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Comments
Submitted by sandy (not verified) on Sat, 9/29/2012 - 10:43pm
The white bldg. on the end was the Rolling Pin Bakery (Aunt Ruth's). There was also a coin operated laundry beside it. On the same block was a 5 and 10 store (Woolworth's type enterprise).
Submitted by Goley53 on Thu, 1/25/2018 - 12:40pm
In reply to The white bldg. on the end by sandy (not verified)
The name of the 5&10 was GRACE'S 5&10 and my mother worked there. It was owned by the Gupton family and they had a small string of stores. The Gupton family lived in Bragtown. They had a store there and in Wilmington. I seem to recall that there was another store but I was only 8 or 9 then so......
My mother was unwed. We lived in a big house on either Dale or Lilac Alley in Edgemont with some of her married brothers and sisters who had children. My mother and I lived in one room of the house. We were all poorer than poor. My mother would take the bus all the way to Chapel Hill street stopping at Five Points and transfering to Grace's 5&10. I was enrolled in Edgemont School in 1952 at 6 years of age. I ran the streets of Edgemont until I finished the 4th grade. Things got so bad for my mother that Mr. Gupton, who was a Mason, helped get me into Oxford Masonic Orphanage in Oxford, where I lived and graduated high scool in 1964.
I have so many loving (and not so loving) memories of Durham. So many that sometimes, as I get older, it's hard to keep them straight in my mind........The movie theatres Carolina, Rialto, Uptown and Criteron, where I spent so much time. As a 3rd grader I sold Durham Sun newspapers everyday (out of a bag bigger than I was) along Main Street from The Uptown Theatre to the tracks at the head of Angier Avenue.Then I would walk from there home. Hopefully with an empty bag.
When the mood strikes me I'll try to write more.
Wiliam L. (Bill)Johnson
Bridgeville, Delaware
Submitted by John Ringland (not verified) on Fri, 11/2/2012 - 10:04am
I bought bags of day old pastries at Aunt Ruth's In the summer of 1975. No matter what flavor you got, they all tasted the same but were good and cheap! I think Don Whitten, a baker at Duke, was the owner.
Submitted by Mary (not verified) on Fri, 1/24/2014 - 1:33pm
Was Aunt Ruths's Rolling Pin on Broad Street at one time?
Submitted by H. Buchanan on Sat, 1/25/2014 - 1:11am
Yes, there was Rolling Pin Bakery on Broad Street....It was next to the drug store...
Submitted by Goley53 on Thu, 1/25/2018 - 12:41pm
Bill Johnson's email. Imagepro54@gmail.com
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