Showing posts with label Learned MS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Learned MS. Show all posts

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Sepia Potpourri

Today I'd like to share a few of my pictures I converted to sepia tone, which makes them look as if they belong in the pages of an old photograph album.

Gibbes Country Store, Learned, Mississippi

Building in Learned

Baum Statue, with Court House in Background
Vicksburg, Mississippi

Ceres Plantation Barn, Flowers, Mississippi

Country Road near Bovina, Mississippi

Carriage Doors, Vicksburg

Cotton Boll

Gingko Tree at Vicksburg National Cemetery
Vicksburg National Military Park

Water Tower, Bovina, Mississippi

Church Bell
St. Marks Episcopal Church, Circa 1854
Raymond, Mississippi

Rosalie, Natchez

Natchez Under-the-Hill

Mailbox, Old Highway 80, near Vicksburg

Urn at old cemetery off the Natchez Trace

Radio Station Sign, Canton, Mississippi

Department Store, Canton, Mississippi

I love the way sepia tones can totally change the look of a photograph and make the subject look as if it is from another place in time. Some of the places shown in the above photos are very old, but some of them are not. Can you tell the old ones from the new?

Monday, May 3, 2010

Dinner at an Old Country Store

Late last Thursday afternoon, my husband and I traveled to the tiny town of Learned, Mississippi, which is about 30 miles southeast of Vicksburg. Someone had told my husband that there is an old country store in Learned that serves "out of this world" steak dinners on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights, so we decided we would go check it out.

Established in 1892, the store is called "H. D. Gibbes & Sons," and has been owned solely by generations of the Gibbes family. When the current owner, Chip Gibbes, is asked how long he has lived in Learned, he answers, "Since 1836. That's when my family first moved here, so that's the date I go by."

Even though the building is 118 years old, its floor, walls and ceiling were constructed of sturdy, rare heart pine, and its structure is remarkably sound. From the moment we walked through the old screened doors on the porch, it was as if we had stepped back in time.

Once inside the doors, you are welcomed by this old Coke chest which is filled with ice and cold drinks.

As you can see in the above picture, the walls on both sides of the store are lined with shelves which are filled with new items for sale, as well as vintage collectibles which are for display only.

There are also old glass cases filled with smaller items, and I wouldn't doubt that some of the older things date back to the early days of the store.

Open year-round, "except for holidays and funerals," Gibbes' store may be the only old country store in Mississippi, where you can sit down to a delicious steak dinner with all the trimmings, and stop on your way out and buy a fishing pole and bait.

Or pick up some groceries, produce, or cleaning supplies ...

I was just wide-eyed at the things I saw, and couldn't wait to put my order in for dinner and get back up and capture some of it with my camera (I asked permission first, of course).

Everywhere I looked, there were wonderful old treasures to be seen. I wish I had had more time to really look at everything, but I was trying to take as many pictures as I could without being intrusive. We arrived a little after five, but it didn't take long for several more parties to arrive. Here are a few of the things I was able to capture while my steak was cooking (you can click on the pictures to enlarge them, if you'd like).

I loved this old library ladder which reached to the ceiling and ran on a cable beside the shelves all the way to the back of the store.

And just look at those old aluminum cups. I remember drinking Kool-Aid from some like that when I was child, and it just didn't get any colder than that. Also notice the pretty red and white rose dishes (and corks).

In the next shelf, faux, I hope, deer antlers mingled with dishes and vintage pottery pieces.

There were some truly beautiful old treasures scattered amongst the novelties, like this old spool cabinet.

And this unique "church-shaped" radio:

I was delighted to see "Miss Elsie" perched high on a shelf ...

And couldn't help but smile at this sign ...

As I rambled toward the back of the store, I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw this old stove pipe heater.

And I've saved my favorite treasure for last ... it's the beautiful old cash register which is still used for the store transactions.

Notice the "H. D. Gibbes & Sons" embossed on the name plate. What a treasure!

After dinner, we rode around Learned (which consists of only a few blocks), and I captured these pictures of some of the old buildings and houses near the store. Again, you feel as if you have traveled back in time to a world where things were simpler and, perhaps, kinder and gentler, than they seem in today's world.

This is the Learned United Methodist Church, which was founded in 1892, the same year as the Gibbes Store.

Aren't these two houses pretty! They seem to beckon you to come sit in one of those rockers and "visit a spell."


This old building is down the street from the store, and I'd love to know its history. It reminds me of a building you might see on a Hollywood set.

And across the street is this old treasure, which is almost identical to the above building.

I would like to know the story behind this old sign, too.

I love this view from the back ...

I wouldn't take anything for our visit to Learned. It was truly a wonderful experience, and I highly recommend it to our visitors to Vicksburg, as a "side trip." The steaks alone were worth the drive, service was excellent, and the atmosphere was the "icing on the cake."

I'd love to go back sometime and spend more time exploring the store and those old buildings that are so full of character. I know I left a lot of pictures there.