
Old Conoco Station/Pop's Place
301 Missouri Avenue
785-765-2500
Originally there were three frame buildings at this location.
The first one housed a cigar factory, the second a barber shop and the
third was offices for J.B. Fields, Realtor. John Degenhardt purchased
the lot and moved the buildings around the corner and built the White
Eagle Service Station. His son, Leo, later operated the business as
a Mobile station and then Leo's son, Jim, ran the business for awhile.
This corner has quite a history as it is known as the famous "Lynching
Corner".
Around the turn of the 20th century a colored man murdered
a man in McFarland, robbed him and threw the body in the creek at McFarland.
The colored man was apprehended and put in the county jail at the old
courthouse in Alma. On a Sunday afternoon about 25 men broke into the
jail, put a rope around the Negro’s neck, drug him down the hill
to Main Street and strung him up on a light pole. An eyewitness of the
account said that after 15-20 minutes the crowd left him for dead and
Marshal William Pippert climbed the pole, cut him down and discovered
he was still alive. A doctor was summoned, the man was revived and rushed
away to keep the lynching from re-occurring.