• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
The Leader

The Leader

Tipton County's Newspaper since 1886

  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Churches
    • Courts
    • Education
    • Election 2024
    • Events
    • Local Government
    • Local Politics
    • Military
    • Public Records
    • Public Safety
  • Sports
    • All
    • Baseball
    • Basketball
    • Cross Country
    • Fishing
    • Football
    • Golf
    • Soccer
    • Softball
    • Volleyball
    • Wrestling
  • E-Editions
  • Public Notices
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Contact Us
    • Submit News
    • Advertise With Us
  • Where to Buy

Here’s why managing editor Echo Day supports a redevelopment project in Covington

By The Leader on August 12, 2019

5b2c20c709cd1.image

Turn onto Depot Alley in Covington and you’ll find Jimmy Butler’s Shop sitting across from the long-vacant former depot. 

Traveling farther south, as it turns into Menefee, you’ll find several more abandoned, blighted buildings. 

The same is true at Union, which joins Depot Alley and Menefee, and East Pleasant. 

Except for Butler’s shop, Little Jimmy’s restaurant, Wallace Cordage Company and the metal roofing supply company, there are so signs of life. Businesses closed, run-down buildings remain. 

I live nearby. 

My children and I have walked our dogs and biked this area several times over the last five years. It was at the corner of Union and East Pleasant that one of my daughters first learned to ride her bike, that all three took turns splashing through the enormous pothole in the parking lot between Little Jimmy’s and Union after it rained, where I winced at the building where painted balloons advertise a long-forgotten sale. 

We generally bike up East Pleasant, either turning on Park or Tipton, after moving back the old Worldwide Art Studio buildings, which are also sitting empty.

These – together with the federal compress, which is lying in ruin – are part of my neighborhood. 

Houston Gordon, the well-respected attorney who practices up the street both from where I work and where I live, purchased the old depot building during a recent auction and asked the city to rezone it for mixed use. His intentions, he said at last Tuesday’s meeting of Covington’s board of mayor and aldermen, were to allow a business owner to live in one side of the depot and work in the other, just as Coy Webb did while cutting hair for so many years. 

Gordon, along with his wife, Debbie, have added corbels to the building and were hoping an artist or restaurant could move in. 

And this makes people angry, apparently.

Four people spoke out against the rezoning at last Tuesday’s meeting, citing increased traffic flow as one of their reasons. The woman who traveled to Covington from Hernando to attend the meeting – she owns homes on Fleming – said she fears a restaurant which serves alcohol would lead to a problem with drunken drivers in the neighborhood. 

“To the extent that Deb and I’ve created a problem for you, we apologize for that,” Gordon told the board after opposition had been given. “We’re not trying to create problems, we’re trying to solve problems.” 

Gordon said he found the historic depot up for auction one Sunday afternoon and became concerned about what would happen to it. 

“So, Deb and I stopped in and, much to her chagrin, offered enough to buy the building. And now that you’ve got the building, what are you going to do with the building?”

Further, he said his vision was to help make this a walkable, livable, attractive place to live. 

I am absolutely in favor of upgrading our neighborhood. Even if I didn’t live in walking distance, I’d support this and almost any measure of beautifying and bettering our community, of bringing in sales tax revenue, of increasing property values. 

While he called the concerns about increased traffic in the area legitimate, the increased traffic and the potential for drinking and driving is low on my list of concerns. 

If you lived in the area near the depot, your concerns are not likely centered around a hypothetical restaurant owned by the Gordons and the potential for mayhem. 

If you lived where I do, you’d know Wyatt Earp’s, housed in another Gordon-owned building, is closer to houses than the depot is, has a liquor license and has little to no problems with intoxicated drivers. Beer bottles littering the neighborhood were another concern, however that is another non-issue as I have yet to see any beer bottles or other litter near the restaurant.

The real problems we should be focused on are the gang members in our backyards, the drugs being dealt over our fences, the empty projects on Tipton and Bledsoe which sit boarded up, the other blighted properties in our neighborhood. 

These, not another restaurant, are our real problems. 

When a private investor who has a reputation for being a good neighbor – see the Lindo Hotel building and the adjacent courtyard, or maybe at least two dozen other properties, if the Wyatt Earp’s/Buff City Soap/What-A-Deal building isn’t enough for you – wants to bring business to our neighborhood and sales tax revenue to our town, we should encourage it, plain and simple. 

MORE COLUMNISTS HEADLINES

Tipton County in the Civil War

Tipton County in the Civil War

Here

Here’s why managing editor Echo Day supports a redevelopment project in Covington

More Stories »

Related Articles:

Covington holds off Brighton to move into first place in district Track and Field runner Ryan Coley signs with Austin Peay State University Freedom Riders, NAACP honor bus driver Jim Ruth Tipton-Rosemark senior Tyler Byrd commits to play baseball at Northwest Mississippi CC

Posted Under: Sports

Primary Sidebar

Search

Featured News

Former Covington, Munford basketball coach Tim Halford inducted into BCAT Hall of Fame

April 8, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

A man known in these … [Continue Reading...] about Former Covington, Munford basketball coach Tim Halford inducted into BCAT Hall of Fame

Brighton midfielder J Kiphut signs soccer scholarship with Dyersburg State

April 1, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

Brighton senior J … [Continue Reading...] about Brighton midfielder J Kiphut signs soccer scholarship with Dyersburg State

Brighton’s Pierce Meacham signs with Cumberland University

March 11, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

In this day and age, … [Continue Reading...] about Brighton’s Pierce Meacham signs with Cumberland University

Munford High School closed Thursday after teacher found deceased

March 6, 2025 By The Leader

Munford High School … [Continue Reading...] about Munford High School closed Thursday after teacher found deceased

Tags

auvic white black history braxton sharp brighton baseball brighton basketball brighton football brighton high school city of covington City of Munford coronavirus covid-19 covington Covington Baseball covington basketball Covington football covington high school Covington HS covington police covington police station Election 2020 events homicide J.R. Kirby Jalen Fayne Jamarion Dowell jeff huffman john edwards Jordan Bell JR Kirby Munford basketball munford football munford high school murder ronnie gorton sex crimes shooting Slade Calhoun tcso Tipton-Rosemark Academy Tipton County Museum tipton county schools tipton county sheriff's office town of atoka town of mason TRA basketball

Footer

The Leader is a weekly newspaper, published on Thursdays, serving Tipton County, Tenn. since 1886.

Contact us: news@covingtonleader.com

Editor’s Choice

Here’s how Home Depot and a team of volunteers helped make over CIAA

December 5, 2019 By Echo Day

Black History Month: Mason’s John W. Boyd went from slavery to the statehouse

February 7, 2020 By The Leader

Search

Copyright © 2025 · The Leader | Legacy Media · Log in