auto Parts, though around that time, the automotive service center was subleased to CarDoc, an independent auto repair shop.

As Sears had converted the company-owned Western Auto stores to Parts America (and Advance Auto Parts finished the job), Advance Auto Parts shut down the Western Auto Supply Company division and gave the franchised stores until 2006 to change their names, ending the use of Western Auto anywhere.

1. The Townshire article needs a major upgrade as of this writing. The Sears wasn't as small as I originally quoted.

EDITOR'S NOTE: I changed the email on the site. I thought it hadn't been working for months, but it was. Still, I can't trust it and it has been changed.

Monday, October 20, 2025

The French Quarter Apartments

Newspaper article from 1966, the first time them or that address was mentioned.
A short one today. The last time we covered dead apartment complexes was Normandy Square (if you don't count the residences at Texas Oaks), and like Normandy Square, this one is at Northgate, The French Quarter Apartments at 601 Cross Street.

Unfortunately, while I did record some of the basic history elsewhere, noting that in fall 2007 they had become Gleissner Hall Apartments1 under the ownership of St. Mary's Catholic Church before they were demolished in early 2017 and effectively land-banked for their master plan. It's currently a parking lot.

As it has long since been demolished the best I can really offer is one of its first advertisements as seen above and a link to Google Maps Street View when the apartments were still there.

1. This was from a 2007 (maybe 2008) article from The Battalion entitled "Living by faith" but finding it again has proved to be elusive.

Saturday, October 18, 2025

The Country Kitchen

Advertisement from c. 1970 phone book

Back before Highway 47 (which was its name for many years), the airport terminal, and other fixtures west of FM 2818 on Raymond Stotzer Parkway, which despite the development of the "Biocorridor" and other new features is still considered the fringe of the Bryan-College Station, there was the Country Kitchen (unassociated with any other restaurants, including a franchised operation back in the 1970s and 1980s). Built in 1961 (or 1968, there is conflicting information) by Frank and Mae Meads and resembling a typical one-story ranch home (this was not, in fact, its original use, and was built as such to be converted into a house).1 The restaurant, located a little over two miles west of FM 21542 originally served barbecue, but expanded to chicken fried steak and catfish within a few years, and in 1975 leased to Ray Martin (I believe the brother of famous College Station restaurateur Ken Martin) which had all-you-can-eat dinners (chicken or fish), along with other options (including chicken fried steak) served every day of the week. The pies were dropped as a menu item, and the Meads felt like Ray Martin was "turning it into fast food" despite otherwise running it well, and planned to take it back over when the lease expired in late 1982. Unfortunately, the restaurant burned down in April 1982 destroying the restaurant and the antique collection the Meads had built up there. The building went quickly, not just because of its isolated location (firefighters had to bring their own water and ultimately resorted to pumping water from the pond on the property) but because of grease-soaked walls and floors (plus, by the time Frank Mead was even alerted to the fire, flames were pouring out of the window and the roof).

When the Meads rebuilt and reopened in 1984 the area was in recession. Five restaurants had failed in June 1984 alone (but were "all student places").3 Ultimately, the reincarnation was short-lived, closing in August 1989 for the construction of Highway 47 and reconstruction of FM 60 (the frontage road is where the restaurant was). (This also marks the first FM 60 entry covered without being University Drive or University Drive East, which is why I made the new [FM 60] label).

The pond, the houses next to it, and the restaurant were all part of the same property.
1. This is discussed in the 1984 article about the reopening of the restaurant.
2. The modern address is 4812 Raymond Stotzer Parkway, still owned by the Meads family. On old maps and some references, this part of FM 60 was called Jones Bridge Road but it wasn't until 1992 when the current name was adopted, during which I assume the addresses were added.
3. The only one I can 100% confirm was Bogie's and likely The Stadium.

EDITOR'S NOTE: A bunch of changes have been made to the labels, which I've adjusted recently again. [Loupot's] has been added to the new post from the other day as well as others, [Charles Stover] and [Costa Dallis] has joined [Joe Ferreri] and [Ken Martin] as a post grouping, and a few new chains now have their own label including ones that only made it to one location in the area. There were a few obsolete tags that were taken out ([railroad], [services], [service businesses], [drug store]). Went through [demolished] and replaced many of them with [redevelopment] (this one sticks with [demolished]). This is addressed in the FAQ.

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Loupot's Southgate

From The Eagle, August 12, 1988

As a complement to their Northgate location, then-locally based Loupot's built a second store here in August 1988. Like their Northgate location, however, the store closed in spring 2012. Sometime afterwards, Maroon & White, LP moved in, better known as TexAgs. (Their film subsidiary, Texas Filmworks, was in the building before moving out to the old Chevron, where you can also see a picture of the building). TexAgs owns MyBCS, a popular Bryan-College Station forum that they ended up fully integrating into their main site. (I will refrain from discussions regarding TexAgs directly, though I will comment that the moderation team takes the rather pretentious term of "Staff" despite almost certainly being a volunteer position).

