We need your help.

The French Co is Marathon's only grocery store and community centerpiece. We need your help to save it. Click here to view our GoFundMe page, learn more, and donate.


Friends, Family, Fellow Texans,Our 5-year lease at the current location was set to end this November, and after years of agonizing deliberation and our best efforts…. it is clear that staying in our current location is no longer a workable option. This has put us in a serious bind- an existential one.Asking for help is humbling, and difficult, but without the aid of our broader community, we will not be able to continue operating and the french grocer would close permanently in November 2024.We do not want to close.Relocating a grocery store is tricky business, and will come with many challenges- some predictable, some not so predictable. Relocation also comes at a substantial cost and is by far the most expensive and challenging effort this store will ever face. Pandemic included.Funding is needed to outfit a location with the necessary infrastructure for our grocery store, electrical, plumbing, built-in refrigeration, renovations, and to help with down-payment for purchase of the store property. We cannot allow a relocation to be a regression in our ability to deliver on the outcomes you expect from us. We are the only location in a 30 mile radius that accepts food stamps- maintaining our status as an EBT (food stamps) store is also critical to delivering on our promises.We are humbly asking for your help in order to preserve and liberate Marathon's grocery store and community centerpiece, allowing us to move to a new location in order to survive. With a little time, expect us to thrive there, too. It is not the first time we have reinvented ourselves.We are not able to disclose details about the new location just yet, but backers of this campaign will be the first to see the details of our plan. What we can say is: our new location will be perfect, and just as (if not more) convenient as our current location. It will allow us to deliver everything you have come to expect from The French and more, right where you need it. Our plan for the next chapter of the french co will excite you and will allow us to continue to deliver on our promises.It will be nothing short of heart-wrenching for us to say goodbye to 206 Ave D- the place where we have devoted endless energy, immeasurable time and financial resources. The truth is, we never wanted to relocate, and we held out hope that our dilemma would see a reasonable compromise allowing us to stay. For the last 5 years, we have painstakingly refitted and adapted our current location through countless improvements that were 100% self-funded, based on thousands and thousands of small decisions and interactions with you. All of this was necessary: we are a grocery store, a produce provider, a catering kitchen, a prepared foods outlet, a private event space, a food service operation, a music venue, a full coffee & espresso bar, a camping gear store, general store, and more. We take all of this galvanized experience with us, and with a successful campaign this will prove to be a masterclass in manifestation and a showcase of our know-how, grit, and community support.With your help we can continue this legacy of independent, old-school industry right here in Marathon. With your help we will remain where we know even more than your name. We will continue our highly active support in our community, With your help this 100+ year story has only just begun. With your help we can continue to create a future together building community.Failure is not an option. It never has been, not in this chapter, nor during the original French family’s chapters over 100 years ago. Leaving Marathon with a void, a wound, is not an option. We strongly hope for your support, and with it, expect to be successful in our plans for the future.

