I remember being very young...hearing my mom say we're going grocery shopping today...and reacting with ohhh no. Speed to present and I majored in history and came to understand how incredibly lucky I was to have been born into a time and a place where people could simply go to a central place where they could purchase any product..meat, vegetable, fruit, and any sort of drink or confection. All in a few hours of a morning. No farming...no droughts or hailstorm or plagues of locusts ...just availability. We're a spoiled lot...we need to be a bit more grateful for the world we live in. Just my two cents.
So true Mike That was impressed on me when we had friends form Sweden stay with us for a while in 1996. I sent my daughter to Sweden on a high school exchange program her junior year and I took my wife and my two other girls over there to pick Ann up. Her hos family said that they planned thier vacation around our arrival so we first stayed at their vaction home. As we were asking about accomdations in their home city, they said that they were staying in their vacation house and gave us the keys to their apartment rent free for t the 10 day stay. That gave us a chance to renta van and travel all the way to Stockholm for three days. So when their youngest daughter was in Minnesota in the program and was unhappy,Ann asked if she could stay with us for the second semester of school. We agreed and agreed to host her mother and her two sisters when they came to pick her up. Well we live in a town of about 4000 people so our stores are not that big. But we took them to a WalMart and then to an upscale store in St. Louis and to a mall ad they were shocked beyond words at the variety and the quality of the food and the lower prices than what they are used to. Of ccourse that has changed and even Russia have large stores now that are fully stocked
The movie “Yours Mine and Ours “ starring Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball. They were a married couple that had 19 children. They went grocery shopping and they had several shopping carts full and they rang up the price $126.00 . The movie was made in 1968. Anyone remember that movie? $126.00 wouldn’t even fill one cart now.
Yes, I came from a big family, 9 including parents 😂 we also had 4-5 carts if not more, bill was almost $500 & that was alot back then like you we're rich & we weren't 😂 & all rhat food lasted us about a week or so 😱
My entire family shopped at A & P for decades! Both grandmothers and my own mother shopped there at least once a week, especially to get their 8 o'clock coffee, freshly ground right inside the store! Miss those days, to be sure!
That coffee was really good. i have to admit; I like my Keurig for the convenience. But I miss the smell of coffee brewing in the morning. It almost made you glad that you have to get out of bed. Almost.
Ann Page fruitcake - wonderful!!!! Shopped at A&P as a kid with my grandma and my mom- a bit older and was shopping for a family of 6, dad would come pay at the checkout! It was nerve wracking
My fondest memory of a grocery store was the one my Great Aunt owned. It was called Cash Grocery and located in a town of around 700 people. It had wooden counters and some of them had glass fronts so you could see what was contained in the storage bins behind them. It had meat coolers and she cut whatever your choice was on a huge butcher block. In the middle of the store, there was a gas heater and about 6 wicker back chairs, and a checkerboard table. I can't remember a time going in there that there wasn't at least 3 people sitting there...usually old timers swapping lies and stories. It used to be a bank and in the back was where the safe deposit boxes were once located. In there, she stored bulk feed and seed. The cash register was huge, but didn't work. She just left the side open and manually opened the cash drawer with a lever inside. It had a large scale (for people, not food) in the very front. Get your weight for a penny. But it didn't work either. Her hours were normally 8 to 5 and she walked to the store every day (rain or shine) since she never owned a vehicle. My grandmother would walk to the store to relieve my aunt for lunch. However, my aunt would often close early if someone invited her to go fishing. AND, if a fishing trip was planned before hand, whoever invited her had to be careful because before the trip, my aunt would invite 3 or 4 others as well. Great times, great people.
I remember the A&P and other grocery stores that had the old fashioned meat scales to weight the meat as well as the button cash registers that would take you at least 15 minutes to cash out and you also would get green stamps also there were silver ashtrays at the end of each aisle because everyone could smoke cigarettes or cigars in the stores
@@MichelleBourque-w9z After my dad died (1957) my mother ended up with the controlling interest of a pharmacy. I started working there when I was 14. We gave out green stamps and as far as smoking went, when I was 16, I started working at a Western Auto store and two of the employees smoked. I was one of them. I remember selling auto accessories, stereo equipment, and appliances with a cigarette in my hand. We even often threw the butts on the floor and swept the store right after closing time. I worked there until I was 20 (1970). That's when I went into the Marines (70-76).
In small town America circa 1960's we had a house down the street from my gramdmother's house that was operated as a small grocery. They even had a butcher.
it's funny how we've gone from clerks getting the products for us, then we the customers got to pick the products ourselves and now we're back to the clerks getting the products for us because everything has to be locked up now thanks to shoplifting
Not so. High priced things like electronics yeah but groceries? Shit, if only they'd lock up the grapes in produce that people love to graze on without buying!
When My Late Mother was growing up during the Great Depression, she told me that she could go to the local Indoor Theater, pay for the ticket to go see a movie, buy a 6-Ounce Bottle of Coca-Cola and a bag of Popcorn for .25 cents. Shows how much things have changed since then.
I remember shopping at A&P when I was a kid. My mom would grind her coffee at the self-serve machine. I also remember their pecan-caramel rolls! Those things were amazing--they didn't spare the delicious, sticky caramel, and they used plenty of pecans to top the rolls. There was another store in the small town where we shopped--National Tea Co. It was larger than the A&P. It's gone through many iterations and is still a locally owned grocery store. I also remember Royal Blue stores.
I was in the business for 41 years. I always preferred the " conventional " stores over the " super stores ". They were more cosy especially around the holidays.
