Originally built in 1916, the basic architecture - long and narrow with high ceilings - of 1129 Broad Street mirrors many of the retail spaces found on the street, many of which were built just after the Great Fire that destroyed 25 square blocks of downtown that same year.
With high ceilings, fancy millwork and large front windows that open onto iron balconies, the upper floors were used as residential units until the mid-1940s. Unlike the adjacent spaces, the upper floors of Westobou Gallery remain vacant today.
Originally a grocery store, the ground floor, over the years was occupied by a shoemaker’s shop, a furniture store and a dry goods store.
The longest, and most well-known, tenant was Simkins Seed Co. For more than 50 years, the Seed Co. was a recognized and beloved Broad Street anchor. Leroy Simkins Sr. operated the country store long after Augusta transitioned from an agricultural to an urban economy.
Westobou Gallery, which opened in May 2015, has once again brought new life into a 100 year-old building. Westobou is proud to carry on the building’s tradition and share a piece of its rich history.