From Deseret News archives:

Utahn keeps store going — for 74 years

Published: Monday, April 2, 2007 12:34 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
STERLING, Sanpete County — If records were kept on the longevity of country storekeepers, Lillie Thomas, 92, would probably hold the Utah title.

Except for three years during World War II, she's been waiting on customers in Sterling, a town of 300 located six miles south of Manti, continuously for 74 years.

She keeps "a goin'," she says, because she needs the income and loves the work.

"I love to work with people. I certainly do. I love to serve if I possibly can," she says. "And every doctor has urged me to go on as long as I could."

Thomas Grocery, a white frame building with a single gas pump out front, is on the west side of U.S. 89 about a half mile into town. She lives in a white cottage next door. The store is open six days per week, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. during the winter, and 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. during summer when the farmers are working late. Thomas covers most of those hours.

A heart attack, cancer, macular degeneration, a broken hip that required two surgeries, and two hospitalizations in the past five years haven't stopped her. Neither did her husband's sudden death.

Story continues below
Thomas represents the third generation in her family to operate stores in Sterling. Thomas started clerking in her father's store when she was 16. A couple of years later, she married Evan Thomas, her sweetheart since eighth grade. Over the next decade, through the births of three children, she continued working for her father.

Just after Pearl Harbor, the Thomases decided to go "up north" to work. Evan Thomas was among the workers who helped build Hill Air Force Base. The couple also worked nights at a cannery, processing food for the military.

When the war ended, they returned to Sterling, and Lillie's father asked them to take over his business. They took out a loan and built a new building across the street and north of her father's store. (The old store was later torn down.)

They furnished the store with counters out of Lillie's father's store — some of which dated back to the previous owner. "Them counters is way, way over 100 years old, you bet they are," she says of the heavy wooden counters that still dominate the interior of the store.

The country store of the 1940s and 1950s was stocked with 50-gallon kegs of vinegar, 50-pound sacks of flour and 40-pound boxes of bananas from the Pacific Fruit and Produce Co. Thomas Grocery got its eggs from local farmers in trade for groceries.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

Lillie Thomas, 92, has worked at Thomas Grocery in Sterling since her teens. She has kept the store open despite health problems and other challenges.

previousnext

Latest comments

'The Light of Thy Childhood Again'

I didn't mean to be anonymous. What a wonderful portrayal of the Christ of...

Clearly eating disorders and the model mentality is dangerous, but I think a...

Yes, thank you for such a wonderful portrayal of the Christ of Christmas!...

And the hits just keep on coming....As I said before, the ignorance about the...

I went throught this cave when I was young and I thought it was fun. I was...

Boys basketball rankings

Hey, I've heard through the underground grapvine that Rich's Head Mechanics'...

Bears are not true hibernators. Just because they "den up" don't make them...

I have read the proposal, and agree that it is verbose, but I fail to see any...

BYU's old uniforms?

I guess a "tribute" to the team of 1984 is fine, but the Royal blue was bad...

Geez Charles. Why don't you take your arrogance and condescension down a...

Advertisements