The Richmond Register

Local News

March 14, 2010

Young at heart

Thornberry’s founder celebrates 101st birthday

RICHMOND — In 1935, America was still in the throes of the Great Depression, but G.H Thornberry was an optimistic young man of 26. He left his job in a bank and moved to Winchester where he opened a grocery store, following in the footsteps of his parents who had a grocery in Olive Hill.

Thirty-four years later, he opened another grocery store on Main Street in Richmond. He also had another grocery in that era at Mt. Sterling.

Yesterday, Thornberry celebrated his 101st birthday with a luncheon at Arlington House with his two surviving sons and other descendants.

The grocery stores in Winchester and Mt. Sterling are now history, but two of his granddaughters, Dina Flynn and Debbie McIntosh, run the Richmond Sav-A-lot, the successor of the store he opened here 41 years ago.

Dressed in a crisply pressed shirt and sweater vest with neatly groomed white hair, the Carter County native looked as fit as a man 30 years younger as he sat at the head of a long table.

With the help of a great-grandson, Cody, 2, Thornberry blew out the three candles on a birthday cake after family members sang, “Happy

Birthday dear papaw.” He did not eat much of the carrot cake and its rich icing, however, seeming to prefer the fruit cup he was eating when the cake was brought out.

Their patriarch has long favored fresh fruits and vegetables in his diet, family members said. Thornberry said he looks forward to planting a garden soon, just as he has done for as long as he can remember.

“My garden has been plowed,” he said, “but it’s been too chilly lately to get out and work it.”

Reflecting on when he first opened his own business, Thornberry said, “Those were rough times, but we didn’t know it then.”

Among the signs of the times in 1935 were customers who brought fresh eggs or live chickens to the store to exchange for groceries.

Thornberry’s first Richmond store was on Main Street, said his son Larry, who managed the family’s Richmond operation for many years.

It later moved to Water Street and then to Richmond Plaza, where it joined the Super Valu and then the Sav-A-Lot retail associations. Two years ago, the Thornberrys moved their store again, to the Robert R. Martin Bypass.

Thornberry’s was the first Richmond grocery to feature a self-serve meat department, Larry Thornberry said.

Starting with G.H. Thornberry’s parents, the grocery business has been a family tradition.

“Family members have always worked the stores,” the elder Thornberry said, “and we never had an ill word.”

When a reporter expressed skepticism about such an idyllic characterization, Thornberry said, “We’re all family and we love each other.”

Thornberry visits the Richmond store at least once a week to shop, he said, but does not try to tell the younger generations how they should manage it.

Asked what advice he would offer the young,Thornberry said, “Get out there and get with it, and never give up.”

Not an especially talkative man, Thornberry mostly has led his family by example, a family member said.

He seems to have passed his work ethic down at least two generations. His granddaughter Dina was dressed in a buttoned-down Sav-A-Lot shirt for the luncheon that began shortly after 11 a.m. She was headed back to the store afterward and would be catching the 1 p.m. University of Kentucky basketball game only on the radio, she said. However, her grandfather has the leisure time these days to watch games on television.

A long-time UK fan, Thornberry had season tickets going back to Memorial Coliseum and the glory days to the Adolph Rupp era. He stopped attending games only because all of his buddies he once shared the stands with have passed on.

“He gave up golf just a few years ago only because he felt he was too slow and was holding up the golfers playing behind him,” said grandson-in-law Kevin Flynn. “When he was 90, his goal was to shoot his age in golf.”

In addition to his son Larry and his twin brother Jerry, Thornberry had another son, Jay Douglas, who is deceased.

He has nine grandchildren, 15 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild. His wife Virginia died in 1996.

Bill Robinson can be reached at brobinson@richmondregister.com or at 624-6622

 

Text Only
Local News
  • 5-27 TeacherRetireLambert2.jpg ‘She wasn’t just a teacher’ : Lambert retires after 43 years at Berea

    Scroll to the bottom of the story to read "Love for Lambert: Berea graduates share memories of their teacher," as well as a list of other Berea retirees this year.

    Writer’s Note: Brenda Lambert is the reason I write articles today (Class of 2000).

    Years ago, a little blonde-haired girl from Rockcastle County gathered her friends to “play school” in a 10-by-10 foot playhouse her father built.
    Even at 12 years old, Brenda Lambert knew she wanted to be a teacher one day.
    “I always felt like an old person trapped in a young person's body,” said Lambert, who is retiring after 43 years of service to Berea Community School.

