Gridley Store Explained

Gridley Store
Location:247 Water St., Austin, Nevada
Coordinates:39.4897°N -117.0622°W
Built:1863
Added:August 14, 2003
Refnum:03000752

The Gridley Store, at 247 Water St. in the "Upper Austin" area of Austin, Nevada, is a historic building built in 1863 but with significance dating to 1864, during the American Civil War. It is associated with Reuel Colt Gridley, who reportedly lost a bet and had to carry a 50lb sack of flour throughout the town. The flour was sold as a benefit to raise money for the U.S. Sanitary Commission, which aided wounded Union soldiers. The single sack was sold and resold, raising considerable funds initially in Austin, then more broadly in Nevada, and later still in the East, in a campaign supported by Mark Twain. The fundraiser eventually earned over [1]

The building is a one-story granite stone building. Also known as Gridley & Hobart Store and as Gridley Store Museum, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.[2] Its current exterior appearance dates from it being renovated in c.1985.[2]

In 2003, it was operated as a museum by the Austin Historical Society.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hall . Shawn . Romancing Nevada's past . 53–54 . 2016 . University of Nevada Press . 9780874170108. May 12, 2021.
  2. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=03000752}} National Register of Historic Places Registration: Gridley Store / Gridley & Hobart Store; Gridley Store Museum ]. J. Daniel Pezzoni . June 1, 2003 . National Park Service. and