The Decline of Woolworth...What Happened?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
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    Woolworth was one of the largest retailers of their time and today are completely gone, in the U.S. anyway. This video profiles their rise and fall, while trying to provide reasons for all of it.
    *Note: The scope of this video is limited to their presence in the U.S. They were also big in the U.K. but that's a story for a different day.
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Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @elselogan354
    @elselogan354 6 лет назад +787

    I was born in 1933, so you KNOW I was a Woolworths Fan. I was 4 in 1937, the first time I went to one alone. I lived 'around the corner' from a Woolworth's 5&!0 on Third Ave in NYC (under the EL). Papa was home, recovering from an illness and mama went to work. Papa said I talked too much and gave me a few coins (very few) to go get something to play with 'quietly.' I even remember what I bought. A book of "cut out dolls and various clothes. With a nickel or a dime I bought that book, and for a similar amount I bought a blunt ended children's scissor to cut out the doll clothes. That 'cut out book' started me on the road to becoming an "Anglo-phile" because the book was called, "The Little Princesses" and was about Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret. I've loved them and everything about British royalty ever since. As I said, I was 4 years old... Elizabeth was 10 or 11 and Margaret was around 7. Elizabeth is now Queen and in her nineties, Margaret has passed away, and I am 85. I've missed Woolworths ever since it closed. Especially the lunch counters. In 1964, after we'd done most of our 40 day trip around America, we were in Selma, Alabama, saw a Woolworths, and decided to h ave lunch there. To our chagrin... tho' the counter was there... the seats were gone.... to avoid "sit-ins" and we had to eat standing up. Afterwards, we saw a group of black people coming across a bridge in a protest march. Being from NYC, it was strange to us, but we were "With the Marchers" and not the people who were not in favor of what they were doing. I do not recall when Woolworths left our town of Ridgewood NJ. But I don't need to "remember" missing Woolworths. I've never stopped missing that store. Tho' I'm rather excited that a Dollar General store just moved onto the property next to my house. This is a wonderful convenience for me.... now, an old woman of 85. This new store is the closest to my beloved 5&10 and I love having it here.... However... It isn't Woolworth's. So I still miss that beloved place to shop.

    • @cdsnider9496
      @cdsnider9496 6 лет назад +106

      I loved hearing the first hand account of these events. My grandmother worked at Sears and K-mart and they were a large part of her and our lives. Sad to say both of them have shut down this year in our town (Lake Charles, la).
      My grandmother has long passed away... she would be around your age and I would give anything to hear how life was through her eyes again.
      Thanks for the wonderful thoughts and telling your story.

    • @livefree1030
      @livefree1030 6 лет назад +11

      So blacks shut it down?

    • @xxXthekevXxx
      @xxXthekevXxx 6 лет назад +31

      morelli tech
      No

    • @xxXthekevXxx
      @xxXthekevXxx 6 лет назад +20

      I love this story :)

    • @nathanlong8295
      @nathanlong8295 6 лет назад +21

      Damn you actually get to walk into a company that I couldn’t even get into myself and lived to tell the tale.
      I wish I had a time machine to see this.

  • @Justaguyinnc
    @Justaguyinnc 6 лет назад +250

    My mother raised four kids as a Waitress, then counter manager at Woolworth Cafeteria always wearing her white uniform.. every Friday I would bring the personal grocery cart to meet her for the A&P or Nationals trip after work.. I would have a tuna club sandwich and the "Famous" Woolworth lemon cheese cake.. sometimes getting their Banana split instead if I popped a balloon with a free coupon inside.. it was the 60's and a wonderful time being part of Woolworth with a hard working mother.. miss her..

    • @fred5nyc
      @fred5nyc 5 лет назад +10

      Nice story, I remember Woolworth from the 80's in NYC.

    • @EASTSIDERIDER707
      @EASTSIDERIDER707 5 лет назад +6

      I had a similar experience in the 50’s.

    • @QueenBee-gx4rp
      @QueenBee-gx4rp 5 лет назад +12

      UncleHank Me, too. My best friend Joanie and I had lunch once every week at our local Woolworth ‘s: a large hamburger with fresh lettuce and tomato, French Fries, and a frosted mug of root beer. All for 55 cents! Boy, was it good! The last 5 cents went for the tip! Big spenders!

    • @TFrills
      @TFrills 5 лет назад

      Single people shouldn't try to raise kids, let alone 4. That is cruel to subject children to such a disadvantaged upbringing.

    • @likemyorbs
      @likemyorbs 5 лет назад +13

      @@TFrills you're an idiot. Plenty of single parents out there doing a great job.

  • @cryptochaos
    @cryptochaos 6 лет назад +42

    Thank you for this. My father was a Woolworth company man. He started in the stock room and moved through the ranks. When he was drafted in the 50's they held a job for him. He went right into managing a store when he returned. We used to go to the Christmas Party at the Woolworth building each year and play in his office while we waited for Santa to arrive. Eventually, he helped shut Woolco down in the Northeast. It was not fun as they made him responsible for security. He was there when Woolworth finally shut down. I remember how proud he was to work at Woolworth​ when I was a kid in the late 60's. He was a buyer by that time and would explain how they imported goods and the rigorous quality control over the process. By the late 80's early 90's he would just shake his head when he read articles about Walmart and say, it's like they read our manuals and our management forgot how to execute it. - Paul Maurer

  • @michaelcoughlin5450
    @michaelcoughlin5450 4 года назад +239

    They were awesome in the 80's. They were like a better version of Dollar General but with a lunch counter and pets. I will always remember their toy section

    • @u686st7
      @u686st7 4 года назад +13

      All the 5 & 10s. Murphy's, Kresge's, Grant's, McCrory's.....

    • @DavidSmith-sb2ix
      @DavidSmith-sb2ix 4 года назад +10

      My downtown had a Woolworth's, McCrory's, Newberry's and W.T. Grant's store when I was young. McCrorys was the last to go when they folded. The Newberry's was two stories and a basement with a lunch counter and restaurant and big candy counter where they scooped it out of bins. As a kid I loved the toy department and the pet department where they had some kind of a loud bird for years. They even sold piranhas!
      They had everything including the first escalator in town. Sadly it burned in 1973 and didn't reopen.

    • @cynthiawoodmancy2564
      @cynthiawoodmancy2564 3 года назад +3

      the scale difference between the two is immense

    • @sroevukasroevuka
      @sroevukasroevuka 3 года назад +1

      When I lived in Chicago I used to go there with my mom.

    • @robertmoir5695
      @robertmoir5695 3 года назад +1

      They were certainly awesome in the 60s and 70s Michael Coughlin

  • @MetFansince
    @MetFansince 4 года назад +115

    The hospital in my town has a lunch counter that looks exactly like the lunch counter at Woolworths. And they still charge 1960's prices. It's like going back in time.

    • @Natalia-hf3et
      @Natalia-hf3et 4 года назад +14

      Wow! That sounds so cool. I’ve always wished stores would charge the prices from their debut once a year.

    • @Melissa0774
      @Melissa0774 4 года назад

      @@Natalia-hf3et There'd be lines out the door.

    • @Melissa0774
      @Melissa0774 4 года назад +1

      Where do you live?

    • @chrisestill8825
      @chrisestill8825 4 года назад

      Natalia Ayasha Ciccone F I used to live by what was once a pharmacy but is now just the restaurant with a lunch counter that would do exactly this.

    • @clintnovaclaw
      @clintnovaclaw 4 года назад +1

      Where is this place

  • @Nikki-oe7gr
    @Nikki-oe7gr 6 лет назад +186

    As a kid in the 1970s, what I remember most about Woolworth was something you didn't mention... the food. They had a little food counter and stools and order things like milkshakes, grill ham and cheese sandwiches, etc. In the 1990s, I worked at JC Penney at the local mall and the mall also had a Woolworth. So my lunch break often involved running down to Woolworth for a cheese dog. By that point, business was already really bad for Woolworth, but I still remember they made the best cheese dogs around... Just sitting here thinking about it, I'm wishing I could have one, even though it's been decades.

    • @marcliuzza317
      @marcliuzza317 5 лет назад +11

      I know!!! It's awesome they used to not let blacks sit at the counter!