There also used to be a barbershop accessible on the upper level (Southgate Barbers) but I think that moved out by the time TexAgs moved in.

The article above mentions a Quicker Sticker, but it wasn't there for very long (it first opened off Cavitt Street in 1984) and I don't see anything on old aerials. Did they operate out of the then-Gulf's garage...?

EDITOR'S NOTE: A major re-do was done to Westgate Center's article. Authentic coastline atmospheres, salsa-saturated sandwiches, and Blimpie's second run, it's all here on the new page! Don't forget to check out that Ko-fi link. If we raise $100 I'll make the Defunct Business List, a list of every store and restaurant covered in this blog with a link back to its appropriate post.

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Former Boston's The Gourmet Pizza

This was taken in June 2015 (by author) not too long before Razzoo's opened (but before the old Boston's signage was cleaned off and new signage installed).

As the "FM 60" directory on Carbon-izer.com is soon to be dismantled (see this archived version), I should discuss the next restaurant just to the right of 830 University Drive East, this time 820 University Drive East. It's current tenant has been Razzoo's Cajun Cafe since August 2015, but opened in August 2006 as "Boston's The Gourmet Pizza", an export version of Canadian-based Boston Pizza (I believe it was to prevent conflicts with Boston Market, but as Boston Market's star fell, the trademarks eventually changed). This closed around summer 2014.1

This post as currently written may have an update forced before year-end, as earlier in October, Razzoo's parent company has filed for bankruptcy, and while the restaurant chain may live on in some form, most of its locations won't. (It already closed three locations prior--Oklahoma City, Pasadena, and Corpus Christi, a store in Winston-Salem closed last year).

1. Boston Pizza closed their stores in San Antonio and Houston, but in Dallas, it lives on and you can see it retired the "Boston's The Gourmet Pizza" for just Boston's Pizza in around early 2018 if not the tail-end of December.

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Holick's on College Main

Picture from Flickr user "treyerice". Unfortunately it's just a thumbnail salvaged from an archived version of this website, the original was deleted.

While it is the least interesting history of the buildings in the block, it's perhaps the most important, and the only one that hasn't been covered in detail yet. 106 College Main was the longtime home of Holick's (which makes the famous Corps of Cadets Senior Boots) for many years. The longtime home of Holick's was built in the 1930s and definitely operating by the 1950s, but in 2005 it was sold out of family ownership and moved to Westgate Center in 2006, which is about when that picture above was taken. By 2007, a sign hung over the facade for "Hookah Station" (looking even worse than the photo above, and lacked the maroon-and-white awnings), which closed in the early 2020s for One15 (moved from 115 College Main, a bit of a misnomer now).

EDITOR'S NOTE: I have been trying to clear out the queue of posts to be updated, which is why this post may seem a bit lackluster. Significant updates have been done to Texas Avenue Crossing and Under the Water Tower (renamed to "Former Bud Ward Volkswagen"), in addition to smaller updates on other posts. Westgate Center is another post that is to be updated in the future.

Sunday, October 5, 2025

Orr's Food Center

This picture from Loopnet is the best picture I can find; unfortunately, it's the renovated version. It didn't use to look like this.


We've touched on Piggly Wiggly before, with the first local store in 1963 (well, under Piggly Wiggly Red River, anyway, apparently one existed a generation earlier in Bryan) and the fifth store they opened when Lewis & Coker departed from their space next to Kmart.

But an important part of Piggly Wiggly's growth in the area...before falling to an over-saturated market (the area was "overgroceried" in 1985, a chronic issue that would last into the 1990s with Winn-Dixie closing its College Station store for the same reason)...was Orr's. Waldon H. Orr got involved with Louis Mauro's Louis' Market at Main Street and 23rd Street in 1939 (324 Main Street, a small storefront by today's standards) and in April 1948 opened a comparatively modern store at 200 East 24th Street, featuring just 8,500 square feet of space. At the time, Orr's Food Center was the largest grocery store in town (a record that has been continuously been broken). A few years later, Orr opened a second store at 3516 S. Texas Avenue and in the 1960s completed an expansion that almost doubled the size of the store, to approximately 12,000 square feet. While the downtown location remained as Orr's Food Center, the second location was referred to as Orr's Minimax, a franchised operation of stores that was owned by wholesaler Fleming Company Incorporated1. In 1971, both Orr's stores were sold to Piggly Wiggly Red River Co., Inc., a large Piggly Wiggly franchisee operation out of Shreveport with stores from Austin to Baton Rouge2 and stretching up to Missouri, which simply rebranded the Orr's stores as its own name (you can see Orr's in Piggly Wiggly form here). In the early 1980s Piggly Wiggly Red River either collapsed or otherwise sold its stores to Six Star Foods, a consortium of local businessmen, at which point consisting of just the two former Orr's, the former Lewis & Coker store, the Hearne store, and a store in Rockdale. Six Star Foods ceased operations in December 1985. The first to go was the Rockdale store (closed within a matter of months), then the one next to Kmart, and lastly this location, along with it the other Bryan location (the Hearne store was sold to Malone & Hyde3).

