“The turning point event was in 1942. The Navy used our campus as a pre-flight training school, so dad said overnight there were 5,000 new men in town, and when they checked in they were given a piece of paper. It had all the supplies that they needed and you came to Franklin Street to find it,” Fox said. “He said, ‘I could do that.’”
He opened Julian’s at 140 E. Franklin St., the space now occupied by Sugarland, in the hopes of supplying the men with everything they would need for their time in Chapel Hill.
Maurice quickly established himself as a premiere arbiter of taste in Chapel Hill, and Julian’s thrived.
“Maurice had incredible taste, just incredible taste,” said Maria Villanueva, a longtime family friend and Julian’s employee. “He could look at you and just know what was going to look good on you. He was a trendsetter here in this area.”
After eloping with Mary in 1947, Maurice tried diligently to get his bride to join his business. The new Mrs. Julian very reluctantly accepted.
“They were both very independent, but just this sort of yin and yang,” Fox said.
“Knowing that mom said, ‘Not on your life,’ and the fact that she ate those words and came into the business — she was always just my mom helping dad, but it wouldn’t have been successful without her.”
Fox recalled coming into the store after school and watching her mother label and send off thousands of bills to the parents of students who had charged their purchases.
“She was the keeper of the cash register,” Fox said. “She had a great business sense and dad was a genius at that. She was the softness, though, where dad could have the vision, and she would do the rest.”
From giving students a job when they needed one to being the first to embroider the Old Well onto a tie, Maurice and Mary Julian worked to not only give back, but also to create UNC traditions that their children could carry on for years to come.
Maurice Julian died in 1993, and Mary Julian died three years later in 1996.
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“I don’t think you can separate Chapel Hill and Julian’s,” Fox said. “I think that this is a place where a Julian’s could thrive. Its very core and heart is a personification of Chapel Hill.”
Seventy-two years after Maurice Julian started it all, Julian’s has changed in many ways. Now located at 135 E. Franklin St., the store is run by a third generation of Julians — Fox’s son, Bart.
But the trait that never seems to disappear is the spirit of Maurice and Mary Julian.
“For them to be recognized for really playing a role in this town that they chose and that they loved so much,” Fox said. “It inspires us in their memory, and it’s a wonderful legacy for our children.”
Now, sitting in the store where she can look out the front windows and see the building that housed her parents’ legacy, a misty-eyed Fox says the business will always be motivated by the two who started it all.
“I’m proud of mom and dad,” Fox said. “I’ve always been proud of them. I know that everything that I’ve done and everything that we’ve done is to make them proud of us too.”
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