I hear you! When I was very young it was just my mother and I -- No car, very little money. We'd walk to the store every other day to purchase food. Back then near Christmas many grocery stores would sell some toys. ANd the little market we went to had toys for sale but the only thing I could see was this little stuffed cat - It was purple and had a bow around its neck. I dreamed about the stuffed cat but knew even as a little kid to not hope to have it. I remember my mother telling me that *if* I was really good Santa might bring me something but sometimes Santa wouldn't, even if I was really good. Christmas morning I got up and there on the kitchen table was that stuffed cat. I kept that silly stuffed cat until high school --- fully understanding just how much it had cost my mom to be able to eek out a few pennies here, a quarter there, to save up for that little stuffed toy.
Me Too.. We had a lot of small grocery stores in my hometown, Most were on Main Street as was my grandparents tavern' So my grandmother tried to shop at all of them for things because it was good for business, But he way she did it was unusal. The weekly newspaper came out on Tuesday with all the grocerie's ads featuring Wednesday sales. Sales were on Wednesday because stores were closed on Thursday afternoons but stayed open late on Friday nights back then. She would go through the paper and circle all the things she wanted by comparison shopping. She'cut out any coupons that were offered and put the coupons, the list, and the exact amount of money, including TAX, for her total costs into an individual envelope for each store. When she came home after numerous trips back and forth to different stores she would store the groceries and take the receipts and pin them to a nail in the window frame next to her chair at the kitchen table. At the end of the month she would total up and see her monthly expenses for food. Thrifty or cheap? I ask you!
When I was a kid in MI, we had A & P, Safeway, Farmer Jack's, Great Scott, and Food Fair all in close proximity to our neighborhood. Most were within walking distance of our house. None of these exist now except for the Safeway, still in the same place. The Great Scott store became a Family Dollar. Lucky stores were there too, but the one closest to us was farther away---had to drive there, and also there was a Wrigley's supermarket too. It's amazing how I remember all of these, since I left MI for AZ in 1970. I was 12 at the time. (Jan Griffiths).
I remember it was always a race between the cashier and the bagger boy ,she could ring stuff up on that mechanical cash register and send it ,while he tried to keep up ! Today they ring up 20 items and stand there Looking at you and ask " do you want a bag ?"
I've only heard of A&P and Jitney. We had a grocery store where I grew up called Sunflower. I was very little and loved the sunflower with a smiley face on their green light up sign.
My dad worked in the grocery business all his life. He started with Barbers in Albuquerque in the 30’s. He went on to work for Piggly Wiggly managing stores in New Mexico and west Texas. He retired as a district manager for them. My brother worked as a sacker in high school for dad. After serving in the Army, he came back and worked for Piggly Wiggly as a store manager. He eventually bought one of their stores and it was a customer favorite in our town. Very successful. He eventually sold it and retired.
I can remember the taste of the A&P cream of mushroom soup. It actually had lots of mushrooms, but it was the very good taste that helps with that memory for me! Every time I open any can of cream of mushroom, that A&P soup pops in my head! So many great memories of all the grocery stores when I was growing up. Where I grew up we had A&P, Safeway, Kroger, and Piggly Wiggly. We also had many hometown owned grocery stores.
🎉 retro greetings from coastal Mississippi. I remember alot of these stores. Piggly Wiggly, A&P, Winn Dixie, Food Basket, Alpha Beta became Skaggs Alpha Beta then became Albertsons (for us) and Safeway,Buddies. Thanks for the research and memories ❤
Me too. I worked at an IGA. Loved working with people! Now they have to bag a certain way, you don’t have enough personal time with your customers. But I loved it then.
My sister and I went with my dad every Friday evening to Safeway for our grocery shopping. The highlight was my sister and I each getting a comic book for 10 cents a piece.
We went to 'National' food store a lot in the 60's. Years ago we had a 'Kash and Karry'. It's now a dispensary called 'Hash and Merry'. Thanks for this upload.
My small northwest BC Canada city had a basement-level Co-Op grocery store. Boxes went by conveyor belt up to ground level; cars could pull up for the boxes just steps away.
When I was very young, my grandma would take me with her to Alpha Beta. It looked exactly like the photo @3:23! I was wondering if it was actually that exact store as a matter of fact 😄 It was in Sacramento, California in the 70’s. I remember those trips fondly and her getting me 1 beautiful cupcake each time from their bakery 😋!! The cupcake were beautiful colors !! I was always looked forward to those cupcakes as a kid 🧁!! They always had a little 3D clown head stuck into the top of them !! Ahh.. such memories ☺️ I miss my grandma SO much and all those fun shopping trips w her each week 🥰 They were the best .. just like my grandma 🥇🏆 Thanks for the post 👋🏼
In the 30s & 40s my Grandfather owned a corner store. My Mom an one of her sisters worked there until they got married. In 2012, 70 years after she married, she was at a funeral. A lady asked her is she used to work in the corner store. She remembered buying penny candy there.
I shop at Piggly Wiggly. Still. I remember the A and P. I'd go with my parents. I'm 65 years old. However in our small town, there was a privately owned grocery store. It was owned by 2 brothers. A very small store. I feel fortunate to have been able to know that experience.
I remember my family shopping at A and P in the late 1960s and I was very sad when all of the local stores closed in the early 1970s. When my family and I moved to Baton Rouge there was another popular chain called National Supermarkets, but they all closed down also. The store I really would have loved to visit back in the day was Piggly Wiggly, but according to what I hear they have all closed too.
Growing up in the Bronx 1 block away from our building was Finast, which was a fierce competitor of the Waldbaum's directly across the street from there
You didn't go back far enough. When I was a kid, about 6-7 years old, the checkstand had this 3 sided wooden rectangle where you put your stuff. You and the checker used these big handles to push the groceries forward.
There was a Kash and Karry when I moved here in the 1980s. When it closed it left many people with a food desert for those who had no cars to travel to stores further away.
Bells, Quality, Super Duper. My dad was a meat manager for a lot of Northeastern A&P, and I kind of remember them, although they pulled out of the WNY area when I was pretty young. The first three I remember quite well, and it seems like yesterday when Tops took over Quality. Twin Fair was also a neat 70s store. Like a very early version of a super Walmart. It was half department store, half grocery store. How things change.
