Carter Coal Company Store
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Images
Carter Coal Company Store
Coal Company Currency
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
The store is located at the intersection of state route 16 and county route 12/8, right in the center of the small coal producing town of Caretta. The company traditionally placed stores such as these in places where they were easily accessible to the community. Along with the store, the company built a church and a school between most of the community and the mine. This ensured that the families who inhabited areas such as these would spend their generic, coal company money in the store and was a way for the company to have essentially control all of the commerce in the town.
Many men and women had no other choice but to shop at places such as these. Since many of them weren’t being paid in actual U.S. currency, they relied on the company stores to put food on their tables. This is why the saying “I owe my soul to the company store” was generated.
The original Carter Coal Company Store stood on an even T-planned stone foundation under a gabled roof. Wooden-frame shed wings, later added to the sides of the façade, made the building into an L shape. This brick building is an important landmark from a time when coal companies monopolized small towns all across the state of West Virginia.