News

For those of us taking road trips with our families in the '60s and '70s, a stop at Stuckey's was a fun treat. They were the original roadside stop before Love's, Racetrack, WaWa, or Bucee's. You ...
These days, she puts 27,000 miles a year on her 2010 Mercury Milan Hybrid — a Craigslist find, its interior littered with wrappers from Smart Pop, Beer Nuts, Cheez-It crackers and, yes, Stuckey ...
Stuckey’s is still my roadside stop of choice. Our restaurant critic Christiane Lauterbach looks back at ’70s road trips and how she rediscovered the Stuckey's pecan log ... nuts, as well as ...
The story of Stuckey’s is a real-life testament to the American Dream. Rural Georgia in 1937: an enterprising young law school-dropout-turned-farmer gets a $35 loan from his grandmother and sets ...
Back in the day, when Southerners hit the road five-deep in the family car to visit relatives during the holidays or head down to the beach for the annual summer vacation, there was always time for a ...
A little backstory . Stuckey's rise started in 1937 in Eastman, Georgia. Following a bumper harvest, W.S. Stuckey began selling locally sourced pecans, honey and souvenirs from a roadside shed.
The once dominant road-trip stop now has about 60 franchise stores left, including one in rural Missouri that offers a vey ...
Atlanta-based Stuckey’s, the kitschy roadside retailer known for its pecan log rolls, bought a Georgia manufacturing plant with plans to move some of the chain’s candy-making and pecan ...