Well =, I do remember A&P very well.. Thoough we had sixteen family owned grocery stores in my home town of 4000 people in the 1950's, mom preferred the big brand store in another town. So she would have my Dad drive her to A&P and she would take me along to help carry the groceries- a job that I hated. I do remember the scent of the grind it yourself coffee machines, There were three brands, Eight O Clock, their breakfast blend in red package, Bokar, the dark roasted blend in a black package, and the de-caf or light blend in a yellow package. We never bought it so I don't recall the name . The coffee packages contained whole beans that you poured into a grinder and then put the empty bag at the chute at the bottom of the machine. It would grind the beans to the grade y9u selected and deposit the ground coffee back into the original bag. You closed and resealed the bag and you were good to go. The aroma of that freshly ground coffee waa wonderful. But as for their products, not so much. They had a store brand bakery items known as Jane Parker which I did not care for, nor their Archway cookies. In the late 50's the store was taken over by Krogers.
Whoa, of all the many grocery stores in this video the only one I ever heard of was Kash n Karry. I was raised in Nebraska and am living in SW Florida. Winn-Dixie was mentioned, and is prevalent where I live now, it is owned by Southeastern Grocers which has sold it to Aldi in 2023.
8 o’clock coffee is sold at Woodmans Foods in Rockford Illinois. I don’t think they have grinders in the store. You could buy your own grinder and grind it yourself at home.
Logli and Hilander were two large chains in Rockford and north central Illinois. About 20 years ago Schnucks of St. Louis bought out both chains and relabeled them all as Schnucks.
My heart aches for another visit to White Hen. As a kid, there was one a mile away and we'd ride our bikes there to get .10 cans of soda and .10 tiny pizzas (that tasted like crap, lol). But the deli was amazing, and as time went on I'd go there for lunch/dinner during breaks of my high school job down the street. The White Hen concept would work again now, I believe. People are sick of being herded around and I think some of us would pay up a bit for decent food and service.
Ohhhh.....I remember the bottles of coke for either a nickle or a dime down at the corner store, this was back in the 60’s , when times where so much fun !
We had Safeway and Food King in Southern California. We also had a great mom and pop butcher shop called Bert’s. As a kid I loved Ribeye steak ( still do ). There was a market from the mid fifties to early 70s called Sages . Sage’s had two stories in San Bernardino and one in my beloved hometown of Rialto. Sages had a great cafe, groceries, camera store. Jewelry and watch repair and toys. You name it.
I remember em all..and also remember in Maine and new Hampshire with mom and pop grocery stores..it wasn’t uncommon to see mouse traps on bottom shelves in the 1950s …..the old squeaky wooden floors…..oh yes ! 😂
5:17 White Hen Pantry was one of my favorite places to stop and get a cup of coffee. Where I grew up, I could throw a stone in any direction and hit a couple of White Hen stores.
When I lived in NJ, I shopped at King's and Packard's as a kid. It was a small chain that sold a lot of gourmet type and imported items. I loved shopping there! Not sure they're still around, I left NJ 30 years ago. Packard's was closed in the late 80s.
@@scottr3484 ya, I grew up and realized I could never buy a home or afford the property taxes, so I left. I bought my first home at 27, while most of my friends were paying rent.
We had an A&P that went out of business in the mid-60’s. It was turned into a job center for school-age kids. That’s how I found my first jobs at the age of 11 yo. by cleaning homes. Riding my bike across town on Saturdays, cleaning one house in the morning and the 2nd in the afternoon. I also got babysitting jobs once I turned 12-13 yo as well as a lot of yard work.
Growing up in Ottawa late 60s to late 70s, remember as a child u pay for ur groceries, they tagged ur bags with a number, u got a copy, then u drove through a covered delivery area where ur groceries came up a conveyor belt from below then placed in ur truck, think the grocery store was dominion groceries
Hey, I just posted above about our Co-Op food store in Prince Rupert BC! Conveyor also up from lower level checkout area to street level for shoppers to pick up.
I remember Alpha Beta markets. They became ABCO in AZ at least. I generally shop at Walmart or Costco nowadays. I do grow most of my own vegetables, however. (Jan Griffiths).
I remember my dad taking me to A&P (Atlantic & Pacific) when I was young. I shopped there myself when I was 19-20 years old and worked at the Perry Drugs ( now Rite Aid) that was next door to A&P. I learned when I started working for Meijer that they had a connection with Atlantic-Pacific back when Meijer was Meijer Thrifty Acres.
You Forgot Piggly Wiggly 🙂 We still have 2 Piggly Wiggly Grocery Stores here in Nashville One so close to me it's where I always get my groceries Clerks know you No Self Scanning Cashier's do it All &Meat dept Butcher will cut your meat if needed & You don't have to walk around a Huge Store like Kroger's ! They sell more other things , aren't needed Only need Groceries
A&P was the only store where I remember any of the clerks giving me a penny to buy a gumball from the gumball machine... People would flip out if someone did that now.
I was raised in Folcroft, PA (just outside of Philadelphia), and there was an A&P store in the shopping Center there. My mother did our food shopping there, and a few other stores as well
The Tops in Rutland, VT was rebranded a Grand Union a year or two ago. They seem to have changed nothing else so I suspect it's more an attempt to keep the trademark on the books than a serious relaunch.
Shop Rite had fond memories for me! My mother and grandma loved the free coffee stand!! My stop was always the snack bar and video rentals before we hit the isles.. once or twice a year they had "Can~Can" sales and I knew it was gonna be an ALL day affair with the check-out lit up like Christmas!! 14 open lanes of organized chaos hahhh poor cashiers!!
Would help to get more photos and interesting info; like how A&P coffee (8 o'clock coffee) was so special and you could smell it as they ground it right at the check out counters etc...I remember Food Town, Grand Union, Shop Rite, Ben Franklin 5 & 10 stores, Kresge's (the same family that started Kmart)...