    • @Norm475
      @Norm475 5 лет назад +12

      I remember those days myself. Who knows what new stores will be around in fifty years and what stores that are around today will be gone. The Walmart haters think Walmart drove the neighborhood stores out of business, but that is capitalism. businesses open and businesses close. If Walmart lose their focus and stop serving the customer they will also be gone. The same for Amazon.

    • @Norm475
      @Norm475 5 лет назад +23

      @@marcliuzza317 Don't blame Woolworth. Blame the Democrat party and their Jim Crow laws. It was the government that fostered segregation, not the business.

    • @onefive151515
      @onefive151515 4 года назад +2

      Same here, still remember Woolworths in Montgomery mall MD from my childhood memories

    • @jorusnak1998
      @jorusnak1998 4 года назад +11

      I rember the food counter in the 50's loved the mashed potatoes & brown gravy. Loved the photo booths. Good day's too bad kids will not be able to experience this.

  • @vhagerty
    @vhagerty 5 лет назад +100

    I remember Woolworth's cafeteria. Yes, the store had a diner in the back. We used to order the hot dog platter. LOL

    • @jabujolly9020
      @jabujolly9020 4 года назад +2

      Some of the larger Woolworths in South Africa have cafeteria type restaurants that, like the parent company, emphasize fresh produce and good quality ingredients.

    • @bxdanny
      @bxdanny 4 года назад +6

      The Woolworth's lunch counters played a role in the civil rights movement. The ones in the south were sites of protests over segregation.

    • @Natalia-hf3et
      @Natalia-hf3et 4 года назад +3

      Exactly. The store and it’s diner area was iconic.

    • @tomhill3248
      @tomhill3248 4 года назад +1

      Sams club?

    • @robc4191
      @robc4191 3 года назад +1

      What was the "hot dog platter?" i only ate grilled cheese or hamburgers there.

  • @garyd1171
    @garyd1171 3 года назад +30

    I worked for FW Woolworth from 1969 until 1976. I started as a "clean-up boy" and ultimately became a store manager at 7th and Broadway in downtown Los Angeles. I also spent a three year stint at a Woolco store in La Mirada, CA. We were the 4th largest retailer in the world and the largest food service corporation in the world. Woolco was definitely the beginning of the end for FWW. Many of the departments were leased out - footwear, men's clothing, furniture, automotive, jewelry and paint. There were relatively few Woolco stores built while K-Mart was saturating the retail market and soon their sales overtook not only FWW but ultimately the retail giant of its day, Sears. Another Woolworth blunder was their attempt to open super stores in the enclosed malls that were so popular in the '70's. Great video. Thanks for the memories (even though some of it is painful for me!)

    • @WonderfulWorldofAwesomeness
      @WonderfulWorldofAwesomeness Год назад +1

      Maybe you knew my Dad? He managed a Woolworths in Las Vegas from 1954-1956, then after a brief stint in the Army, a Scottsdale, AZ store from about 1960-1968, then he managed the San Francisco store on the corner of Market and Powell until it closed in the early 90s. Kendall was his last name.

  • @38ddkelly
    @38ddkelly 6 лет назад +144

    My dad told me that Woolworth's lunch counter had the best cheeseburgers he ever ate. He also still has his 45-rpm copy of "Hey Jude" that he bought there for 67 cents.

    • @morganahoff2242
      @morganahoff2242 6 лет назад +4

      I remember going into a Woolco in the 1980's to buy Prince's album, Purple rain, and agonizing over whether to get it on LP for 9.99 or cassette for 11.99. And renting the movie in the $1 bin at the video store. (I chose the LP, and it was awesome!)

    • @valerieehrlich7166
      @valerieehrlich7166 6 лет назад +6

      i use to go to the woolworths on sutter street in stockton ca and buy my 16 magazines and other stuff and the lunch counter was great. their apple pies were great and their toasted grill cheese sandwiches were all served with a smile by helen the gal behind the counter mr woolworth was a smart man with a great Idea and yes i am familiar with the five and dime they even had bikes and hardware too in our stockton store

    • @abigllama
      @abigllama 6 лет назад +10

      They were sort of on the decline when I was growing up in the 70s and 80s. But remember the lunch counter as well and it was a treat to be taken there as a kid. The coke had a weird taste because they would mix it there, but it was a unique taste I missed. Always would get the grilled cheese with those crinkle cut fries.

    • @btipton6899
      @btipton6899 6 лет назад +6

      Great malts!

    • @catcook3324
      @catcook3324 6 лет назад +10

      The coke is better when they mix it from the syrup and seltzer separately. The bottled one is too fizzy.

  • @jimhamrick5207
    @jimhamrick5207 6 лет назад +166

    How can you talk about Woolworths and not even mention the lunch counters?

    • @jamessnee7171
      @jamessnee7171 6 лет назад +13

      My favorite thing was a hot dog at the lunch counter that my Mom would buy for me. They were the only place with that New England style bun that you butter and grill on the outside of the bun for that toasty goodness.
      Oh and my first job. Part time after school. The hot dog was better.

    • @LiLi-or2gm
      @LiLi-or2gm 6 лет назад +14

      OMG, that hot dog was the best- that toasted bun and the special sauce, like tartar sauce but less tangy. My mom was a cook and my two sisters worked the counter at the Woolworth's in the town where we lived. My favorite lunch was the hot dog, fries, and a coke. Every once in a while, I was allowed to get a chocolate malt. Wonderful memories, those!

    • @craigpearson7578
      @craigpearson7578 6 лет назад +2

      You had a lunch counter? We had nothing like that in the UK... we had pick and mix sweets?! Still miss it though

    • @jamessnee7171
      @jamessnee7171 6 лет назад +5

      Now this is over 50 years ago and I was just a little kid but I seem to remember that they had some sort of counter top machine that they used to butter the rolls with before they put them on the grill. I think it was some type of little rotating drum and the lady would hold the bun to it for just a second or so. I remember thinking 'They got a special machine just to butter rolls?'. Seems like a dream and it could be because I've never seen anything like it again.

    • @joker167able
      @joker167able 6 лет назад +2

      Because he's not too bright

  • @playerpianogal
    @playerpianogal 6 лет назад +107

    Woolworth was ALWAYS my favorite store at which to shop! And sadly it just disappeared many years ago. They had WONDERFUL things!

    • @dorismay4411
      @dorismay4411 6 лет назад +7

      playerpianogal they sure did my friend

    • @markwhite1780
      @markwhite1780 6 лет назад +10

      As a child in NYC & NJ our family visited Woolworths for fun. Of course we bought things. The best time was when my dad, brother and I were in the pet section where they sold little turtles, frogs, hamsters and gerbils. My dad said "you guys keep your hands off these animals. You could get bit." As good little boys we did obey our dad. My brother and I soon lost interest and turned our backs and walked away. Within 10 seconds we heard "shit!" Low and behold the hamster had got hold of my father's thumb and there was blood everywhere! The manager freaked out while my brother and I lost it and broke out laughing which made my father angry and embarrassed at the same time. Do you think there's a lesson here?

    • @dsmith9964
      @dsmith9964 6 лет назад +1

      Woolworths is still around. its corporate successor is called Foot Locker. I'm sure that you've heard of it.

    • @darrendonovan7230
      @darrendonovan7230 6 лет назад +1

      lol my favorite caust i use to get my hot fudge sundae or a banna split

    • @dawnlovescouture2644
      @dawnlovescouture2644 6 лет назад +1

      I loved the hot dogs at t he soda fountain!

  • @annettesortore8228
    @annettesortore8228 4 года назад +35

    Growing up I loved Woolworths. Spent a lot of time there when I was a teenager, their makeup selection was awesome, My friends and I would sometimes skip a class and go eat at the lunch counter. I actually cried when they closed. So many memories.

  • @BarbecueinItUpGood
    @BarbecueinItUpGood 4 года назад +267

    I'm old enough to remember Woolworth's!

    • @robinlillian9471
      @robinlillian9471 4 года назад +5

      So am I, but the last Woolworths owned department store closed in the 1990s, so that's not saying much. Walmart & Target aren't much different, except they don't serve their own food, although they usually have a fast food concession of some sort.

    • @tomhill3248
      @tomhill3248 4 года назад +1

      What was it like? I hear they sold food and games and knick nacks. Like mini-malls.

