This was one of the first purpose-built automobile service stations on the Eastern Shore, erected on the site of the Creighton blacksmith and wagon shop, ushering in a new era in transportation. It was built for brothers A. Milby and J. Lloyd Hurst and operated by the family into the 1970s. It contained a lunch counter and sold hunting and fishing licenses, becoming a popular local meeting spot. Typical of service stations of the era, it is a rectangular frame building with a hipped roof extending to form a drive-through canopy to shelter the gas pumps and has a double-door entrance flanked by display windows. It was purchased by the town commissioners and since 2002 has served as a local history museum.
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HURST BROTHERS SERVICE STATION
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