The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Councilman quits after souvenir shop gets permit

Officials: Wildman’s Civil War Surplus passed inspection­s.

- By Taylor Croft taylor.croft@ajc.com and Brian Eason brian.eason@ajc.com

A Kennesaw city councilman resigned and his daughter announced plans to relocate her business out of downtown in protest of a Confederat­e memorabili­a shop reopening last week after the city issued it a business license.

Wildman’s Civil War Surplus, infamous locally for its collection of racist souvenirs, closed earlier this year after its founder, Dent “Wildman” Myers, died in January and its business license expired. The store reopened Tuesday.

Councilman James “Doc” Eaton said he resigned effective June 21 after the city manager told him there was nothing the city legally could do to prevent the store from reopening.

“It breaks my heart to have to do it,” Eaton told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “I said, ‘If you guys can’t do anything about it, I don’t want any part of it.’”

Wildman’s Civil War Surplus displays and sells Confederat­e and Jim Crow-era parapherna­lia, including Confederat­e flags and uniforms, old pictures and papers with racial slurs, and dolls and statues portraying caricature­s of Black people. The store was targeted by a student-led protest advocating for its shutdown in 2020.

Marjorie Lyon, who worked with Myers for years, said reopening Wildman’s “wasn’t a decision. It’s an honor.” Lyon identified herself as the manager. She’s also the CEO of Dent Myers Enterprise­s, which owns the store, according to the Georgia secretary of state’s office.

Lyon said she has received a mix of hate and support from the community, including emails and comments on social media.

“I don’t have any control over someone’s emotional response,” Lyon said. “I’ve heard all kinds of colorful things. And everybody’s entitled to their opinion.”

The store’s prominent location in the heart of downtown has frustrated some city leaders and nearby business owners for decades, some of whom view it as a black eye for Kennesaw’s image. Cris Eaton Welsh, Councilman Eaton’s daughter, owns a chiropract­ic business across the street and called Wildman’s “an absolute hate store.”

“I have been on this corner for 22 years with the thought that once Wildman passed away, that store would go away,” Eaton Welsh said. “It’s not OK.”

Kennesaw issued the business license after the store underwent “the procedural process that is required by all businesses within the City of Kennesaw when applying for a new business license,” city officials said in a statement.

Dennis Deal, a longtime customer and friend of the late Myers, said the store is preserving history and has a right to stay open.

“I think it’s everybody’s right to own a business,” Deal, 68, said. “I mean, you can’t deny one and accept another.”

But Eaton Welsh said history belongs in a museum, not in a store.

“There’s a difference between selling merchandis­e and propagatin­g hate,” Eaton Welsh said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Customers shop Thursday at Wildman’s Civil War Surplus, which first opened in downtown Kennesaw in 1971. When the owner, Dent Myers, died in January, Marjorie Lyon vowed to keep the shop open.
PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Customers shop Thursday at Wildman’s Civil War Surplus, which first opened in downtown Kennesaw in 1971. When the owner, Dent Myers, died in January, Marjorie Lyon vowed to keep the shop open.
 ?? ?? Wildman’s Civil War Surplus has a prominent location in the heart of downtown Kennesaw, which has frustrated some city leaders and nearby business owners.
Wildman’s Civil War Surplus has a prominent location in the heart of downtown Kennesaw, which has frustrated some city leaders and nearby business owners.

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