    • @DavidSmith-sb2ix
      @DavidSmith-sb2ix 4 года назад +5

      @@tomhill3248 A lot like Dollar General stores but with a lunch counter. Sort of scaled down Walmart. Other five and dime stores as they were called even had a pet department where they sold birds and fish. Clothing, toys, household items.

    • @Melissa0774
      @Melissa0774 4 года назад

      @@robinlillian9471 Target serves their own food.

    • @pamelagriffin6049
      @pamelagriffin6049 4 года назад

      Me too! I miss them.

  • @carolreid5405
    @carolreid5405 4 года назад +29

    As a child, when money was very tight, a trip to Woolworths was something to always look forward to.
    Besides the fact that everything was priced affordably, it’s items were not necessarily cheap. The household items were always useful, the jewelry and makeup and accessory counters always had something your savings could reach and someone on hand to offer good service.
    Many inexpensive yet hard to find elsewhere items, could be hidden if you looked.
    Then there was the layaway plan, that also afforded a budget a most needed item.
    Sort of like reverse credit where you paid over time for an item before you got to take it home.
    The most fun was the ‘lunch counter’ where the price of soup, pie, sandwhiches or a milk shake for a hungry shopper, made from fresh ingredients, was always within reach.

  • @ravenlord4
    @ravenlord4 6 лет назад +99

    The Five and Dime stores sound like today's "$1" stores. Maybe they should have gone that route.

    • @JD-zi7ip
      @JD-zi7ip 6 лет назад +12

      I think they did.

    • @HellcatCustoms
      @HellcatCustoms 6 лет назад +4

      My town had a few 5 and dimes open until sometime in the 80s. Now we have 8 dollar stores.

    • @bubba99009
      @bubba99009 6 лет назад +15

      The dollar stores are ironically much cheaper than the 5 and dimes were at the end. At least Dollar Tree. Not the shitty "we price everything in dollars so it's a dollar store lol" ones which seem to account for most of the rest.

    • @reaperout201
      @reaperout201 6 лет назад +3

      They tried that in the 90's. It didn't work out with all of the other dollar stores.

    • @RySenkari
      @RySenkari 6 лет назад +4

      That's actually the closest thing to what I remember Woolworth's being, at least the one I went to in the early/mid 90s! A Dollar Tree/Family Dollar/Big Lots kind of place!

  • @ArthurBrinkman-c5z
    @ArthurBrinkman-c5z 4 года назад +40

    When I was a kid during the 60's my parents used to take me to Woolworths to get school supplies every year. I would also go there and buy model cars, air planes to put together.
    But my Mom worked for Sears so all of our new school clothes came from there. I hope I never see another pair of Tough Skin jeans during my entire life. Our house looked like a Sears show room. And all of the appliances were of course, you guessed it! Kenmore, washer and dryer, stove, dishwasher etc. Now Sears is going away with Woolworths too. They have been fighting bankruptcy now for years. One of my family members owned a Been Franklin store, a competetior of Woolworths back during the 60's and 70's. I don't know what ever became of it.

    • @adrienne0711
      @adrienne0711 2 года назад +2

      My Grandma dragged me out of Ben Franklin by one ankle when I was about 5 or 6. Not that I was a spoiled rotten brat having a tantrum or anything as I was a perfect child. (/sarc) I bought dumb stuff for my $1.00, like that paddle with a ball and elastic string (only child, gotta do whatcha gotta do). Somehow it always turned into a weapon that paddled my perfect child behind... This happened more than once, it would indicate I am a slow learner.

  • @Superdummy803
    @Superdummy803 4 года назад +350

    Woolworth's "Five 'n Dime" store concept is the "Dollar Store" concept of today.

    • @MrBrink-bz3nk
      @MrBrink-bz3nk 4 года назад +25

      Woolworths could've survived as a dollar store. I think they're better than dollar stores of today

    • @sirmartinfrobisher
      @sirmartinfrobisher 4 года назад +5

      I am UK, I remember talking one day, to the manager in our local store. He complained vociferously to me that he was overburdened with a massive choice of stock, so he never got the mix right.

    • @MonicaJNYC
      @MonicaJNYC 4 года назад +6

      yet Woolworth was cool...

    • @THEmightyQUINN777
      @THEmightyQUINN777 4 года назад +20

      Woolworths was so much cleaner than dollar stores. All the dollar stores I’ve been in are filthy for the most part

    • @u686st7
      @u686st7 4 года назад +13

      The five and dimes had better quality merchandise.

  • @bucksky619
    @bucksky619 4 года назад +92

    I remember shopping at Woolworth as a kid. It was like a little step back in time. I don't recall a lot but I do remember them selling goldfish.

    • @maryberon4193
      @maryberon4193 4 года назад +5

      Parakeets and turtles, too.

    • @fposmith
      @fposmith 4 года назад +1

      They sold live Turtles too !

    • @Melissa0774
      @Melissa0774 4 года назад +1

      It's been my experience that when a store makes you feel like you stepped back in time, no matter how much fun that is, it's always an indicator that they're about to go out of business soon.

    • @clintnovaclaw
      @clintnovaclaw 4 года назад

      I went to buy my hamster supplies in the early 90’s. I miss the place.

    • @Melissa0774
      @Melissa0774 4 года назад

      @@clintnovaclaw Yeah, what is it about that store that just made it seem so much more fun than other stores? It wasn't really that much different than any other store, really.

  • @Robert_St-Preux
    @Robert_St-Preux 6 лет назад +77

    I have good memories of Woolworth's as a child (1960s and 70s), especially going to the lunch counter with my mom. Fast forward to today, Woolworth's are gone, yes, but the niche once occupied by five-and-tens is now the desmense of so-called "dollar stores" like Dollar General and Family Dollar, which are trashy versions of the old idea.

    • @sixletters9759
      @sixletters9759 6 лет назад +7

      That's exactly what I'm thinking, that Family Dollar General are the 5 and Dime of today. Family Dollar and Dollar General try to hard to be like a mini Wal-mart. They are good for running in to grab a couple of things. Around here, in North Carolina, we have Rose's. They are closer to the what I remember a Woolworth's and S.S. Kresge being like, when I was a kid. They almost have that smell about them, too.

    • @Robert_St-Preux
      @Robert_St-Preux 6 лет назад +3

      Six Letters, I've been in a Rose's before and I agree, it seemed a lot like Woolworth's, except no lunch counter. Where I live, Dollar General and Family Dollar are pretty trashy, and I try to avoid them, but I'd shop at Rose's if it were nearby.

    • @christinacope562
      @christinacope562 6 лет назад +3

      @@Robert_St-Preux Dollar General opens in the middle of absolutely nowhere that Walmart won't go. Nothing usable for me, same as Dollar Tree. Remember Dollar Tree, Dollar General fought over Family Dollar with Dollar Tree winning😆

    • @ME-hm7zm
      @ME-hm7zm 6 лет назад

      I've been in a Rose's here in Maryland - that one looked basically like a discount clothing store, though.

    • @hamsterama
      @hamsterama 6 лет назад +2

      +Christina Cope Hey, you never know when you'll need something from Dollar Tree. I was having moisture in parts of my basement recently. I went to a hardware store to buy Damprid, but they were sold out. The price tag on the shelf showed it would have been $11. I went to Dollar Tree, where they had their generic equivalent of Damprid for just $1. That was an amazing deal. While I was there, I impulsively bought freeze-dried fruit. The freeze-dried fruit contained no added sugar, and cost less than at a regular grocery store.

  • @humbledriver2536
    @humbledriver2536 3 года назад +16

    I recall playing on an organ keyboard when I was ten. I played by ear and played Silent Night. Upon completion applause rang out from dozens of patrons and employees. It was a fond memory. 52 years later and hundreds of original songs I've yet to learn to read sheet music and consider that Christmas time my introduction to music.
    Thanks Woolworth

  • @eventvisionsinc
    @eventvisionsinc 4 года назад +152

    Best lunch counter this took me back when I was 12 ,coolest toys ever

    • @realmccoy9597
      @realmccoy9597 4 года назад +6

      I bought my first train set from there, my grandmother loved going to Woolworth. It was a Amtrak train set good memories!