In 1986 Frank and Pete Palasota reopened the store as Pal's Supermarket. Pal's rearranged the store to make the shelves lower and easier to get around the store (with making multiple half-aisles instead of longer ones) but I think this was just a way to stock less merchandise. Pal's was unfortunately a failure, closing sometime in late 1987 with little fanfare. If Six Star Foods couldn't keep Piggly Wiggly afloat with the competition, Pal's couldn't do better. Pal's was mentioned as one of the participating retailers of a Brazos Food Bank food drive3 and the last mention of it was in March 1987 when a 67-year-old man drove into the parking lot in his truck and took his own life.

Not too long after (I suspect Pal's sold the lease and quietly closed) A.B.E. Systems, an office supplies dealer took up the space but it must have left something behind as references appear in 1998 for an antiques store called "A Bygone Era", and in 1999, "A Better Environment".

By 2005, it was divided into two smaller medical suites, with an otolaryngologist taking up residence (David Suchowiecky, MD) and chiropractor David Bailey, DC, in the other (d/b/a Back & Joint Clinic), and by 2007 the ENT doctor had been replaced by Lone Star Legal Aid. By December 2012 it was Infinity Real Estate & Management and by 2016, Wayne Carroll Enterprises (looks like the corporate office of The Chocolate Gallery, if that's the same business).

By 2022 the building had been renovated, losing the original architectural features like the glazed glass blocks of Orr's and had smaller tenants. With the East 24th facade divided into 200, 202, and 204 (200-202 having AB Hormone Therapy, 204 having St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Store and the Tabor side also getting sub-divided, with 307 North Tabor Road getting a branch of Engel & Völkers, and 311 North Tabor Road getting Dirt Road Home, it seems that at least the building has a future ahead of it, but there's nothing at the site to remind visitors to downtown Bryan of what was once the town's largest, most modern grocery store.

1. For more information on Minimax, please see Houston Historic Retail. Fleming (later Fleming Companies starting around 1981) will also figure a bit into this story.
2. Piggly Wiggly was never truly a chain, it franchised its name and format, much like a fast food franchise. Both H-E-B and Winn-Dixie were originally Piggly Wiggly franchisees.
3. Memphis-based Malone & Hyde were the owners of the Piggly Wiggly brand at the time and based out of Memphis. Besides being the one-time owner of Piggly Wiggly, its biggest success was Auto Shack, founded in 1978 and spun off in 1986 (renamed AutoZone in 1987 due to a lawsuit by Tandy Corporation). Malone & Hyde (and by extension Piggly Wiggly) were sold to Fleming Companies in 1988, and in 2003 C&S Wholesale Grocers got the brand in Fleming Companies' bankruptcy.
4. The others included the "big three" at the time, Safeway, Kroger, and Winn-Dixie...plus 7-Eleven.

EDITOR'S NOTE: I'm in the middle of another project that I hope will be a big thing (can't reveal too much of it right now) but as part of that, Kettle and Fort Shiloh got big updates. Pay attention to the Confucius Chinese Cuisine page as well...that's also to receive a major update, hopefully coming by October 6th.

Friday, October 3, 2025

Aggieland Outfitters

Picture by author, April 2014. I had to touch it up to make visible.

Moving down University Drive to University Drive East from our last post we get to 303 University Drive East. (All these years later and I still have University Drive East photos from 2014...and more to come!). I wanted to briefly touch on this Aggieland Outfitters location as part of phasing out the Carbon-izer.com City Directories (of College Station-Bryan). Originally, there were two buildings here, and Aggieland Outfitters opened in 303A University Drive East in 2010 (there were two other locations; one on George Bush Drive, the other at Post Oak Mall). A few years later (2013), both buildings were torn down for a new Aggieland Outfitters store. New parking was soon added after that, but it was reconfigured (mostly torn up) to build a new office building to replace the parent company location (Kalcorp Enterprises) at Graham Road. I can't find too much on the original pre-2013 buildings as they were mostly intended for non-retail use from the looks of it. In 1984, 303-B was home to Sun Shield Applications, in 1993 and 2001 WTA Leasing (apartment locator service) and I can't find anything for 303-A. This Yelp review suggests it might have been a dental office at one point which would make sense...if the review wasn't from 2018. In any case, the former buildings are one of the things in town that I still know little about.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Recently I went back and updated Taco Villa's article which goes over its history as Del Taco and Quick as a Flash. And always, if you like this blog, don't forget to donate!