Page 12 - Early Spring 2019 SWHS Newsletter
P. 12

Julia Mackie Brixner Cross’s
        Maxwelton Store

          In 1917 Julia Mackie married Myron
        Brixner  (a  logger  at  Maxwelton)  and
        started a family. Unfortunately, her hus-
        band died in 1929 and as a widow with
        three  young  children,  she  was  faced
        with finding a way to support them.
           In 1931 her father, Maxwelton pio-
        need  P.H.  Mackie,  built  Julia  a  small
        store called the Sea Shell next to her
        house to  sell  produce,  milk,  butter,
        and eggs from his farm. She also sold
        chickens and salmon and baked bread
        and pies to sell to summer visitors.
                                                                                      When  customers  phoned  Julia  and
                                                                                    ordered salmon, she would paddle by
                                                                                    canoe out to the fish trap at Maxwelton
                                                                                    to pick them up. Back then a whole king
                                                                                    salmon sold for 75 cents, a coho (silver)
                                                                                    for 35 cents, and only 10 cents for a pink
                                                                                    (humpie).
                                                                                      The store was expanded and named
                                                                Julia Mackie Brixner
                                                                was a young widow   Cross Country Store in 1936 after Julia
                                                                who ran a small     married Ray Cross and they ran it to-
                                                                grocery at Maxwelton   gether. It was sold in 1947 and changed
                                                                in 1931. When she   hands several times before closing in
                                                                married Ray Cross the   the late 1990s. Julia died at age 95 in
                                                  Circa 1940s   store was enlarged.  1989, while still living at Maxwelton.



        P. H. Cookson’s Mutiny Bay Store
          Pleasant H. Cookson and his wife,
        Serelda, came to  Austin about 1910
        when he built and operated the Mutiny
        Bay Store just up from the dock in Austin
        (now near the public boat ramp.)
          He was postmaster at  Austin from
        1915 to 1940. He died in 1946 at age
        82. The store was a hub of activity for
        the beach area, even as it transitioned
        into a fishing resort location.









                                               Photo courtesy Joy Fisher
                                                pThe store was located near the corner of
                                                Mutiny Bay and Lancaster Roads and was a
                                                gathering place for local residents.  p .H. Cookson ran the Mutiny Bay Store at
                                                                                      P
                                                                                    Austin for years.
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