I ❤d when it was time to go grocery shopping 😂 at A&P. Everything we needed was all in a strip mall. The other grocery stores we had were Hills, King Kullen, Pathmark, FoodTown, always had sales & great deals too! 😁👍
These must have all been East Coast stores, I grew up in WA and have never heard of any of the stores you mentioned and I am 61. My mom shopped at a store called Grocery Boys and another called Farmers Market. At Farmers Market you used a flat cart with boxes and wrote the price on your grocery items with a grease pen. I the late 60's Fred Meyers came to our town, it was all the rage, clothes, household items, pharmacy and groceries..all under one roof!
My Grandma worked at A&P in a small midwestern town and the old-fashioned nature of Dominick's is what I liked about it even in the 90s. Was sorry to see Dominick's go. Grocery stores are too large now.
BACK IN THE DAY, AND I STILL REMEMBER WHEN I,WAS LIVING IN DETROIT, MICHIGAN. THERE WERE 6,MAJOR SUPERMARKET CHAIN STORES, AND THEY WERE: 1.A&P 2.CHATHAM COMPLETE FOOD CENTERS 3.FARMERJACK SUPERMARKETS 4.GREAT SCOTT !SUPERMARKETS 5.KROGER/BI-LOSUPERMARKETS WRIGLEY'S SUPERMARKETS/PACKERS I, REALLY MISS,THE OLD SUPERMARKET CHAIN STORES FROM BACK IN THE DAY. 10:29
Kohls is still very much a store, just clothing now. You even used a modern kohl’s clothing picture, would’ve been cool to go in depth if it’s the same store as the grocery store. Amazon even uses kohl’s for returns in Illinois/ Wisconsin.
Growing up, we would go to a kohls food store and a kohls department store that shared an entrance. But kohls department store wasn’t part of the food store. Same founder - different stores.
The only grocery store I recall was A&P. That was in Waterloo, Iowa. None of the others were there. In the 60's Super Value was the big grocery chain there. There was also an Eagles grocery store. The Super Value stores died out in the mid-70's and Hy-Vee came in. They are still here today. In the early 60's there was a grocery store called Piggly Wiggly in Waterloo.
I remember being very young...hearing my mom say we're going grocery shopping today...and reacting with ohhh no. Speed to present and I majored in history and came to understand how incredibly lucky I was to have been born into a time and a place where people could simply go to a central place where they could purchase any product..meat, vegetable, fruit, and any sort of drink or confection. All in a few hours of a morning. No farming...no droughts or hailstorm or plagues of locusts ...just availability. We're a spoiled lot...we need to be a bit more grateful for the world we live in. Just my two cents.
So true Mike That was impressed on me when we had friends form Sweden stay with us for a while in 1996. I sent my daughter to Sweden on a high school exchange program her junior year and I took my wife and my two other girls over there to pick Ann up. Her hos family said that they planned thier vacation around our arrival so we first stayed at their vaction home. As we were asking about accomdations in their home city, they said that they were staying in their vacation house and gave us the keys to their apartment rent free for t the 10 day stay. That gave us a chance to renta van and travel all the way to Stockholm for three days. So when their youngest daughter was in Minnesota in the program and was unhappy,Ann asked if she could stay with us for the second semester of school. We agreed and agreed to host her mother and her two sisters when they came to pick her up.
Well we live in a town of about 4000 people so our stores are not that big. But we took them to a WalMart and then to an upscale store in St. Louis and to a mall ad they were shocked beyond words at the variety and the quality of the food and the lower prices than what they are used to. Of ccourse that has changed and even Russia have large stores now that are fully stocked
The movie “Yours Mine and Ours “ starring Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball. They were a married couple that had 19 children. They went grocery shopping and they had several shopping carts full and they rang up the price $126.00 . The movie was made in 1968. Anyone remember that movie? $126.00 wouldn’t even fill one cart now.
Yes, I came from a big family, 9 including parents 😂 we also had 4-5 carts if not more, bill was almost $500 & that was alot back then like you we're rich & we weren't 😂 & all rhat food lasted us about a week or so 😱
Yes glen, I love that movie. I remember the grocery store scene indeed. I believe Capt.(?) North even got a six pack of beer.
A&P and Winn-Dixie I'm 82,their only ones 😢 I remembered
And that was commissary prices.
Iv seen that movie several times both as a child in black and white as the Sunday feature and in color on the movie channel.
Loved it.
I’m 53.. wish I could turn back time. Childhood goes so fast.
I remember shopping at both Grand Union and A & P. This was during the 1970s and early 80s in the Washington DC area.
My entire family shopped at A & P for decades! Both grandmothers and my own mother shopped there at least once a week, especially to get their 8 o'clock coffee, freshly ground right inside the store! Miss those days, to be sure!
My maternal grandmother shopped at A&P. She could easily walk over from her house.
@@diannelavoie5385 I'd LOVE to be able to walk to the store - could get my steps in easier, I think LOL!
That coffee was really good. i have to admit; I like my Keurig for the convenience. But I miss the smell of coffee brewing in the morning. It almost made you glad that you have to get out of bed. Almost.
Ann Page fruitcake - wonderful!!!!
Shopped at A&P as a kid with my grandma and my mom- a bit older and was shopping for a family of 6, dad would come pay at the checkout! It was nerve wracking
Their coffee ☕ was the BEST!
I remember A&P on Miller Road in Wilmington, DE I will always remember the smell of the fresh ground coffee when you would enter the store
A&P coffee was the best!Walking into the store you could.smell the coffee beans.
