Now serving community: Vermonters rally to preserve the general store

At the top of a winding road in rural Vermont sits Pierce's Store, a white-paneled department store with a wide front porch and steep pitched roof. By most measures this place should have closed long ago.

But on a recent cold November morning, stepping through Pierce's front door to the sound of a bell and the warm aroma of fresh baked goods feels like a hug.

These spaces are more than just picturesque settings for Hallmark Christmas movies. On the outskirts of Vermont, the general store serves as a lifeline for residents, delivering mail, local wealth and goods. But with the advent of Amazon and chain stores, the tide turned against them.

Why did we write this

They are reminiscent of Hallmark movies and simpler times. But in rural areas, general stores are a lifeline to the community, providing access to food and serving as a social hub. In Vermont, cities are struggling to survive.

There are about 70 independent stores left in the state, said Dennis Bathory-Kitz, a Vermont historian and author of “Vermont Country Stores: A History and Guide.” This is down from about 125 in 2001. Still, a small but significant number of cities are tackling the challenge of keeping their doors open through a nonprofit model through fundraising, volunteering, and hosting community dinners and music jams.

Kendra Nordine Beato/The Christian Science Monitor

Martha Sirjane (left), assistant manager at Pierce's Store, assists a customer on November 4, 2025. Marjorie Pierce, the former owner, donated the store to the Vermont Conservation Trust in 2001 with clear instructions that it should continue to operate as a grocery store for the small town of Shrewsbury.

“When someone preserves something in their community for their neighbors, it brings them joy and hope. I hear that all the time,” says Ben Doyle, president of the Vermont Conservation Foundation in Montpelier, the state capital.

At Pierce's Restaurant, Lee Wilson finishes his breakfast sandwich at a small table in the back room. He's been coming here for 48 years and now volunteers to man the counters. Mark Youngstrom is there too, wrapped in an Icelandic wool sweater. He has been coming for 46 years. Martha Sirjane, the assistant manager, is also there, carefully moving between shelves of daily necessities and specialty items, chatting with customers, ringing up orders and, in some cases, introducing neighbors for the first time.

The store's last owner, Marjorie Pierce, wanted to preserve that warm feeling for her small town of 1,100 people. Shrewsbury's general store first opened the year the Civil War ended, not just as a place to buy flour or sugar, but also as a gathering place where neighbors played checkers next to a pot-bellied stove, caught up on the latest news and escaped the isolation of rural life. When she died in 2001, she left the family store to the Vermont Conservation Foundation, a nonprofit that provides support and funding to towns seeking to save buildings that define a sense of place. She gave specific instructions to ensure that Pierce's store remains a working store and not a museum of a bygone era.

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