    • @MrBrink-bz3nk
      @MrBrink-bz3nk 4 года назад +4

      Swear I just remember getting all my alien movie action figures there for cheap like $5

    • @fposmith
      @fposmith 4 года назад +1

      The stores always smelled like popcorn and chewing gum rubbed around with a leather sole shoe !

    • @ebaydon8230
      @ebaydon8230 4 года назад +1

      YEESSS!! The lunch counter. Whenever my mother would go shopping we'd stop at Woolworth on Lincoln Ave. in Chicago. And I always knew what that meant..hamburgers and cokes at the lunch counter. Wow..the memories.

    • @yell0wberry
      @yell0wberry 4 года назад +4

      One of the very first sit ins for civil rights was at a Woolworth store

  • @missmable6015
    @missmable6015 4 года назад +40

    I'm 59 & i remember Woolworths, I used to shop there a lot in the middle 70's -late 80's.they had the Best Banana Splits ever !!!! Our local Woolworth closed in the late 80's, around 1989 or so in Gastonia, NC. I really miss Woolworth.

  • @mike-rayner-videos
    @mike-rayner-videos 6 лет назад +342

    very sad.. i loved woolworth 🌷 ❤️

    • @hasanicoward4425
      @hasanicoward4425 6 лет назад +9

      I loved Woolworths to being from the city of Lancaster PA our store was down town and we went there everyday except Sunday

    • @robmoir7524
      @robmoir7524 6 лет назад +3

      I FEEL SAD LOOKING AT THIS THE DOG I LOVED WOOLWORTH S

    • @robertmundt6105
      @robertmundt6105 6 лет назад +11

      As a youngster, I remember Woolworth as a treat on Sunday afternoons: coffee counters with ice cream sundies and milk shakes. Granted not all locations had them, but they kept us busy while mother shopped. That back in days that seemed so much friendlier.

    • @DucatiPaso750
      @DucatiPaso750 6 лет назад +4

      @@robertmundt6105 I was just about to say...the diner. I loved the BLT sandwich and the cute waitress.

    • @pirateship6112
      @pirateship6112 6 лет назад +7

      We in Waltrop Germany still have a Woolworth store

  • @Bluepeter62
    @Bluepeter62 3 года назад +8

    Woolworth is still alive in Germany. I did a little research and found out that Woolworth Germany is far bigger than I thought and they seem to be doing well apart from pandemic caused problems but those hit all competing stores as well. At present they have 450 stores running and the goal is to expand to 800. They started as a branch of the American stores, opening the first shop 1927 in Bremen. It is a complicated story from then on as well. They went through management buyout in 1998, bancrupcy in 2009 and a lot of reorganisation. The concept is the same, kinda German version of a five and dime, must be the cheapest of the traditional departement stores in Germany. I hope Company Man will cover Woolworth Germany as well, just to find out why they survived in Germany but not in USA and UK.

  • @shanemckenna9416
    @shanemckenna9416 6 лет назад +135

    Woolworths is still going strong in Australia. They alongside Coles are the biggest supermarket chain here. Thankfully we don’t have Walmart.

    • @LewsLegos
      @LewsLegos 6 лет назад +26

      Shane McKenna Woolworths Australia was never related to Woolworths America Or UK

    • @matthew3v2
      @matthew3v2 6 лет назад

      walmart sels guns

    • @BlackFlagHeathen
      @BlackFlagHeathen 6 лет назад +1

      Wow you guys don’t have Walmart?! I’m honestly shocked.

    • @abdiganisugal825
      @abdiganisugal825 6 лет назад +2

      The UK has a Walmart, except here it's called ASDA (with no guns ofc).

    • @Mr.Quinlan888
      @Mr.Quinlan888 6 лет назад +1

      I remember seeing a Woolworths when I was visiting New Zealand. I thought it was the old department store like the ones back in the States, but it was actually a supermarket.

  • @susanbennett3115
    @susanbennett3115 6 лет назад +40

    I will always miss Woolworth's. We used to go to the soda counter after school and could get an order of french fries and a cherry coke for 35 cents. It was also a great pick-up joint for teens in that era. Guys who had a crush on you would offer to pay for our after-school treat. It was so much fun to browse the cosmetics aisle. They had everything, and fragrances. They didn't mind if we tried out the samples and just had affordable merchandise.Until the 80's there was still one Woolworth's open but it wasn't the same. They'd been bought out by OSCO Drug. It was so sad to see them go.

  • @davidbrown8303
    @davidbrown8303 4 года назад +86

    Imagine opening a store for only two hundred dollars.

    • @babyinuyasha
      @babyinuyasha 4 года назад +9

      That was back in the 19th century, the dollar went further back then.

    • @kayskidf1
      @kayskidf1 4 года назад +2

      even a 10 x 10 pop up, with walls and such, cost more than $200

    • @ronrichardson3103
      @ronrichardson3103 4 года назад +1

      @Pat Burke the government would be on your bones in a flash.

  • @ctbadcop15
    @ctbadcop15 4 года назад +12

    The thing that set Woolworth apart was they were selling all new products but you couldn’t get a pair of Levi’s but you could get wranglers. I remember them in the late 70’s - early 80’s. They were indeed unique. They had a lunch counter where you could get sandwiches, hamburgers, fries, for about half the price of fast food, and it was all fresh. Mom could send the kids to look around while she had a cup of coffee. Just a whole different atmosphere! Wish they were still around!

  • @Ballacha
    @Ballacha 6 лет назад +113

    fun facts:
    woolworth today is top 2 biggest supermarkets in australia (the other one is coles)
    kmart today is top 2 biggest department stores in australia (the other one is big w)
    ford usa discontinued "falcon" model in the 70s, but ford australia continued to produce it until 2016 (with two trims, 4.0L inline 6cyl and 5.0L v8) and today it's australia's top 2 RWD sedan/ute (the other one is holden commodore)
    so basically australia does throwback america better than the real america

    • @godofthisshit
      @godofthisshit 6 лет назад +3

      Because the U.S don't need to throw back.

    • @bartsimpsongoatbootleg682
      @bartsimpsongoatbootleg682 6 лет назад +24

      Target America - A massive retail chain just second behind Walmart
      Target Australia - A Shadow of its former self 10 years ago
      There is something that the US and Australia have in common
      Myer and Macy's - Declining in net worth and profits
      David Jones and JC Penney - Declining in net worth and profits
      Company Man should just make an extra long video on the decline of department stores.

    • @christinacope562
      @christinacope562 6 лет назад

      @@dodecahedron1 I ❤Falcons, never drove one but gramps had one. I see them in classic car shows. I hate FoMoCo is going to stop making cars.

    • @christinacope562
      @christinacope562 6 лет назад

      Some 'Muricans have no sense. Every store I like to shop at, is gone. Hate Wal-Mart! So I shop at antique, thrift stores now.

    • @chicagoakland
      @chicagoakland 6 лет назад

      Not to mention El Camino-style utes are still huge out there.
      I remember visiting Australia and seeing not only how big Kmart is, but that you still use the 70's/80's logo! God bless your country.

  • @Kenxclout
    @Kenxclout 6 лет назад +1346

    Do a video on the decline of my life

    • @jadavis84
      @jadavis84 6 лет назад +184

      I think the copious amounts of porn and alcohol would probably lead to the video being de-monetized.

    • @bhullargurbir7280
      @bhullargurbir7280 6 лет назад +17

      Joel Davis good one

    • @Omar-em7rl
      @Omar-em7rl 6 лет назад +23

      +Ken Fulton
      i don't want to know about your homosexuality life.

    • @alienvolt7741
      @alienvolt7741 6 лет назад +22

      damn son shit got real right there

    • @zan31669
      @zan31669 6 лет назад +39

      Your dad couldn't afford a condom you was born the end

  • @JamesWilliams-yc3yd
    @JamesWilliams-yc3yd 5 лет назад +242

    What about Woolworths in Australia? They are still there.

