City Drug Store Then and Now

401-405 N Second Avenue

You may have noticed I intentionally avoid delving into the adventures of the Wild West. Because this particular building was right in the middle of it, I’m making an exception just for you.

Herman Fringer and A. J. Peacock built a drug store at the northwest corner of Second Avenue and Front Street in 1872. Fringer was appointed Postmaster and the post office was located in the back of the store.

The Leavenworth Daily Times, November 7, 1872

Dr. Thomas McCarty and his wife, Sallie, occupied a small room attached to the back of the building and that is where Claude was born the following year. Charles and Carrie Rath lived in the room next door and that little lean-to was the site of the famous Chief Spotted Tail escapade.

The Fringer and Peacock partnership was dissolved in August of 1873. Dr. McCarty worked as Fringer’s assistant in the drug store, which sounds weird because he was Dr. McCarty.

Dodge City Messenger, July 2, 1874

It didn’t take long for McCarty to open his own establishment one door east of F. C. Zimmermann’s store. That business became known as the City Drug Store.

Ford County Globe, January 1, 1878

George Hoover bought the post office drug store from Fringer in September of 1881 and flipped it to Dr. McCarty about a week later for a small profit. Lloyd Shinn was appointed Postmaster that October and the post office remained in the building until 1886.

McCarty sold all of his buildings along Second Avenue from Chestnut to Front Street to the ill-fated Merchants State Bank for $20,000 in July of 1887.

The Globe Live Stock Journal, August 2, 1887

Merchants State Bank imploded in February of 1891, still owning the east end of the block from Chestnut to Front.

This parade photo shows the City Drug Store just south of the doomed Merchants State Bank.

Photo courtesy Ford County Historical Society Eagan Collection

It was announced in March of 1892 that Walter F Pine and G. H. Lawrence had bought City Drug. Pine began working there around 1887 and became manager in February of 1889.

The Globe-Republican, March 3, 1892

Meanwhile, George Hoover finally conducted a sale of bank assets on December 19, 1893.

The Globe-Republican, November 24, 1893

The Ford County Commissioners bought the City Drug building and other properties, hoping to recover some of their losses from the bank failure.

The Dodge City Democrat, December 30, 1893

The Commission voted to rent the City Drug building to Walter Pine for $20 per month effective January 1, 1894. George F McKinney bought the building from the County in November of 1899.

Pine moved City Drug to the Gwinner Building in the Union Block in late January or early February of 1900. At that time, the building constructed by Fringer and Peacock was said to be the oldest remaining structure in Dodge City.

The Globe-Republican, January 18, 1900

William Robison then remodeled the building and positioned his City Hardware store on the busy corner.

Western Kansas Live Stock Journal, March 15, 1900

An adjoining structure was built on the west end of the hardware store in the Summer of 1900 to make room for additional stock.

The Dodge City Democrat, August 31, 1900

This postcard shows the enlarged City Hardware store with a most unusual roofline.

Postcard courtesy Ford County Historical Society

Robison operated the hardware store until 1924 and “Dodge City’s oldest building” was demolished in January of 1925. Its replacement was a new service station with adjoining storefronts built by the Kennedy Brothers.

The new building had mostly glass along the south and east sides with the service station positioned at an angle on the corner.

Kennedy Brothers Hardware moved to the new location the first part of June.

The Southwest News, June 4, 1925

The grand opening of the service station was held on June 13.

The Southwest News, June 11, 1925

Jewelers Walker and Hoffman arrived later in the month.

The Southwest News, June 25, 1925

This photo was taken during an ag show in the early 1930s with the filling station front and center.

Photo courtesy Ford County Historical Society Sam Zygner Collection

Hoffman bought out Walker’s share of the jewelry store around 1929 and moved to the south room at 607 Second Avenue in the mid-1930s. Around that time, the filling station was Bud’s Certified Service. It changed hands a few times becoming Swede’s and later Andra’s Service Station.

Postcard courtesy Ford County Historical Society

Vernon Beatty opened a tavern called Bar X in the old service station around 1947, which he immediately tried to sell.

The Wichita Eagle, May 14, 1947

Schafer’s Cafe was next door at 403 Second with Lucille’s Beauty Salon on the north side of the cafe. In the early 1950s, Bar X was replaced by the William Cook Insurance Agency. Southwestern Bell rented the former beauty salon for additional office space while they expanded their spot on First Avenue.

A fire at Schafer’s Cafe gutted the building but it was reopened in March of 1953.

Great Bend Daily Tribune, March 14, 1953

Around 1957, an osteopath named Carl Hammer occupied the former filling station with the Cowboy Cafe next door at 403 Second Avenue. Walker’s Sportswear was located between the cafe and Lester Butler’s insurance agency.

