Thomas Judd’s store day; from sheep supplies to nostalgic treats, the story of St. George’s longest-running business

Exterior of Judd's Store, St. George, Utah, Sept. 29, 2018 | Photo by Reuben Wadsworth, St. George News

FEATURE – It provides visitors with a great dose of nostalgia, from its variety of retro candy to the old-fashioned relics that adorn its walls. It’s been a fixture in the same location for over a century.

What patrons might not know about Thomas Judd’s Store in downtown St. George on Tabernacle Street is that it is the oldest ongoing business in St. George, and until its acquisition by Green Gate Village in the early 1980s, it was also the longest-running family-owned business in the city.

The original proprietor’s story

Thomas Judd was a prominent businessmen in early St. George. Born in 1845, he immigrated to Utah from England in the early 1860s after his family joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He was a bugler in the Navajo Indian Wars of 1866-1870.

Along with two other partners, he opened the Woolley Lund and Judd Store in 1875, which provided competition for the Southern Utah Cooperative Mercantile store established by the church. He served a mission in his native England from 1876-1878.

A historic portrait of Thomas Judd in his later years, date unspecified | Photo courtesy of Washington County Historical Society, St. George News

In addition to the jointly owned store, he had a hand in several other businesses in Washington County.

In 1888, he developed a plan to divert water from the Virgin River onto the LaVerkin Bench via a canal and was forced to mortgage his home to raise the necessary capital to complete the project, which was a key factor in the establishment of LaVerkin. Judd also became president of the LaVerkin Fruit and Nursery Company to establish orchards and vineyards, manufacture wine and promote farming in the area. He also leased the Washington Cotton Factory for five years, from 1890-1895, employing 70-80 people and helping it turn a profit for the first time in its history.

Judd served as bishop of the St. George 1st Ward for 18 years, from 1879 to 1897, after which he was called to colonize Whitewater, Nevada. He returned to St. George when he finished his assignment there and sold his much of his interest in LaVerkin, including what is now the Pah Tempe Hot Springs.

Judd constructed and opened the store in 1911, with its location across the street from the Woodward School being a fortunate one.

This historic photo shows Judd’s Store with the actual working gas pump in front, Judd’s Store, St. George, Utah, date unspecified | Photo courtesy of Washington County Historical Society, St. George News

The store was built with adobe that was the same thickness as the homes surrounding it – the home in back being Judd’s himself.

The store became very successful. Instead of selling the treats it does now, it first catered to the needs of the area’s cattlemen and sheepherders, which were a major economic engine in Dixie’s early days. Back then, it sold everything from hay and grain to Levi’s and sheep supplies. It also carried groceries and dry goods, including clothes, kerosene, hay and fabrics.

Thomas Judd died in 1922. His son, Joseph, continued to run the store and then turned operations over to his son, Tom.

In the early 1980s, St. George City wanted to condemn the store and turn it into a parking lot, but thankfully Dr. Mark and Barbara Greene purchased the building in 1982 and incorporated it into Green Gate Village.

Tom Judd continued to operate the store even after the Greene’s bought it and retired in 1988.

The “school” business

Judd’s store seemed to have a symbiotic relationship with the school across the street, first the Woodward School, which now serves as part of the Washington County School District offices, and then later with West Elementary, which stood where the 5th District Courthouse now stands. Students from the two schools were regulars at the store during lunch to get their fill of candy for the day.

However, in 1983, the West Elementary faculty and principal decided to implement a closed-campus policy, barring students from purchasing anything from the store during school hours.

The store proprietor at the time, Tom Judd, Jr., wasn’t keen on the decision. He admitted that, at the time, the store depended on students’ purchases, which he estimated accounted for approximately 50 percent of his business. The little store had a hard time competing with larger chain stores.

Some West Elementary 5th and 6th graders even drew posters protesting the closed-campus policy. The posters read “Mr. Judd, we want you” and “America, land of the free, that’s why Mr. Judd stays.”

Teachers said that children crossing the street posed a safety hazard, to which Judd countered, saying there had never been an accident involving a student in the store’s history. The teachers also said that the candy wasn’t good for their students and contributed to hyperactivity.

Initially, the policy was implemented on a two-week trial, after which the teachers noted resoundingly that there had been fewer problems at the school since the change.

The school principal admitted that he was not trying to hurt Judd’s Store with the new policy but that he was just looking out for the safety of his students.

Later, however, the Washington County School Board made Judd’s Store an honorary part of West Elementary’s campus and gave students permission to cross the street and frequent the store during school hours if they had a signed permission form from their parents. The school board even received letters of support from community leaders criticizing the closed campus policy because it put an undue hardship on Judd’s Store.

The store today

Frequenting Judd’s Store is a tradition for many St. George residents. One woman in particular has made the store her own “labor of love.”

Exterior of Judd’s Store, St. George, Utah, Sept. 29, 2018 | Photo by Reuben Wadsworth, St. George News

Heather Graff, who was a regular at the store when she was a student of the county’s 6th Grade Center (Woodward School) in the early 1990s. She even has some family history at the store; her grandfather worked there in the 1940s.

Back in her elementary school days, she said the store would host girls’ and boys’ days, when it would let about 10 kids in at a time to enjoy some food away from their school campus.

“I remember it was swarmed with kids,” Graff said.

Graff would get nachos, breadsticks and Pepsi during her trips there during school hours.

“I don’t remember anything healthy,” she noted.

These days, the nostalgia of the candy and decor are certainly a draw for locals and visitors alike, Graff said, but it’s also the store’s friendliness that has endeared it in the hearts of many regulars.

“People like to go where they feel important,” she said.

The store’s staff gets to know the regulars’ names and have a good idea of what they will order based on what they’ve ordered in the past.

Wall displaying nostalgic nick knacks, soda and retro candies at Judd’s Store, St. George, Utah, Sept. 29, 2018 | Photo by Reuben Wadsworth, St. George News

“It’s like ‘Cheers’ without the booze,” Graff said, comparing it to the atmosphere portrayed in the popular 1980s sitcom about a neighborhood bar in Boston.

The older generation love the store because it reminds them of their childhood, she said, and kids enjoy it because it reminds them of similar places they’ve been on vacation. Former Woodward School attendees especially love the walk down memory lane the store provides.

One won’t find any sheep supplies in the store anymore, but what they will find is plenty of both sweet and savory treats.

The store still retains some original items in the interior and boasts a gas pump made in 1946 out front. It’s not the original, but it’s in the same spot where a similar one once stood.

The small store, located in downtown St. George at 62 W. Tabernacle St., has tables to sit at inside the store, and it is open from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday.

For more information, visit the store’s Facebook page.

About the series “Days”

“Days” is a series of stories about people and places, industry and history in and surrounding the region of southwestern Utah.

“I write stories to help residents of southwestern Utah enjoy the region’s history as much as its scenery,” St. George News contributor Reuben Wadsworth said.

For previews on Days Series stories, insights on local history and information on upcoming historical presentations, please “like” Wadsworth’s author facebook page.

Wadsworth has also released a book compilation of many of the historical features written about Washington County as well as a second volume containing stories about other places in Southern Utah, Northern Arizona and Southern Nevada.

Read more: See all of the features in the “Days” series

Copyright St. George News, SaintGeorgeUtah.com LLC, 2022, all rights reserved.

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