    • @copiernerds
      @copiernerds 5 лет назад +6

      exactly

    • @FlyxPat
      @FlyxPat 5 лет назад +66

      Unrelated to the US and UK companies. The Australian company simply used the name in the 1920s because it was already famous and not registered in Australia

    • @adrianrichards6825
      @adrianrichards6825 5 лет назад +4

      Still going

    • @exphurtfan
      @exphurtfan 5 лет назад +9

      That's what I was thinking the whole time like bruh I just went to Woolies the other day, what they on about? 😂

    • @lexocool7551
      @lexocool7551 5 лет назад +14

      Woollies is killing it in Australia 🇦🇺

  • @todgilmore3258
    @todgilmore3258 3 года назад +9

    I was an assistant manager at the first Woolworth store in Lancaster PA from 1980-1983. I saw first hand the demise of the Woolco discount chain and the slow death of the Woolworth variety store chain. I think the Dollar General type stores are the legacy of the 5 & 10 variety store model.
    I learned a lot about business from FW Woolworth and I am glad I had the opportunity to work for the company.

    • @ReynaldoAbasr
      @ReynaldoAbasr 9 месяцев назад

      it's still there in another multiverse

  • @Everett02
    @Everett02 6 лет назад +423

    Please do one on Woolworths UK for all the british people like me!

    • @SirVoltz
      @SirVoltz 6 лет назад +9

      Yup!

    • @theseal8790
      @theseal8790 6 лет назад +16

      I think they were around a while longer, correct?

    • @thegoodtony3339
      @thegoodtony3339 6 лет назад +11

      Agreed

    • @_megwaters
      @_megwaters 6 лет назад +8

      Please oh my gosh when they closed down

    • @BronzeManul
      @BronzeManul 6 лет назад +39

      Was disappointed when this video wasn't about the British Woolworths or didn't at least cover both chains. :/

  • @demareatunes
    @demareatunes 6 лет назад +49

    is there a subgroup of company man fans who haven' t heard of half of these companies but watch these videos anyway?

    • @romajimamulo
      @romajimamulo 6 лет назад +7

      It happens with a lot of us

    • @ZacAttackLeader
      @ZacAttackLeader 6 лет назад

      Even though I have heard of most of these stores, Im here for his voice.

  • @mrjsanchez1
    @mrjsanchez1 6 лет назад +134

    I miss the lunch counters great Hamburgers hot dogs and ice cream. I'm surprised nobody tries to resurrect Woolworth's. It was always a fun experience as a kid to shop there.

    • @debbiem9218
      @debbiem9218 6 лет назад +21

      I too miss Woolworth's they had the best soda fountain type restaurants, and you usually got what you ordered. If you wanted something hot it was hot if you wanted something cold it was cold. Yeah those were the days alright!

    • @imy5279
      @imy5279 6 лет назад +7

      I used to shop there as a kid. Boy, do I feel old!

    • @Rich.Staples
      @Rich.Staples 6 лет назад +12

      Yes they should ressurect it. If they make the customer experience the prime focus with the same sort of soda fountain diner meets general store feel. It would prolly bring back the fun of shopping brick, and mortar again.

    • @verawallace9055
      @verawallace9055 6 лет назад +2

      Nice house stuff too

    • @uncletibs
      @uncletibs 6 лет назад +3

      San Fransisco had the best Woolworth. Powell and Market. Rode the cable car there!!!

  • @luisg.407
    @luisg.407 3 года назад +5

    I used to go to Woolthworth with my mom all the time when I used to live in Los Angeles. We always went to the one on Broadway in Downtown L.A. I still remember it fondly. She always bought me so many toys there and always two slices of pizza. I remember Woolworth and this other store that looked like it called Newberry. I was amazed when I found out years ago that Foot Locker is actually Woolworth. I would say Woolworth's demise is the same as KMart. You gotta update yourself throughout the years with store appearance and promos to stay attractive and relevant to your consumer. Alot of these stores like Sears and Kmart just became dingy lit places that never changed with the times. Thanks for the video. Brings back good memories.

  • @williamsandbrink6944
    @williamsandbrink6944 6 лет назад +53

    I grew up in the 50's and 60's and I always loved to go to Woolworth's five & dime. As a child I got clothes, toys and anything else we needed as a family. As a teen, I bought my first AM pocket radio, my first 45RPM record and record player, then my first guitar a Woolworth's. They also sold guitar strings and picks, which I frequently needed. And Woolworth's always had a great lunch bar. Never spent more than 50 cents to a dollar for a great complete lunch including a drink! I miss Woolworth's today.

    • @annapaulikonis2433
      @annapaulikonis2433 6 лет назад +1

      I do too.

    • @johnminehan1148
      @johnminehan1148 6 лет назад

      Really good hot dogs, although I generally preferred Grants, Jupiter's/Kresge's or H.L. Green's as a child. (Nothing smelled like H.L. Greens).

    • @markemanuele1929
      @markemanuele1929 6 лет назад +1

      Yes, I remember the lunch counter. I used to go there for lunch when I was in High School. You got a soup and sandwich for a buck. And you even got a coke with it.

    • @cindazoo
      @cindazoo 6 лет назад +1

      and omg their fresh home made limeade on a hot Texas summer day !!

    • @johnminehan1148
      @johnminehan1148 6 лет назад +2

      I particularly remember the hot dogs fondly . . . .

  • @SomewhereinIngerland
    @SomewhereinIngerland 6 лет назад +27

    Woolworth's was absolutely class, legendary shop. The fact that WHSmith is still in business and not Wooly's proves how far our society has fallen tbh.

  • @JimmyPlato1
    @JimmyPlato1 6 лет назад +54

    I always loved the little coffee shops in a lot of the Woolworth stores. It was a joy to eat there and maybe grab a great milkshake too! I really miss Woolworths....

    • @zot254
      @zot254 6 лет назад

      Come to SA you will change your mind.

    • @MissWitchiepoo
      @MissWitchiepoo 6 лет назад +2

      My mom always took me to Woolworths but we could never afford to go eat anything. I remember wishing one day we could:)

    • @daveb1649
      @daveb1649 6 лет назад +1

      My Nana would take me there and undoubtedly I always got a treat...a trip to the luncheon counter and little toy cars were my treat...and the closest Woolthworth's was right down the street...now...I like to go into different older towns and cities and look at the old buildings...all I've seen still has the name on them and are referred to as such...Check out the Woolworth's store and S.S. Kresge buildings in Asheville, North Carolina...

    • @anthonymcilwain4426
      @anthonymcilwain4426 6 лет назад +1

      Yes! I had forgotten the coffee shops in there. You could get cheap Egg, peas and Chips lunches there too.

  • @brianwhitlock4494
    @brianwhitlock4494 3 года назад +6

    I started with the Woolworth Company as a store janitor at age 16 in 1983. I was there at the end as a store manager in 1997. The downfall was not the competition since the stores were in malls and downtown areas. Woolworth Stores were left to die on the vine by poor upper management. Stores were never updated. Management were more concerned with the specialty stores. (Kinney, Foot Locker, Champs, San Francisco Music Box) Those chains had much higher profit per square foot. Also customers no longer shopped in downtowns and moved to the suburbs. One hidden fact. The Woolworth retirement system owned the properties of most non shopping mall locations. The system would lease the property to the Company for pennies. Today most of the properties are still owned by Woolworth. Frank Woolworth believed in buying the property for his stores and that continued after his death.

  • @charlottetowler4319
    @charlottetowler4319 6 лет назад +28

    Thanks for these historical vignettes! Every Saturday morning my mom & I would clean our house together. Afterward we would take the bus downtown to Woolworth's where she treated me to a BLT sandwich & a (real) milkshake at the lunch counter. I was impressed by the cute waitress uniforms that included small caps to control their hair; they were required to wear a hairnet to contain longer hair. It was at Woolworth's that I discovered strawberry-rhubarb pie which became my favorite (with ice cream on top). Such sweet memories! 💞

    • @jf9488
      @jf9488 6 лет назад +2

      Charlotte Towler when did you go to Woolworth’s? In the 80’s my mom would take me there. I loved the lunch counter. Our local store did well up to the very end. I also loved Woolworth’s during Halloween and Christmas.

    • @charlottetowler4319
      @charlottetowler4319 6 лет назад +2

      It was during the late 40's that Mom introduced me to that wonderful store where I could hardly wait to spend some of my allowance. I remember purchasing little juice glasses painted flowers that were 5 cents each, "45" records, a stainless steel bracelet engraved with my name, & Evening in Paris perfume in a small blue flask with a fancy tasseled cord around the neck. There was always something new & wonderful to see. 😊

    • @charlottetowler4319
      @charlottetowler4319 6 лет назад

      We're kindred spirits a generation apart! 😊

    • @charlottetowler4319
      @charlottetowler4319 5 лет назад

      Larry, your writing is every bit as good!