My fondest memory of a grocery store was the one my Great Aunt owned. It was called Cash Grocery and located in a town of around 700 people. It had wooden counters and some of them had glass fronts so you could see what was contained in the storage bins behind them. It had meat coolers and she cut whatever your choice was on a huge butcher block. In the middle of the store, there was a gas heater and about 6 wicker back chairs, and a checkerboard table. I can't remember a time going in there that there wasn't at least 3 people sitting there...usually old timers swapping lies and stories. It used to be a bank and in the back was where the safe deposit boxes were once located. In there, she stored bulk feed and seed. The cash register was huge, but didn't work. She just left the side open and manually opened the cash drawer with a lever inside. It had a large scale (for people, not food) in the very front. Get your weight for a penny. But it didn't work either. Her hours were normally 8 to 5 and she walked to the store every day (rain or shine) since she never owned a vehicle. My grandmother would walk to the store to relieve my aunt for lunch. However, my aunt would often close early if someone invited her to go fishing. AND, if a fishing trip was planned before hand, whoever invited her had to be careful because before the trip, my aunt would invite 3 or 4 others as well. Great times, great people.
Great story of precious memories. Thanks for sharing
I remember the A&P and other grocery stores that had the old fashioned meat scales to weight the meat as well as the button cash registers that would take you at least 15 minutes to cash out and you also would get green stamps also there were silver ashtrays at the end of each aisle because everyone could smoke cigarettes or cigars in the stores
@@MichelleBourque-w9z After my dad died (1957) my mother ended up with the controlling interest of a pharmacy. I started working there when I was 14. We gave out green stamps and as far as smoking went, when I was 16, I started working at a Western Auto store and two of the employees smoked. I was one of them. I remember selling auto accessories, stereo equipment, and appliances with a cigarette in my hand. We even often threw the butts on the floor and swept the store right after closing time. I worked there until I was 20 (1970). That's when I went into the Marines (70-76).
In small town America circa 1960's we had a house down the street from my gramdmother's house that was operated as a small grocery. They even had a butcher.
it's funny how we've gone from clerks getting the products for us, then we the customers got to pick the products ourselves and now we're back to the clerks getting the products for us because everything has to be locked up now thanks to shoplifting
HA! HA! Right!!!!!
Now the clerks get it for you, and you can either get it "curbside" or delivered to your door. I hope they bring back the milkman!
Not so. High priced things like electronics yeah but groceries? Shit, if only they'd lock up the grapes in produce that people love to graze on without buying!
@@romainphillis2526I will sign up. They got a lot of play.
The sad part is that it's not done for customer service , like it was. It's done now because of wokeness.
When My Late Mother was growing up during the Great Depression, she told me that she could go to the local Indoor Theater, pay for the ticket to go see a movie, buy a 6-Ounce Bottle of Coca-Cola and a bag of Popcorn for .25 cents. Shows how much things have changed since then.
😱😱😱😱
I remember shopping at A&P when I was a kid. My mom would grind her coffee at the self-serve machine. I also remember their pecan-caramel rolls! Those things were amazing--they didn't spare the delicious, sticky caramel, and they used plenty of pecans to top the rolls. There was another store in the small town where we shopped--National Tea Co. It was larger than the A&P. It's gone through many iterations and is still a locally owned grocery store. I also remember Royal Blue stores.
I was in the business for 41 years. I always preferred the " conventional " stores over the " super stores ". They were more cosy especially around the holidays.
I hear you! When I was very young it was just my mother and I -- No car, very little money. We'd walk to the store every other day to purchase food.
Back then near Christmas many grocery stores would sell some toys. ANd the little market we went to had toys for sale but the only thing I could see was this little stuffed cat - It was purple and had a bow around its neck. I dreamed about the stuffed cat but knew even as a little kid to not hope to have it.
I remember my mother telling me that *if* I was really good Santa might bring me something but sometimes Santa wouldn't, even if I was really good.
Christmas morning I got up and there on the kitchen table was that stuffed cat.
I kept that silly stuffed cat until high school --- fully understanding just how much it had cost my mom to be able to eek out a few pennies here, a quarter there, to save up for that little stuffed toy.
@@gulfgypsy That's a nice memory to have., and that's what it's all about. Thanks for your reply.
Me Too.. We had a lot of small grocery stores in my hometown, Most were on Main Street as was my grandparents tavern' So my grandmother tried to shop at all of them for things because it was good for business, But he way she did it was unusal. The weekly newspaper came out on Tuesday with all the grocerie's ads featuring Wednesday sales. Sales were on Wednesday because stores were closed on Thursday afternoons but stayed open late on Friday nights back then. She would go through the paper and circle all the things she wanted by comparison shopping. She'cut out any coupons that were offered and put the coupons, the list, and the exact amount of money, including TAX, for her total costs into an individual envelope for each store. When she came home after numerous trips back and forth to different stores she would store the groceries and take the receipts and pin them to a nail in the window frame next to her chair at the kitchen table. At the end of the month she would total up and see her monthly expenses for food. Thrifty or cheap? I ask you!
gulfgypsy....... That's a really precious story. And I'm sure you hold the memories dear in your heart. Happy Holidays!
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all.
Loved A&P. You could smell the coffee, when you walked in the door.
Bring back the A&P ❤
Thanks for the trip down memory lane.
I'm from the east coast and can vividly remember Food Fair, A&P and Grand Union stores. I guess I'm getting old.
All three where in Florida also
When I was a kid in MI, we had A & P, Safeway, Farmer Jack's, Great Scott, and Food Fair all in close proximity to our neighborhood. Most were within walking distance of our house. None of these exist now except for the Safeway, still in the same place. The Great Scott store became a Family Dollar. Lucky stores were there too, but the one closest to us was farther away---had to drive there, and also there was a Wrigley's supermarket too. It's amazing how I remember all of these, since I left MI for AZ in 1970. I was 12 at the time. (Jan Griffiths).
I remember it was always a race between the cashier and the bagger boy ,she could ring stuff up on that mechanical cash register and send it ,while he tried to keep up ! Today they ring up 20 items and stand there
Looking at you and ask " do you want a bag ?"