    May 27, 2012 5 Photos

  • 5-27 Special Olympics4.jpg Special Olympics return for 18th year at EKU

    Next weekend, the Special Olympics Kentucky State Summer Games return to Eastern Kentucky University campus. This is the 18th consecutive year EKU has hosted the event.
    The games will be Friday through June 2. About 1,300 athletes will compete this year.

    May 27, 2012 1 Photo

  • Assault charges reduced, dismissed by grand jury

    Two men arrested in connection with serious assaults had their charges reduced, and in one case dismissed, by a Madison grand jury.
    Jerry Wayne Edington, 34, of Berea Road, was charged Jan. 19 with second-degree assault after an altercation at the Blue Moon bar on East Irvine Street, according to a Richmond police report.

    May 27, 2012

  • 5-27 Dump of the DayBW.jpg Dump of the Day

    The Dump of the Day is a recurring series the newspaper publishes to highlight illegal trash piles and push local governments to cite perpetrators and get illegal dumps cleaned up. See Page A7 in Sunday's paper to read a copy of the city’s ordinance related to trash pickup.

    May 27, 2012 1 Photo

  • 5-26-Paradise-Cove-opens.jpg Paradise Cove open through Labor Day Opening day of Paradise Cove Family Aquatic Center coincided with a spike in temperatures Friday which reached 90 degrees. The facility, located in Richmond’s Lake Reba Park, will be open through Sept. 3. Regular hours are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 to 6 p.m. Sunday.

    May 26, 2012

  • 5-26-Dump-of-the-Day.jpg Dump of the Day

    An old mattress, a car seat and other debris sit Friday afternoon on North Street between Fourth and Fifth Streets where it was first spotted Thursday. The “Dump of the Day” is a recurring series the Richmond Register publishes to highlight illegal trash piles and push local governments to cite perpetrators and get illegal dumps cleaned up. See Sunday’s Richmond Register to read a copy of the city’s ordinance related to trash pickup.

    May 26, 2012 1 Photo

  • Undefeated academic team brings pride to Madison Middle School

    Madison Middle School 6th and 7th grade academic teams have been undefeated for the last two years.
    The 8th grade team also has done well, having some students qualify to compete at the state level.

    May 26, 2012

  • 5-26-Elvis-Isaacs.jpg Woman fends off burglar with knife

    A Berea woman used a kitchen knife to fend off an alleged burglar early Wednesday morning, and police say they were able to catch the man in the act.

    May 26, 2012 1 Photo

  • Man is indicted on additional sex charge involving teen in 1998

    A man already accused of sex abuse in November 2011 has been indicted on a charge of first-degree rape involving a child in 1998.
    Charles W. Peyton, 63, of East Irvine Street, was indicted Wednesday by a Madison grand jury. He used “forcible compulsion” to have sexual intercourse with a 14-year-old girl between March 1 and May 1 in 1998, according to the indictment.

    May 26, 2012

  • 5-26 Elvis Isaacs.jpg Woman fends off burglar with knife

    A Berea woman used a kitchen knife to fend off an alleged burglar early Wednesday morning, and police say they  were able to catch the man in the act.
    Officers responded to a call in the 1000 block of Scaffold Cane Road about a man trying to break into a home, according to a release from BPD Public Information Officer Jake Reed.

    May 25, 2012 1 Photo

Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
AP Video
Raw Video: Gay Protest Blocked in Moscow Vatican in Chaos After Butler Arrested for Leaks Jimmy Carter Endorses Egypt's Election Results Biden Addresses West Point Graduating Class Dozens of Children Killed in New Syria Attack Raw Video: Activists Allege Massacre in Syria NJ Man Charged With Murder in Death of Patz Support, Fun for Kids of Fallen Soldiers at Camp Fugitive Penguin Caught, Returned to Aquarium 50 Years Later, Underground Fire Still Burning Light Show Transforms Sydney Opera House Raw Video: Unruly Passenger Restrained in Miami Raw Video: Robber Uses Drive-thru Window Raw Video: Dragon Arrives at Space Station Calif.'s Coronado Named Nation's Best Beach CEO Salaries Become Sore Issue in Labor Disputes
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com
Poll

A recent health ranking listed Madison County as the 20th healthiest county in the state. It measured factors such as exercise, access to health care and smoking. Do you smoke cigarettes?

Yes
No
I used to, but I quit.
     View Results