  • @theedmee
    @theedmee 6 лет назад +20

    I'm just old enough to have been to Woolworth's countless times as a kid, adolescent- but that was it. The year I went off to college, the stores all began closing. My mom, a teacher, would always bring me there for school supplies because the prices were great and it kept me occupied while she looked at the clothes. Smart! I've sat in those swivel chairs, had a Coke at the counter... and I was born in 1982. It really was heartbreaking to lose Woolworth's when I could have used inexpensive school supplies the most.

    • @turksandwich7538
      @turksandwich7538 6 лет назад

      I am the same age as you, but I never stepped foot in one. Perhaps they weren't in my area.

    • @fnjesusfreak
      @fnjesusfreak 6 лет назад +1

      So you're kinda like me, one of the last generation to have the 5&10 experience (I was born in 1980). :)

  • @timothymclean
    @timothymclean 6 лет назад +214

    You _know_ a company hit it big when you hear someone describing the reasons it succeeded, and go "So what? That's just the basics, what made them stand out?"
    (Come to think of it, this applies to more than just companies.)

    • @drunkenhobo8020
      @drunkenhobo8020 6 лет назад +23

      Like when a guy thinks that just being nice is going to lead to women throwing themselves at him? Being nice should be the default - you're expected to be nice!

    • @companyman114
      @companyman114  6 лет назад +16

      Completely Agree.

    • @rodigoduterte9192
      @rodigoduterte9192 6 лет назад +1

      Timothy McLean if company doesnt adapt, it would fall faster eventually

    • @sasuey
      @sasuey 6 лет назад +2

      Woolworth is the retail version of the "Seinfeld is unfunny" trope.

    • @gilbertconner6478
      @gilbertconner6478 6 лет назад

      Timothy McLean the return of Woolworths and gold blatts.

  • @TheAnubis57
    @TheAnubis57 4 года назад +4

    Sad to know that 40 or 50 years from now (2060-2070) people won't fond memories of stores like Woolworth, Sears, Radio Shack , Toys R Us, etc because today there is nothing like them at all. BTW, I love the design of their old time store fronts of Woolworth and even the modern/art deco look of Woolco too.

    • @ReynaldoAbasr
      @ReynaldoAbasr 9 месяцев назад

      remember, they are in now a separate multiverse apart from now

  • @PositionLight
    @PositionLight 6 лет назад +69

    The irony is that today Dollar Stores (think Dollar General and 5 Below) are all going crazy. That's basically what Woolworths started as. The problem was that in the middle of the 20th century decreased income inequality allowed a middle class to develop that wanted to shoppe somewhere better. Today inequality is back and dollar stores are once again taking off.

    • @christinacope562
      @christinacope562 6 лет назад +8

      But filled with cheap junk from China that nobody wants.

    • @syxepop
      @syxepop 6 лет назад +2

      And what stuff do you think Woolworth's US had back then? The equivalent American "cheapery"...

    • @Jimbaloidatron
      @Jimbaloidatron 6 лет назад +4

      In the UK, what are a good many of the Woolworth stores now? Pound Land.

    • @MegaMagicdog
      @MegaMagicdog 6 лет назад +5

      syxepop But at least it was American made for the most part. Some Japan and Taiwan, but not Red China.

    • @fnjesusfreak
      @fnjesusfreak 6 лет назад +2

      I call Dollar General and Family Dollar "5&10"s, because they're more or less the same as I remember McCrory's (aka Greens, Newbery) being...except that Greens had a diner in the front (a stereotype of 5&10s, but something I've never seen anywhere else).

  • @realShadowKat
    @realShadowKat 6 лет назад +76

    First to say that this is the defunct American Woolworth, not the currently in business Australian Woolworth

    • @reeseclarke9293
      @reeseclarke9293 6 лет назад +2

      Shadow Kat in NZ its countdown :)

    • @Alex632
      @Alex632 6 лет назад +1

      @@reeseclarke9293 its such a weird name in NZ lol

    • @AdvanceAU
      @AdvanceAU 6 лет назад +22

      Also, the Australian counterpart is called 'Woolworths' and not "Woolworth".

    • @1121494
      @1121494 6 лет назад +1

      It's not just Australian and NZ Woolworth that survived, just been to one today.

    • @Ice_Karma
      @Ice_Karma 6 лет назад +9

      He made it quite clear early on in the video that he was talking about the American Wookworth.

  • @JannaBrewer
    @JannaBrewer 6 лет назад +17

    I remember my mom taking me to Woolworth’s when I was a child and buying me 45’s and eating at the lunch counter..sigh..💔

  • @robertschmalbach86
    @robertschmalbach86 4 года назад +3

    I was in college when they closed. I was hired to help dismantle three stores, the Allentown, Easton and Bethlehem stores. My job was to take apart displays, shelving units, took apart the restaurants, etc. I have the original under-the-overhang sign for the Easton Store, which was in a strip shopping center. I also have the little price display cards from the Bethlehem store, which was an awesome store, one of the original downtown ones with the creaky old floors, long lunch counter, it was something. Depressing to close the stores down but I am glad I had the opportunity to work for them and get to preserve a few pieces of the history.

  • @socalgal714
    @socalgal714 4 года назад +13

    Fond memories of Woolworths. Whenever that teenage angst would hit, dad would throw me in the car, take me down to Woolworths, and we'd split a banana split and talk it out.

  • @Medjeed86
    @Medjeed86 6 лет назад +46

    In Chihuahua, Chihuahua, México there's a Woolworth that's been there for ages. My dad would tell me about his medschool years and how he would go there to drink some coffee and have some pie. The store still operates and is quite a place to visit if you come to Chihuahua as it's located in one of the most popular trade zones: "Calle Libertad" (Liberty Street)

  • @TimPearcy
    @TimPearcy 6 лет назад +28

    I miss the little breakfast/lunch counter in Woolworth's.

    • @jaybird113
      @jaybird113 6 лет назад +2

      Don't forget, some even had a full service restaurant.

    • @TimPearcy
      @TimPearcy 6 лет назад

      I remember that the big cites had one, but in towns like mine with a mere 90+K population, we didn't get anything but the small counter.

    • @theconciergerecommends3981
      @theconciergerecommends3981 3 года назад

      It was Harvest House

  • @michaelheffernan4509
    @michaelheffernan4509 4 года назад +3

    As many of you who are watching this video will remember in the 1950s as a child,
    you go into the Woolworth store and look at all the toys
    the old "five-and-dime"....
    Great memories...

  • @handylady8015
    @handylady8015 4 года назад +19

    I always got my records there, makeup and perfume too. Everything a young teen needed. We had one close enough to walk to. Good memories. Oh, and loved the square hotdog buns.

  • @davidjanuszewski5020
    @davidjanuszewski5020 6 лет назад +59

    Generally, the Shopping Malls were the downfall of the Downtown experience, so many of the Mom & Pop stores suffered a miserable death.

    • @annettekoch3766
      @annettekoch3766 6 лет назад +1

      So true and sad.

    • @soapbxprod
      @soapbxprod 6 лет назад

      They died because of retail economies of scale. Tough luck, Luddite.

    • @billhahn4113
      @billhahn4113 6 лет назад +6

      And now the malls are suffering the same fate. Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose.

    • @hermangre
      @hermangre 6 лет назад +3

      It's all mail-order(Amazon etc) now.

    • @deborahhoffman7394
      @deborahhoffman7394 6 лет назад +7

      David Januszewski This destroyed community life. This is what happened to my town where I grew up. Interestingly, this community concept around shopping and dining is starting to come back.

  • @FadesT0Black
    @FadesT0Black 4 года назад +13

    I have fond memories of visiting Woolworth's as a kid in the late 80s, early 90s. The store wasn't quite as busy as the other stores around it but it did seem to do okay. What really sticks out in my memory though was their restaurant. That was always busy and I remember begging to stop there for lunch any time we were nearby.