And they still don't know how to pack 😡
I've only heard of A&P and Jitney. We had a grocery store where I grew up called Sunflower. I was very little and loved the sunflower with a smiley face on their green light up sign.
My dad worked in the grocery business all his life. He started with Barbers in Albuquerque in the 30’s. He went on to work for Piggly Wiggly managing stores in New Mexico and west Texas. He retired as a district manager for them. My brother worked as a sacker in high school for dad. After serving in the Army, he came back and worked for Piggly Wiggly as a store manager. He eventually bought one of their stores and it was a customer favorite in our town. Very successful. He eventually sold it and retired.
I remember pork rinds in a can, Jiffy-Pop popcorn, Ozark and Bluebell potato chips.
I can remember the taste of the A&P cream of mushroom soup. It actually had lots of mushrooms, but it was the very good taste that helps with that memory for me! Every time I open any can of cream of mushroom, that A&P soup pops in my head! So many great memories of all the grocery stores when I was growing up. Where I grew up we had A&P, Safeway, Kroger, and Piggly Wiggly. We also had many hometown owned grocery stores.
You are right about that.
🎉 retro greetings from coastal Mississippi. I remember alot of these stores. Piggly Wiggly, A&P, Winn Dixie, Food Basket, Alpha Beta became Skaggs Alpha Beta then became Albertsons (for us) and Safeway,Buddies. Thanks for the research and memories ❤
My mom and I carried many paper bags of groceries home back in the 1970s.
We need to get back to the good old days!
I grew up with A&P!! When i went shopping there with mom I always got to grind up the 8 o clock coffee!!
N
I worked at a grocery store in the 80's, loved it.❤🎉😊
79-80's here. You're right, it was a blast, and payday was the best part! 😃
Me too. I worked at an IGA. Loved working with people! Now they have to bag a certain way, you don’t have enough personal time with your customers. But I loved it then.
Red Owl stores were quite popular here in Minnesota.
My sister and I went with my dad every Friday evening to Safeway for our grocery shopping. The highlight was my sister and I each getting a comic book for 10 cents a piece.
We went to 'National' food store a lot in the 60's. Years ago we had a 'Kash and Karry'. It's now a dispensary called 'Hash and Merry'. Thanks for this upload.
My small northwest BC Canada city had a basement-level Co-Op grocery store. Boxes went by conveyor belt up to ground level; cars could pull up for the boxes just steps away.
When I was very young, my grandma would take me with her to Alpha Beta. It looked exactly like the photo @3:23!
I was wondering if it was actually that exact store as a matter of fact 😄
It was in Sacramento, California in the 70’s.
I remember those trips fondly and her getting me 1 beautiful cupcake each time from their bakery 😋!!
The cupcake were beautiful colors !!
I was always looked forward to those cupcakes as a kid 🧁!!
They always had a little 3D clown head stuck into the top of them !!
Ahh.. such memories ☺️
I miss my grandma SO much and all those fun shopping trips w her each week 🥰
They were the best .. just like my grandma 🥇🏆
Thanks for the post 👋🏼
In the 30s & 40s my Grandfather owned a corner store. My Mom an one of her sisters worked there until they got married. In 2012, 70 years after she married, she was at a funeral. A lady asked her is she used to work in the corner store. She remembered buying penny candy there.
I shop at Piggly Wiggly. Still. I remember the A and P. I'd go with my parents. I'm 65 years old. However in our small town, there was a privately owned grocery store. It was owned by 2 brothers. A very small store. I feel fortunate to have been able to know that experience.
I miss these stores, and thee life we had. I miss thee amount of stuff, we got for a dollar 💵 😪.
I remember my family shopping at A and P in the late 1960s and I was very sad when all of the local stores closed in the early 1970s. When my family and I moved to Baton Rouge there was another popular chain called National Supermarkets, but they all closed down also. The store I really would have loved to visit back in the day was Piggly Wiggly, but according to what I hear they have all closed too.
Definitely featuring those in part 2!
According to Google Maps there are still lots of Piggly Wigglys in Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama.
Piggly Wiggly bought Harris Teeter in D.C.
I live in Wisconsin and we still have a couple of Piggly Wiggly's in the town I live in.
Still have several in Eastern NC, so nice to have smaller stores that don't all feel like WalMart
Growing up in the Bronx 1 block away from our building was Finast, which was a fierce competitor of the Waldbaum's directly across the street from there
There was a Alpha Beta a couple of blocks from our house in Huntington Beach, CA.
On beach and yorktown?
Grocery stores rocked. My first job was a carry out/bottle boy. You had to wear a white shirt and tie. 👍👍👍
You didn't go back far enough. When I was a kid, about 6-7 years old, the checkstand had this 3 sided wooden rectangle where you put your stuff. You and the checker used these big handles to push the groceries forward.
There was a Kash and Karry when I moved here in the 1980s. When it closed it left many people with a food desert for those who had no cars to travel to stores further away.
I remember the A&P during the less popular time. I do wish I experienced it during its heyday
I remember many of these chains, but i was surprised I didn't see Acme among them.
We had one in PA. Then it became a drug store and now it's a pizza place.
I remember A&P very well. Many of the other brands I never heard of.
Same here. All regional store chains. A&P was a national chain.
Bells, Quality, Super Duper. My dad was a meat manager for a lot of Northeastern A&P, and I kind of remember them, although they pulled out of the WNY area when I was pretty young. The first three I remember quite well, and it seems like yesterday when Tops took over Quality. Twin Fair was also a neat 70s store. Like a very early version of a super Walmart. It was half department store, half grocery store. How things change.
Detroit here
Wrigley
Chatham
Farmer Jack
Hillers
Great Scott
May they rest in grocery heaven
I would love to see those prices brought back, it'll make grocery shopping more affordable to everyone.