Long Store ShortFor those of you who don’t know me yet, my name is Sam. I moved to Marathon in 2019 to become the steward of an establishment that was well over 100 years in the making.I once listened to two locals at the cash register arguing with each other about who was in less of a hurry after one offered to let the other ahead of them in line. "I ASSURE YOU I AM INDEED IN LESS OF A HURRY THAN YOU, SIR". They were not being ironic nor even sarcastic. This was a jaw-dropping experience for me and the other patrons standing in line. That moment and many others made me acutely aware that Marathon was a unicorn community. I was in the right place. Not because I want to "move slow," but because the point of this project we call "the store" has never been to simply get-in-and-get-out. It is about a commitment to a community to be here, stay here, serve here, grow here, listen and give all that we can… at a cadence that may feel like a lost art in most communities.I never questioned the claim that Marathon was the gateway to The Big Bend. To me, Marathon is the perfect size town, because you can barely call it that. I, like Guil Jones, prefer "hamlet". I grew up in Andrews, in Texas' Permian Basin, and Big Bend was my first experience in a national park. Lucky. I was barely a teenager when I first canoed through Santa Elena. Now, more than twenty years and a hundred river trips later, I've rooted down in my forever-home for reasons which any resident of the transpecos can attest. I never mind the "west texas tax" (usually comes in the form of "wtf?" or "whenever time" or just "wind").From the time I could walk, I never passed on an errand to the grocery store. A grocery store is a wonderland. I still never pass a trip to the grocery store, for those same reasons, and a whole lot of new ones.In 2019, I was, and "the french" was, ready for a new chapter, and Marathon's store has almost as many chapters as Lonesome Dove. So much has changed in the last 5 years, and the store's continuity in Marathon is a story that is beyond rare. That story is impossible to capture in this context but useful and important for us just to imagine. Our small-but-mighty store continues to evolve every single day that we are open (and even when we aren't)- and we are in fact open 365 days a year. (With your help, 366 days in 2024). The evolution of Marathon's grocery store, which is located in a USDA-designated Food Desert (not dessert), includes its transformation into the community centerpiece. (Some say it is "the dairy queen", which is a useful metaphor, but our burgers are not in the same league.) If you are reading this, you are the purpose of this evolution. This era of the french co's 100+ year history is strongly defined by the people it reaches. From a recent Texas Highway's article, I said:“If you are really honest [...] you realize that community is the whole reason to do this. If not, it would be like a zombie—it might have arms and legs, but it wouldn’t have a soul.”Say no to zombies. In this new era, I wanted for this establishment to mirror its real people. This is not a visionary's quest based on a design. It is a malleable culture. It has evolved a magic that is based in its intention to be dynamic and vibrant just like the people who work there, the people who frequent us, the people who encourage us from afar, the people who stop in once a year, the people who tell us stories, the people who ask for help, the people who rendezvous in our backyard-- all of them, people who value and cherish our place, our space, and our efforts.A successful fundraising campaign will lead to the preservation and liberation of Marathon's grocery. You already know that it's more than a grocery store. If you don't (yet), we look forward to spending time with you in "the french co universe".For a crew that doesn't make promises, let this campaign be our exception: For supporting this campaign, we promise you that we will pass it on, we will be generous, we will keep the dream alive, we will deliver, and we will delight you and everyone who comes into our universe every time for many many more years to come. For the rest of my life, if I can help it. I never pass up on an errand to the grocery store.

PressFood and Winehttps://www.foodandwine.com/the-french-co-grocer-marathon-texas-7486486Texas Monthlyhttps://www.texasmonthly.com/food/small-texas-grocers-rise/Texas Highwayshttps://texashighways.com/travel/15-small-town-mom-and-pop-shops-worth-the-trip/Big Bend Timeshttps://bigbendtimes.com/2023/04/29/french-grocer-of-marathon-selected-by-food-wine-as-a-must-visit-destination/Big Bend Timeshttps://bigbendtimes.com/2023/04/12/french-co-grocer-in-marathon-a-one-stop-shop-for-all-your-grocery-camping-gear-and-catering-needs/

Call to Action
Please Donate. Please share this story with others. Please encourage others to donate. Please share this story on social networks. We need you. Our continued existence will be a monument to every contribution in this effort.

Contact
To get directly in touch please email Sam: sam@frenchcogrocer.com

Testimonials

"To walk into the French Grocer is to walk into the beating heart of a community. The kind of place you find yourself lingering, trying to put your finger on what it is that makes you so content just being there. On summer nights you’ll find yourself in amongst friends and warm strangers, happy to share the millions of stars and dark skies that surround this little oasis of simple richness. In our travels, we find ourselves enchanted by such places. We seek them out because they are rare. They offer an insight into a place and its inhabitants that is real and rooted in a community that is alive and vivid. We wonder aloud what it would be like to spend significant time here and find our answer in the lovingly curated ambiance of the French Grocer. Its more than a store in a small town. The presence of the French Grocer reveals the soul of a place like Marathon. To see the store fail would be to kill a bit of the character that makes a place unique in this world. The store is more than groceries or burgers or music, it’s the symbol of passion and handcrafted culture that is rapidly disappearing in this world."
- matt tumlinson


My favorite memory at the French Co. was 3rd annual John Prine event - I met so many people there, and made, what I would consider life long connections with some. Going until 3am in the morning with some of the best people in Far West Texas.The French Co. Means a lot to me on the terms of community. Living in Sanderson, I miss out on a lot of community opportunities because I’m always in Marathon for work - but the French helps close that gap. Not once has there ever been a time that I didn’t feel at home or welcomed into the French.
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All my time spent at the French Co. has been welcoming and fun. I’d hate to see the one hub in town stripped from this community. Anybody and anyone can be someone at the French.
A permanent closure [of the French Co] would be detrimental to Marathon. My grandparents, who are both born and raised in Marathon, depend highly on the convenience of the French. It would be a mess if there was no local spot where they could grab something quickly.[...] Locals need to have a space that feels like homeIf I am looking for homemade, quality food, I can’t get that currently in Sanderson due to my work hours. Having a last min grocery store for someone that loves at least an hour from the nearest one is extremely helpful and it would not be fun if I didn’t have access to the French.
- kierstin pratt