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Stephanie Stuckey recently became the shepherd of her family’s brand. And now she’s on a mission to visit its flock of roadside stores around the nation. Her grandfather, W.S. Stuckey Sr.
As of a couple of years ago, it was down to barely a dozen stores. Then Stephanie Stuckey, Sylvester’s granddaughter, stepped in. Two and a half years ago, she set aside a career as a lawyer and ...
Stephanie Stuckey bounds up the driveway of Houston’s Beer Can House in red sneakers, white jeans and a souvenir-stand T-shirt. She whips an iPhone from her back pocket and starts recording a ...
Seeing Southern Travel on MSN3mon
Stephanie Stuckey and the American Road TripBy the time her grandfather died in 1977, the brand was fading and what most had come to know about Stuckey’s was a distant ...
Stephanie Stuckey, CEO of the Georgia-based Stuckey’s chain of candy and convenience stores, believes road trips are a great time to give yourself permission to step away from normal dieting habits.
As Stephanie Stuckey reminds us in “UnStuck,” her account of the company’s rise and fall and current attempts at resurrection, Stuckey’s was for decades an oasis of fun—and profit.
“So before there was TA, Pilot, Love’s, Buc-ees, there was Stuckey’s,” said the company’s CEO Stephanie Stuckey. “We were founded in 1937 as a roadside stand by my grandfather and ...
Will it last? By Roy Furchgott In June 2020, having used her life savings to buy back the failing roadside franchise that bears her family name, Stephanie Stuckey was in a Marion, Ark., ...
"Our plans include reviving the original pecan shed where my grandfather started our company and bringing it to Wrens as a tourist attraction,” said Stephanie Stuckey, the company’s CEO and co ...
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