I still remember prices from the 60's. ouch! It was real food too.
My first job in the Summer of Love (1969) as a stock clerk...$1.13 an hour. Had money to save and spend for a 17 years old.
I love the “Recollection Road” channel. Lots of memories!!
GREAT VIDEO !
You missed my favorite store! FARMER JACK located in Michigan.
Well =, I do remember A&P very well.. Thoough we had sixteen family owned grocery stores in my home town of 4000 people in the 1950's, mom preferred the big brand store in another town. So she would have my Dad drive her to A&P and she would take me along to help carry the groceries- a job that I hated. I do remember the scent of the grind it yourself coffee machines, There were three brands, Eight O Clock, their breakfast blend in red package, Bokar, the dark roasted blend in a black package, and the de-caf or light blend in a yellow package. We never bought it so I don't recall the name . The coffee packages contained whole beans that you poured into a grinder and then put the empty bag at the chute at the bottom of the machine. It would grind the beans to the grade y9u selected and deposit the ground coffee back into the original bag. You closed and resealed the bag and you were good to go. The aroma of that freshly ground coffee waa wonderful. But as for their products, not so much. They had a store brand bakery items known as Jane Parker which I did not care for, nor their Archway cookies. In the late 50's the store was taken over by Krogers.
A&P always smelled like coffee, and the clerks there would always give me a penny to buy a gumball. 😃
I have only heard of A & P which we had in our town when I was a child and I heard of Winn Dixie and that was it. But I enjoyed the video.
Whoa, of all the many grocery stores in this video the only one I ever heard of was Kash n Karry. I was raised in Nebraska and am living in SW Florida.
Winn-Dixie was mentioned, and is prevalent where I live now, it is owned by Southeastern Grocers which has sold it to Aldi in 2023.
Publix, too.
You know I miss the hucksters that used to ride down the street it was good stuff reasonable. ❤❤those❤❤ days are long gone.
🔔 @ 2:28 is why Pee-Wee Herman loved to shop there!
I remember shopping at Lucky and Alpha Bata.
There are 2 other grocers that are no longer around, Smittys and Abco.
We still have 8 o'clock coffee from A&P.
8 o’clock coffee is sold at Woodmans Foods in Rockford Illinois. I don’t think they have grinders in the store. You could buy your own grinder and grind it yourself at home.
My husband worked at Food Fair from the time he was 16 and finally he was made produce manager he worked there till we moved to Kentucky.
I remember Alpha Beta. Dear Lord, I'm getting old! 😂
Logli and Hilander were two large chains in Rockford and north central Illinois. About 20 years ago Schnucks of St. Louis bought out both chains and relabeled them all as Schnucks.
Learning 10 key by touch as well
My heart aches for another visit to White Hen. As a kid, there was one a mile away and we'd ride our bikes there to get .10 cans of soda and .10 tiny pizzas (that tasted like crap, lol). But the deli was amazing, and as time went on I'd go there for lunch/dinner during breaks of my high school job down the street. The White Hen concept would work again now, I believe. People are sick of being herded around and I think some of us would pay up a bit for decent food and service.
Ohhhh.....I remember the bottles of coke for either a nickle or a dime down at the corner store, this was back in the 60’s , when times where so much fun !
Buttrey’s- Montana. Applebaum’s- Minnesota. Hinky Dinky- Nebraska.
Being from North Carolina I've only heard of A&P from your list.
One of the best deli/cafeteria-type foods was at Jitney Jungle. I went there every Saturday back in the day
We had Safeway and Food King in Southern California. We also had a great mom and pop butcher shop called Bert’s. As a kid I loved Ribeye steak ( still do ). There was a market from the mid fifties to early 70s called Sages . Sage’s had two stories in San Bernardino and one in my beloved hometown of Rialto. Sages had a great cafe, groceries, camera store. Jewelry and watch repair and toys. You name it.
A&P, Food Fair/Pantry Pride and Grand Union, I was born in 1961 and went to all these as kid with my foster parents.
You can still visit Grand Union in New York & Vermont, 10 in New York, and 1 in Vermont.
@@henrysmith9763It is not the same as the old grand unions, they are take over of topps markets, non of the grand union brand items anymore.
I remember em all..and also remember in Maine and new Hampshire with mom and pop grocery stores..it wasn’t uncommon to see mouse traps on bottom shelves in the 1950s …..the old squeaky wooden floors…..oh yes ! 😂
Shaw's and Market Basket, too.
5:17 White Hen Pantry was one of my favorite places to stop and get a cup of coffee. Where I grew up, I could throw a stone in any direction and hit a couple of White Hen stores.
When we lived in la puente California we shopped at food giant
When I lived in NJ, I shopped at King's and Packard's as a kid. It was a small chain that sold a lot of gourmet type and imported items. I loved shopping there! Not sure they're still around, I left NJ 30 years ago. Packard's was closed in the late 80s.
Leaving NJ is the best you could do.
@@scottr3484 ya, I grew up and realized I could never buy a home or afford the property taxes, so I left. I bought my first home at 27, while most of my friends were paying rent.
@@scottr3484we left in 1977!
We had an A&P that went out of business in the mid-60’s. It was turned into a job center for school-age kids. That’s how I found my first jobs at the age of 11 yo. by cleaning homes. Riding my bike across town on Saturdays, cleaning one house in the morning and the 2nd in the afternoon. I also got babysitting jobs once I turned 12-13 yo as well as a lot of yard work.
Growing up in Ottawa late 60s to late 70s, remember as a child u pay for ur groceries, they tagged ur bags with a number, u got a copy, then u drove through a covered delivery area where ur groceries came up a conveyor belt from below then placed in ur truck, think the grocery store was dominion groceries
Hey, I just posted above about our Co-Op food store in Prince Rupert BC! Conveyor also up from lower level checkout area to street level for shoppers to pick up.
