NewsNational News

Actions

‘White Only’ signs for sale at antiques store spark confrontation

Posted

CORTEZ, Colo. - It's tough to miss the Antique Corral on Highway 491 in Cortez. The shop is a bit of an antique itself, a popular store attracting tourists and others for several decades.

However, the store's shelves are also stocked with some controversy.

"I was angry, confused, shocked and absolutely just dumbfounded," Nicola Shanks told KDVR.

Shanks was shopping at the store several months ago when she says she stumbled upon several signs she believes were racist in nature, with messages that included, "Public Swimming Pool - Whites Only" and "Colored Seating in Rear."

antique1

Shanks says she demanded to speak with the owner, but the owner wasn't around.

After spending several months unsuccessfully trying to reach the owner, Cheryl Dean, Shanks says she decided to stop by the store again. She asked Dean to remove the signs.

"She told me to go back to England where I came from," said Shanks.

Dean did not remove the signs and says they are not racist in nature. She also told KDVR she's been selling them for years without complaint.

"I've lived in a small town my whole life. I don't even know what the word means. There's been black people in the store and we laugh about it. There's people that collect that stuff. It has nothing to do with racism. It's part of history, like, 'Look how far we've come'," Dean said.

Shanks responded: "That's the thing she says over and over: 'It's history. You're trying to erase history.' I shared with her that history belongs in a museum and that these things are made for profit and you're profiling a very horrible time in this country's history."

The dispute has now taken on a life of its own. Hundreds of people are now vowing to boycott the store and are bombarding the business with negative reviews online.

"They're horrible. They've threatened to burn down my store. They've threatened to kill me," said Dean.

Shanks says she doesn't condone violence, but she says she does support the First Amendment and is vowing not to let up. She says her 11-year-old daughter is African American, so the decision not to remove the signs is even more personal.

"It still doesn't make me angry. It makes me sad because it shows me how utterly emboldened and entrenched she is in her belief system that she utterly can't see how it affects others," said Shanks.

Dean said: "I don't have any regrets at all. Not at all. I never thought anything about it. It's just crazy how so few people can cause one person so much misery."

Dean said all of the signs sold in a couple of days because of all the publicity. She also said she does not plan to purchase any more for her store.