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Introduction

In a career built on truth-telling and quiet dignity, Alan Jackson has always been more than just a singer of country hits. He is a storyteller for the working class, a poet of small towns, and a voice for those whose stories often go unheard. Nowhere is this more evident than in his poignant 1999 single “Little Man,” a heartfelt tribute to the independent shopkeepers, farmers, and mom-and-pop business owners being quietly edged out by progress.

Released as the third single from his album “High Mileage,” the song quickly resonated with listeners who recognized its message not as nostalgia, but as a reality unfolding in their own communities. Written by Jackson himself, “Little Man” became a rallying cry for the overlooked — not political, but deeply personal, told in the same plainspoken style that has made Jackson such a trusted voice.

The lyrics trace the narrator’s journey back through towns he once knew, storefronts he used to frequent, and people who once thrived but are now gone“I go back now and the stores are empty / Except an old Coke sign dated 1950,” he sings, his voice steady, soft, and filled with quiet disappointment. Each verse brings another image — shuttered hardware stores, closed-down diners, boarded-up main streets — until the listener feels the weight of what’s been lost in the name of expansion.

It’s a simple line, but one packed with emotion — recognition, respect, and regret. In that moment, Jackson is not a superstar. He’s a son of the South, a fellow traveler, a man remembering what used to be and asking why it had to change so much, so fast.

Musically, the song is grounded in classic country instrumentation — steel guitar, acoustic strumming, and a mid-tempo rhythm that carries the message without distraction. The production is clean and restrained, designed to keep the spotlight on the lyrics and the emotional landscape they paint. There’s no need for flash. The story itself does the heavy lifting.

“Little Man” peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, but its impact far outweighed its chart position. For older listeners especially — those who remember when a handshake could close a deal, when a small-town store could feed a family, when main street was the heartbeat of the community — this song struck a nerve. It wasn’t just about economics. It was about identity, pride, and the slow fading of a way of life.

Video

Lyrics

(Alan Jackson)

I remember walkin’ round the court square sidewalk

Lookin’ in windows at things I couldn’t want

There’s johnson’s hardware and morgans jewelry

And the ol’ Lee king’s apothecary

They ware the little man

The little man.

I go back now and the stores are empty

Except for an old coke sign dated 1950

Boarded up like they never existed

Or renovated and called historic districts

There goes the little man

There goes the little man.

Chorus:

Now the court square’s just a set of streets

That the people go around but they seldom think

‘Bout the little man that built this town

Before the big money shut em down

And killed the little man

Oh, the little man.

He pumped your gas and he cleaned your glass

And one cold rainy night he fixed your flat

The new stores came where you do it yourself

You buy a lotto ticket and food off the shelf

Forget the little man

Forget about that little man.

He hung on there for a few more years

But he couldn’t sell slurpees

And he wouldn’t sell beer

Now the bank rents the station

To a man down the road

And they sell velvet Elvis and

Second-hand clothes

There goes little man

There goes another little man.

Chorus:

Now the court square’s just a set of streets

That the people go round but they seldom think

‘Bout the little man that built this town

Before the big money shut ’em down

And killed the little man

Oh, the little man.

— Instrumental —

Now the stores are lined up in a concrete strip

You can buy the whole world in just one trip

And save a penny ’cause it’s jumbo size

They don’t even realize

They’er killin’ the little man

Oh, the little man.

Chorus:

Now the court square’s just a set of streets

That the people go round but they seldom think

Bout the little man that built this town

Before the big money shut em down

And killed the little man

Oh, the little man.

It wasn’t long ago when I was a child

An old black man came with his mule and his plow

He broke the ground where we grew our garden

Back before we’d all forgoten

About the little man

The little man.

Long live the little man.

God bless the little man…

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