I enjoyed this very much. I was quite surprised Piggly Wiggly wasn't mentioned. That was popular here on the East Coast.
Remember when a large bag of potato chips was a dollar.? Now the the large bag is half size and $5.29!
Prices used to rise a few cents over time. Now they seem to have doubled over nite! 😮
Lay's brand of chips are on sale from $3 to $4 each bag ... MORE THAN THE PRICE OF MEAT 🍖
Just absurd. And the bag is smaller.
I remember Alpha Beta markets. They became ABCO in AZ at least. I generally shop at Walmart or Costco nowadays. I do grow most of my own vegetables, however. (Jan Griffiths).
I remember my dad taking me to A&P (Atlantic & Pacific) when I was young. I shopped there myself when I was 19-20 years old and worked at the Perry Drugs ( now Rite Aid) that was next door to A&P. I learned when I started working for Meijer that they had a connection with Atlantic-Pacific back when Meijer was Meijer Thrifty Acres.
You Forgot Piggly Wiggly 🙂 We still have 2 Piggly Wiggly Grocery Stores here in Nashville One so close to me it's where I always get my groceries Clerks know you No Self Scanning Cashier's do it All &Meat dept Butcher will cut your meat if needed & You don't have to walk around a Huge Store like Kroger's ! They sell more other things , aren't needed Only need Groceries
We have a Piggly Wiggly in my NC town, too. It's a pretty nice store.
A&P was the only store where I remember any of the clerks giving me a penny to buy a gumball from the gumball machine...
People would flip out if someone did that now.
I remember A&P stores they had one in my moms hometown in Wausau WI, I loved going to that store
I was raised in Folcroft, PA (just outside of Philadelphia), and there was an A&P store in the shopping Center there. My mother did our food shopping there, and a few other stores as well
you must remember Penn Fruit
@@onemansopinion6038: Yes I do. Both my grandmother and my parents shopped their as well.
The Tops in Rutland, VT was rebranded a Grand Union a year or two ago. They seem to have changed nothing else so I suspect it's more an attempt to keep the trademark on the books than a serious relaunch.
Used to live there. That store got very expensive, Tops.
I remember visiting Rutland in December of 2012, and being very surprised at seeing a Grand Union food store.
When I was a kid we went to a store called Red Owl.
Shop Rite had fond memories for me! My mother and grandma loved the free coffee stand!! My stop was always the snack bar and video rentals before we hit the isles.. once or twice a year they had "Can~Can" sales and I knew it was gonna be an ALL day affair with the check-out lit up like Christmas!! 14 open lanes of organized chaos hahhh poor cashiers!!
We had Warehouse Food Market. I still remember my mom taking us to the WFM.
Great days love it❤
Would help to get more photos and interesting info; like how A&P coffee (8 o'clock coffee) was so special and you could smell it as they ground it right at the check out counters etc...I remember Food Town, Grand Union, Shop Rite, Ben Franklin 5 & 10 stores, Kresge's (the same family that started Kmart)...
My father had a Thriftway store in the 50's and 60's, he bought produce and eggs from the local farmers. We lived in a small town in Kansas.
I ❤d when it was time to go grocery shopping 😂 at A&P. Everything we needed was all in a strip mall.
The other grocery stores we had were Hills, King Kullen, Pathmark, FoodTown, always had sales & great deals too! 😁👍
When we lived in Chicago we also shopped at a store called MAYFLOWER that place was huge
These must have all been East Coast stores, I grew up in WA and have never heard of any of the stores you mentioned and I am 61. My mom shopped at a store called Grocery Boys and another called Farmers Market. At Farmers Market you used a flat cart with boxes and wrote the price on your grocery items with a grease pen. I the late 60's Fred Meyers came to our town, it was all the rage, clothes, household items, pharmacy and groceries..all under one roof!
I'm in new england and have only ever heard of A&P. Maybe south of me!
I lived on east coast,south and north only knew 2 A&P, the Winn-Dixie.
My Grandma worked at A&P in a small midwestern town and the old-fashioned nature of Dominick's is what I liked about it even in the 90s. Was sorry to see Dominick's go. Grocery stores are too large now.
National Supermarkets (store names varied by state) in the Midwest. Had a long history and was a decent store.
BACK IN THE DAY, AND I STILL REMEMBER WHEN I,WAS LIVING IN DETROIT, MICHIGAN.
THERE WERE 6,MAJOR SUPERMARKET CHAIN STORES, AND THEY WERE:
1.A&P
2.CHATHAM COMPLETE FOOD CENTERS
3.FARMERJACK SUPERMARKETS
4.GREAT SCOTT !SUPERMARKETS
5.KROGER/BI-LOSUPERMARKETS
WRIGLEY'S SUPERMARKETS/PACKERS
I, REALLY MISS,THE OLD SUPERMARKET CHAIN STORES FROM BACK IN THE DAY. 10:29
Wrigley/Great Scott were the same company, Allied Supermarkets. Along with K-Mart Food
Kohls is still very much a store, just clothing now. You even used a modern kohl’s clothing picture, would’ve been cool to go in depth if it’s the same store as the grocery store. Amazon even uses kohl’s for returns in Illinois/ Wisconsin.
I wondered if it were the same.
It was a spinoff of the grocery store. They had Kohls Food Stores and Kohls Department Stores.
Growing up, we would go to a kohls food store and a kohls department store that shared an entrance.
But kohls department store wasn’t part of the food store. Same founder - different stores.
Kohls is still a store in MI, it's a clothing store. Amazon uses them for returns.
The only grocery store I recall was A&P. That was in Waterloo, Iowa. None of the others were there. In the 60's Super Value was the big grocery chain there. There was also an Eagles grocery store. The Super Value stores died out in the mid-70's and Hy-Vee came in. They are still here today. In the early 60's there was a grocery store called Piggly Wiggly in Waterloo.