The former Kennedy Building is shown here around 1957. Fact check me, auto enthusiasts!

Photo by Hoover Cott

Around 1959, the National Farm Loan Association and Zimmer’s Abstract and Title Co. moved to the former Walker’s location. The whole building seemed a bit boring until the Blue Lounge Tavern moved to the spaces which previously held the filling station and cafe around 1964. It remained there until Urban Renewal took the 45-year-old building away in 1970.

Lettering for the Blue Lounge is visible just beyond the traffic signal.

This is how the site of the City Drug Store looks today:

I would love to recreate the angle of the historic photos, which were taken from the top of the flour mill…but it was demolished, too.

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Walt Hall Then and Now

Kansas Soldiers’ Home, Fort Dodge, Kansas

People who think history stopped with the Old West frustrate me to no end. Also, people who point out old buildings have asbestos. “This Old House” premiered in 1979 so we all know about asbestos!

By now, you’re probably all aware that the State of Kansas has included funds for the demolition of Walt Hall in their draft budget for Fiscal Year 2025. If you haven’t seen the document in question, it’s available online at https://kslegislature.org/li/b2023_24/committees/ctte_jt_bldg_constr_1/documents/testimony/20240125_02.pdf

Of note, “The Governor recommends $3.5 million, including $201,980 SGF, for capital improvements for FY 2025. This is an SIBF increase of $600,000, or 18.3 percent, above the agency’s FY 2025 request. The increase is for the demolition of the Junior Officers Quarters and Walt Hall at the KSH on Fort Dodge.”

A committee is working on the Junior Officers Quarters, which is being addressed separately so I’m focusing on Walt Hall. This is the old hospital on the hill which everyone asks about. The general consensus is that people love it, they want it saved, but they don’t really know much about it.

The Kansas Soldiers’ Home outgrew its first permanent hospital located in what is now known as the Pershing Barracks and the State made plans for a larger facility. State Architect Charles D Cuthbert of Cuthbert and Sons designed the $120,000 building featuring two 100-foot wings with a total of 34 beds. Contracts were awarded in October of 1927 to businesses in Oberlin, Hays, and Fort Scott.

The new hospital was dedicated in August of 1928. Local newspapers reported more than 1,000 celebrants in attendance.

This photo from a retrospective article in the Dodge City Daily Globe was taken shortly after the hospital was completed. You can see the landscaping hadn’t even been finished and the building originally had a tile roof. The style is listed as Italian Renaissance on the Kansas Historical Society survey.

Dodge City Daily Globe, August 14, 1972

In the early days, the hospital doctor lived upstairs. You can see the large front porch was screened in so patients could enjoy the fresh air.

Photo courtesy Ford County Historical Society Photo Collection

This hospital was also outgrown and it was converted to a dormitory after Halsey Hall was dedicated in 1970. This dormitory was named Walt Hall in January of 1971 after General Lewis “Big Lew” Walt, who retired the following month. General Walt was born in Wabaunsee County, Kansas in 1913. Big Lew appeared on the cover of Life in May of 1967. He became Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps in 1968 and was buried at Quantico National Cemetery in 1989.

Walt Hall was at full capacity as late as 1979. At some point, the tile roof was replaced with asphalt shingles and the top story was closed by the fire marshal due to code issues. Occupancy dwindled throughout the 1980s, with only 15 residents by December of 1989. Walt Hall finally closed in January of 1990 and has been vacant ever since.

I took these photos in December of 2021. It’s not great but I’ve seen worse.

I understand why history buffs focus on the buildings in existence when Fort Dodge was in operation. In my opinion, the history of the Kansas Soldiers’ Home is equally deserving of our care and concern.

To every person who still laments the destruction of Downtown Dodge City during Urban Renewal, I say this: Walt Hall is older today than the buildings on Front Street were in 1970.

Walt Hall still has a lot of life left in it. There are avenues for restoration which do not require an additional tax burden on the residents of Ford County or an additional hassle for the Kansas Commission on Veterans’ Affairs. Tell your elected officials to stop the demolition of Walt Hall.

If you like what you see, be sure to subscribe (way at the bottom of the post on mobile devices) to receive an email each time a new post is published and share on social media. You can also support my work by donating below. This content is 100% funded by history fanatics such as yourself. Thanks for reading!

Some of you have requested additional donation options. If you would like to send a direct donation, you can now do so by clicking here.

Donation

Your support keeps the content flowing! Make a one-time donation. Your contribution is appreciated!

$5.00

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