Minnesota's Largest Candy Store
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Minnesota's Largest Candy Store is a family-owned candy store along
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in
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, Minnesota. The business is known for its distinctive yellow building, extensive candy selection, pop-culture-themed decor, and puzzle collection. The store closes during the winter months and is cash-only.


History

The store has its roots in Jim's Apple Farm, another Wagner family business, though the land was sold into the Wagner family in 1900. At first, the business focused on selling apples, as the
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had invested a great deal in Minnesota's apple industry. The business was successful, but remained relatively small, as travelers would buy apples and pie, and then continue traveling. At a certain point Robert Wagner decided to begin selling candy as well, mostly focusing on old-fashioned American candies, such as salt-water taffy. This also allowed the business to open earlier and close later in the season. While Robert did not intend the candy to become permanent, his daughter, Christine, pushed him to keep it available. Unlike apples, candy sales grew exponentially. In the mid-2000s a series of hailstorms devastated three consecutive years' worth of crops. Facing this financial burden, the family decided to rely more on candy sales. The gamble was successful, and the family began investing more heavily in candy, eventually building the yellow barn on the site. The building has been expanded numerous times, most recently to include a
planetarium A planetarium (: planetariums or planetaria) is a theatre built primarily for presenting educational and entertaining shows about astronomy and the night sky, or for training in celestial navigation. A dominant feature of most planetariums is ...
-like dome on its north end. In 2019 a car crashed into the side of the candy store, causing more than $50,000 in losses. Even so, the store did not close and the hole in the building was repaired by the time the store opened for business. Later in 2019, following a string of cash register robberies in
Scott County Scott County is the name of eleven counties in the United States of America: *Scott County, Arkansas *Scott County, Illinois *Scott County, Indiana *Scott County, Iowa, the most populous county on the list *Scott County, Kansas, the least populous ...
, the candy store placed a 16-ton Abbot tank in its parking lot as a
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deterrent. The store initially closed during the
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, but re-opened as an essential business on May 8, 2020. During this time, it provided free advertising for local restaurants seeking to advertise
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services.


Controversies

The store has several billboards on its property, which it uses to attract motorists' attention and advertise its products. They have caused controversy in the past.


Black Lives Matter

In October 2015 the store posted a message on a billboard, which read "Join The Movement #caramelapplesmatter." Robert Wagner, the owner of the store, apologized for the message and called it "a mistake." Five years later, in July 2020, an employee with access to the company Facebook page replied to a message stemming from the original #caramelapplesmatter billboard by insulting the sender and by saying "
All Lives Matter All Lives Matter is a slogan that emerged as a negative response to the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement, initially popularized on social media following the police killings of Michael Brown and Eric Garner in 2014. The phrase has been widel ...
." The store first believed it had been hacked, but then revealed that a longtime employee had sent the messages; the employee was fired. The store issued an apology, saying "The...messages by no means reflect the views of the owners or the Jim’s Apple Farm family as a whole" and " sincerely apologize that this event occurred and are in the process of determining action going forward."


Climate change

During an April snowstorm in 2018, the store posted a billboard that read "In Only Two Years
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Fixed
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." While some passing motorists interpreted this as support for Donald Trump, Wagner said the message was intended to "convince otoriststo stop." Even so, Wagner has donated at least $1,000 to Donald Trump's 2020 re-election campaign.


References

{{Wikidatacoord, Q124690131, region:US-MN_type:landmark, display=title Confectionery stores Tourism in Minnesota Scott County, Minnesota Family-owned companies of the United States Food and drink companies based in Minnesota