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Memories of Copeland's CaféBy: L. Jarod Pearson
One of the oldest buildings in Cowan today is at 106 S. Tennessee Avenue in the historic downtown. The years following World War II were Cowan's heyday when the town's population and economic strength reached their highest levels when Cowan. At the center of it all in this glorious time in history was Copeland's Cafe. The restaurant was owned and operated by Roy and Mary Copeland. The building was constructed in 1901 in a distrinctly french-style architecture. The upstairs of the building connected to the second floor of The Franklin House hotel by way of a shared wall and provided additional guest rooms for the hotel facility. Roy Copeland, III shared some of his memories, written to us on September 25, 2011:
Copeland's closed in the late 1950's. The building served as a coin laundry until the late 1960's when Edna's Place, a casual dining restaurant, opened. In the mid-1970's through the early-1990's it was reborn as the Petticoat Junction, a small beer package store, or as the locals would call a "beer joint". Petticoat Junction happened to be next doorto Cowan City Hall in the former Bank of Cowan building. Local legend held that there was a passageway between Cowan City Hall and Petticoat Junction used by the mayor and police department to "grab a cold one" without being noticed. What appeared to be a passageway connecting the two buildings was in fact a special housing for the upstairs plumbing. There were actually three locations of Copeland's Restaurant in Cowan. The first Copeland's was located prior to World War II in an old railroad car parked on East Cumberland Street, approximately where today's Cowan Welcome Center is located. The car was removed in the late 1940's to make way for the Texaco station that operated there. Another Copeland's Restaurant operated in the Pearson building after Cowan Cafe relocated to a larger restaurant building further up the street. This particular one was referred to as Copeland's No. 3. The former Copeland's restaurant on Tennessee Avenue is now Sernicola's restaurant. The second floor of the building is the home of James Wesley Garner and Laura Pearson-Garner.
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