  • @sharonjones7498
    @sharonjones7498 4 года назад +4

    I worked for Woolworths for about 8 years as , first a waitress, and later, as a food servise manager. I enjoyed it. You never mentioned the fact that they had counter food service with great food and deserts. I even remember, as a child, my Mom would take me and my sister and brother to have a turkey dinner on special occasions. They are great memories.

  • @Simon-tl4lw
    @Simon-tl4lw 6 лет назад +232

    Do the decline of sears

    • @digitalrailroader
      @digitalrailroader 6 лет назад +39

      Lil Broomstick he essentially covered that in the Decline of Kmart video; because Sears and Kmart were joined at the hip in 2005.

    • @thegoodtony3339
      @thegoodtony3339 6 лет назад +10

      Sears is owned by Kmart and that was the 1st video last year.

    • @back2the80s
      @back2the80s 6 лет назад +1

      bad business move

    • @THEJEDEYEMASTER
      @THEJEDEYEMASTER 6 лет назад +6

      caldor

    • @ashehollaway9552
      @ashehollaway9552 6 лет назад +7

      I'd say wait until it finally closes completely.
      It will probably take a year or more tho.

  • @renna912
    @renna912 4 года назад +125

    I miss Woolworth .they had everything. Woolworths was so relaxing to go shopping..

    • @yeovic2242
      @yeovic2242 4 года назад +5

      They had everything... Too much money tied up in that everything!

    • @lalani888blue
      @lalani888blue 3 года назад +6

      The lunch counter! Burgers & fries after you shopped!! Memories 💚💌

    • @craigham6081
      @craigham6081 3 года назад +1

      Woolworth's is bigger and better in Australia

    • @renna912
      @renna912 3 года назад

      @@craigham6081 Lucy Australia to have a Woolworths...

    • @rekdyoface4503
      @rekdyoface4503 2 года назад

      @@lalani888blue were they good?

  • @judyvalencia3257
    @judyvalencia3257 6 лет назад +23

    I wanted to see this because I worked at Woolworth's when I was 19. We had those old fashioned cash registers, so you actually had to count out the change.

  • @emilymagallanes9115
    @emilymagallanes9115 3 года назад +3

    I remember The Woolworth in Huntington Park, California. Love it as a kid & enjoyed it with my best friend, Nora, during our high school years. We felt like such grown ups, grabbing a bite to eat after a shopping trip down Pacific. Thanks for the story Company Man.

  • @TheEDNC
    @TheEDNC 6 лет назад +96

    I was there, I saw it happen. I started working for Woolworth/Kinney corporate in NYC during the early eighties. That was my office about 2-4 inches down from the top depending on your phone size. The company suffered from stagnant indecision, no one knew what the hell they were doing because the market was changing way too rapidly for the old timers running the show... that not only constipated any creative forecasting, it generated fear to gamble on new perspectives, thus the company lost all of its visionary wind, like a sail boat on dead seas, it went nowhere. We all felt our CEO was subconsciously headed for the rocks. Sensing the impending doom, we all moved on rather than wait to be laid off. It was terrible watching as the exodus worsened.
    BTW, Woolco was intentionally remodeled to mimic K-Mart when it hit. Some thought that was a mistake. So they pitched that Woolco should become more grandiose, the size of a warehouse selling a wider range of goods. The boss thought their concept sounded too much like Sears, so it was dismissed straight out. Although discouraged by the rejection, these 3-dimensional thinkers & planners left and eventually went where open minded concepts were recognized & appreciated. They went on to help PriceClub transition into Costco, which along with e-commerce (aka Amazon) eventually brought down the infamous and much heralded Sears/Kmart business model.

    • @mattstang808
      @mattstang808 6 лет назад +11

      Yes thank you for the info

    • @nelsonx5326
      @nelsonx5326 6 лет назад +15

      My mother used to cal Woolworth "The five and dime". That was back in the 60's.

    • @GodsFavoriteBassPlyr
      @GodsFavoriteBassPlyr 6 лет назад +9

      I had an aunt who was semi-retired.. and worked part time at W.T. Grant. Very similar to Woolworth. Those were the days!

    • @ericspencer8093
      @ericspencer8093 6 лет назад +7

      You explain it better than the video.

    • @TheEDNC
      @TheEDNC 6 лет назад +7

      NotSnarl Proof, what would you prefer, my SS# or my name? I have nothing to hide. Back then I ran the digital Planogram Dept. Now you may be my guest and go look that up. BTW, this is RUclips where you either have faith or not, but asking for proof on YT is absolutely ridiculous.

  • @valeriesabino1311
    @valeriesabino1311 6 лет назад +156

    PepsiCo bigger than you know

    • @lilkmrt2389
      @lilkmrt2389 6 лет назад +8

      Valerie sabino I asked him about this on Twitter and he said if he does another bigger than you know that would be the one

  • @dabprod
    @dabprod 6 лет назад +50

    5 and dime store, or later just dime store. There were many dime stores but Woolworth's was the biggest and the best. Great food at the lunch counter in every store. I grew up in the deep south in the 50's but have lived in NY State for the past 40+ years and go into NY City occasionally and the Woolworth's building is the most beautiful building in Manhattan. The lobby itself will blow you away and all the gorgeous brass elevator doors and entrances. I used to use a lawyer on the upper floors years ago and the ride up was like something at the county fair. Most beautiful building I have ever seen. The lobby was huge, had shops, news stands, flower shops, barber shops etc. HIGH Gothic ceilings in marble and tile. We used to always stop and go into the lobby just to look at the beauty anytime we were in the city. But after 9-11 you can't do that anymore. Its restricted to people that work there or if you have business with a tenant. Too bad. Nice informative video. Thanks.

    • @catcook3324
      @catcook3324 6 лет назад +4

      I know! Wasn't that an amazing building? I loved the Arts&Crafts tile work. After 9/11 they closed all the best architectural wonders of NYC. You used to be able to go into the Chrysler bldg and upstairs they had an incredible restaurant with the ceilings painted with planets.

    • @patrickgrady5219
      @patrickgrady5219 6 лет назад +5

      9/11 ruined a lot of things for a lot of people. The ramifications of that event forever changed our lives, sadly.

    • @slicksnewonenow
      @slicksnewonenow 6 лет назад +6

      @@patrickgrady5219 yes... Sadly. I wonder if the fine folks that currently own the Woolworth Building also have it rigged so they can "pull it" if they have to... I'd bet it is, if Silverstein is the owner... Sad times we're in, indeed.

    • @donmarsh5171
      @donmarsh5171 6 лет назад

      THE NARRATOR SOUNDS LIKE A WET BEHIND THE EARS TEENAGER THAT IS VERY DISRESPECTFUL. I WORKED WITH THEM MANY YEARS AND I CAN TELL YOU THEY TREATED EMPLOYEES MUCH, MUCH BETTER THAN COMPANIES TODAY. MAYBE SOMEONE THAT HAS MORE RESPECT CAN DO A NEW NARRATION DONE IN GOOD TASTE.

    • @colinp2238
      @colinp2238 6 лет назад +2

      Why is ten cents called a dime?

  • @bsx121
    @bsx121 2 года назад +2

    I remember seeing a Woolworth in Germany in 2010 which blew my mind considering they've long closed in my area in Philadelphia. Good memories there... now it's a dollar store,kinda ironic

  • @soapbxprod
    @soapbxprod 6 лет назад +39

    Groucho: "Chicolini should get ten years in Leavenworth or eleven years in Twelveworth."
    Chico: "How about 5 and 10 in Woolworth?"
    :)

  • @51gary51
    @51gary51 6 лет назад +34

    Thanks for bringing back pleasant memories. I always enjoyed Woolworth's lunch counter. I'm surprised, and a bit disappointed, that you didn't mention that feature in your coverage, as I've always assumed that the lunch counters were a staple in all of the Woolworth branches. I worked at Kinney shoes in the early 1970s, which was located in a shopping plaza in NY state, and Woolworth's was right next door. I spent many a lunch break/supper break there. I remember they had great French Fries! Unfortunately, it's all gone. Just a pleasant memory from the past.

