Thursday, January 8, 2026

Aggieland Outfitters of Southgate

This building has been Aggieland Outfitters for the last 20+ years but time is running out...

Technically this is not a day later after January 7th's post as I've made a placeholder, something I've done for Numbered Exits.1

The earliest reference I can find for the address (208 George Bush Drive, formerly 208 Jersey Street) is 1962 with the opening of a medical doctor, David J. Shannon with the address being used a few years later for Gala Realty. In 1972, the first convenience store, Sak & Pak, moved in. In 1977, this was replaced with UtoteM (I can't tell if they purchased it or not) and in 1984 was rebranded as Circle K (#3346) as it took over the chain. In 1993 it was sold (by this time the address was 208 George Bush Drive) and became Tropicana Quik Mart (a locally-owned operation)2. It closed in 2000 with Aggieland Outfitters taking over the entire building in 2002 with a large indoor-and-out renovation. This also took over the 210 space. This was the home of Cut-Rate Liquor (later Coach's Cut Rate Liquor—this I DO remember, it was on the left side of the building; the door doesn't even exist anymore). This operated from 1971 to shortly before Aggieland Outfitters took over. It replaced Big G Malt Shop, but I can't find too much on the restaurant, only that it existed in the late 1960s.

Among the new features of the store was a little fenced-in area with a Bevo statue with its horns sawed off and for a decade when A&M left the Big 12 and stopped playing University of Texas, it was replaced with a "Gig'em" statue in a wave of related iconoclasm, but as of summer 2025 the Bevo statue is back. In fall 2023, a new location was built just about three blocks away due to eventual construction at the intersection (most of the other places have been closed or cleared, including McDonald's at Marion Pugh, the Equity office, the Unitarian Universalist church, 101 Grove, a large apartment building that sat on the corner of the street, and a few other houses. Despite that, both stores continue to operate, at least for now.

All photos in this post were taken January 2026 by the author.

The liquor store may have had a pick-up window.
The north side of the building dates back to the opening of Aggieland Outfitters and has faded over the years as murals tend to do. That iteration of Kyle Field, once iconic to College Station, is now just a memory.

This alley area was created when a shed was built behind the store around 2013. Note the cinderblock on the right, which was created on the liquor store side of the building and dates back to that time.

Bevo's back, but that statue isn't the same as the original pre-2012 one.

1. It's a way to fill every day that I haven't made a post with something, and the next one will come on the 23rd.
2. The phone books had been pretty good about when businesses stopped operating, but still listed the Circle K after it changed hands.