  • @tippytoes2358
    @tippytoes2358 6 лет назад +54

    I remember going into Woolworth in the 1980s and 1990s, and they still had their lunch counter. It was in a corner of a downtown. People would often come into the lunch counter to get out of the cold and have a place to hang out. The store was similar to the Dollar General and Family Dollar stores that are still busy today. I still remember buying a pair of canvas shoes for $3.00 at Woolworth during my senior year in high school and other girls beginning to buy the same kind of shoes at my high school! I think I started a trend!!

    • @JakeWerkmeister
      @JakeWerkmeister 6 лет назад +6

      We had two Woolworths located at two malls in the Pittsburgh area. Both had a diner restaurant, and a full fledged cafeteria located in adjacent stores in the mall. Both restaurants were absolutely spectacular, and retained a very 80's look all the way up to their closing. The store itself was like a slightly smaller version of a Hills. I miss them, as both stores were pleasant stops during my visits to the mall as a kid.

    • @doorguru168888
      @doorguru168888 6 лет назад +2

      I agree! Woolworth was NOTHING like those crappy dollar stores!!

    • @tangerinesky3336
      @tangerinesky3336 6 лет назад +2

      Tippy Toes
      Woolworth was NOTHING like all those crappy dollar stores that sell nothing of value!! Sounds like you have serious memory issues.

    • @brewcrew5854
      @brewcrew5854 6 лет назад +4

      i too recall the lunch counter there would be people smoking away drinking fountain soda or coffee . it had creaky wooden floors and i always checked out the toys dept and small pet/fish dept. it was located dead in the center of town with 2 enterances/exits.

    • @mzrzfxr
      @mzrzfxr 6 лет назад +1

      I recall the Woolworths by Great Northern Mall in Cleveland in the 1980s. They had a lunch counter and some pretty good deals, I recall a few toys from there when I was growing up. Yes they were inexpensive but not like the throw away items at Dollar General or Family Dollar. The lunch, for the price, I recall being decent as well. Sad to see them go, but like many icons, times change. Speaking of some other brands, I am always shocked how Kmart and Sears seem to be invincible and just keep going on and on despite dismal financial results...

  • @katsudon2048
    @katsudon2048 3 года назад +4

    “You either die a hero, or live long enough to see yourself become the villain” that quote aged too well

  • @brendalancour5008
    @brendalancour5008 6 лет назад +14

    I miss our Woolworth store.I used to be a waitress in the store.I really miss our store in Rutland Vermont U.S.A. in the north east!!😊

    • @annapaulikonis2433
      @annapaulikonis2433 6 лет назад +1

      I liked the Harvest Room at Woolworths.You could gey a really good meal with a drink and dessert included for $2.95.

  • @PreppyPrincess777
    @PreppyPrincess777 4 года назад +48

    I actually miss Woolworth’s and the icees and popcorn they used to sell

    • @paulsiegle4153
      @paulsiegle4153 4 года назад +2

      Yes. Great popcorn! Up front by the checkouts. Warm, lots of salt!

    • @mariannesouza8326
      @mariannesouza8326 4 года назад +2

      Paul Siegle In those long bags?

    • @paulsiegle4153
      @paulsiegle4153 4 года назад

      @@mariannesouza8326 Yes. The long bags. How come things were so much better then!? lol

    • @Lonestar863
      @Lonestar863 4 года назад +3

      Kmart had the same thing for me growing up 😭

    • @Hugatree1
      @Hugatree1 4 года назад +1

      Fire Star ❤️ my mom took me there for ice cream sodas. The best memories!

  • @adrienne0711
    @adrienne0711 2 года назад +5

    I LOVED Woolworth and some of my best childhood memories were made at their "soda fountain" & having a banana split with my Grandma. We spent hours "window shopping" back in the day (the 60s). Woolworth fountain also turned out quite the cheeseburger.

  • @ThatFanBoyGuy
    @ThatFanBoyGuy 5 лет назад +9

    I remember when the local Woolworth closed. My mother was sad, and I couldn't understand why. Thank you for helping me understand why.

  • @billl1127
    @billl1127 6 лет назад +11

    I do remember Kenneys. It was a fairly large stand-alone building near us. That would be where mom took us kids to get shoes for school and sneakers (Keds or Converse). Buster Brown was the other choice for shoes. Wasn't aware of the Foot Locker connection.

  • @alswann2702
    @alswann2702 4 года назад +40

    The pet department was a blast. My mother loved the after Christmas sale on decorations. And Kinney shoes was where you got your waffle stompers when I was a kid.

    • @paulsiegle4153
      @paulsiegle4153 4 года назад +4

      Yes. They sold pets, live pets. Fish, turtles, lizards, all the tanks and stuff. Great memory to go over and see them as a kid. I think they sold bunnies too? And all the similar hamsters?

    • @MsFiveEight58
      @MsFiveEight58 4 года назад +1

      Aahhh, I remember the pet department, especially the fish. This brought back fond memories.

    • @gojoe2833
      @gojoe2833 4 года назад +2

      Goldfish were 10 cents each in 1968. And they were nice healthy fish too!!

    • @DavidSmith-sb2ix
      @DavidSmith-sb2ix 4 года назад

      The Newberry's five and dime in my town was big, two floors and a basement with lunch counter and restaurant. First escalator in town. The pet department even sold piranhas. I kid you not! It broke my heart when it burned in 73. The McCrorys, Woolworths and Grant's eventually closed too.

    • @djlresearch
      @djlresearch 4 года назад

      I got a baby alligator in the pet department.

  • @super-gerald
    @super-gerald 4 года назад +8

    I remember Woolco quite fondly. It was a huge store with departments for everything. You could literally be going to a particular Woolco for several years and still discover a department that you never knew existed. Of course in terms of the business maybe that was actually part of the problrm...

    • @gibberconfirm425
      @gibberconfirm425 2 года назад +1

      It's vaguely weird to think Sears and K-mart were kicking their asses given Sears and K-mart classic cases of self-destruction, now.

  • @DoryCrowe
    @DoryCrowe 6 лет назад +14

    Fond memories of Woolworths. They were always front and center on Main Streets before the malls killed downtown retail. My mother always called them the Red and Gold Gift Shop because of the red and gold signs on their store fronts and the quality of the merchandise. When malls became the retail meccas in the 60s and 70s, the Main Street Woolworths often moved out there. They never modernized the Main Street stores, which had squeaky wood slat floors in the aisles and open bin-like wooden table/counters for merchandise. Instead of the usual stools found at places like Rexall Drugs or other lunch counters, the red leatherette, swiveling Woolworth's lunch counter stools had backs. A soda fountain glass of Pepsi was a nickel. A Coke was a dime. I think that helped cement my 50s childhood early Baby Boomers as the Pepsi generation.

  • @midnight.amethyst
    @midnight.amethyst 6 лет назад +25

    Thanks for the video! They are always so well put together and informative.
    Could you do Montgomery Wards one day? I thought they went out of business, but I saw a mail in catalog for them.
    Keep up the great work😊

    • @stompchunkman4248
      @stompchunkman4248 6 лет назад +3

      I remember those stores when I was a kid in the 90's. Service Merchandise, Mervyn's, MW and Joe Brand. Joe Brand was the last one to fold here .

    • @Legoguy1979
      @Legoguy1979 6 лет назад +1

      The name was bought by the Swiss brands (then Swiss colony). Swiss brands in HQed in Madison while Wards has their distribution and little store with the rest of the swiss brand stores in Madison. I almost ended up working there a year ago.

    • @pmvaldez1
      @pmvaldez1 6 лет назад

      My dad (RIP) and his friends had a cement mixer they passed around that was a Montgomery Ward rental that someone never returned.

  • @susanprice7202
    @susanprice7202 6 лет назад +25

    Woolworth's was always an ICONIC store for children to shop...you could always get everyone in your family a Christmas gift with the amount of cash that most children had to spend. Also, in North Carolina, Woolworth's was an ICONIC location for the 1960's Civil Rights Movement. College students held"sit in" s in order to desegregate lunch counters and retail shopping. There is a genuine Woolworth's lunch counter from North Carolina in the Smithsonian. There was also a tragic story of a sad life for a Woolworth's heiress. For generations Woolworth's was such a huge part of American main street establishments.

  • @djlresearch
    @djlresearch 4 года назад +2

    I went to work for Woolco in 1981 and quit about 4 months later. The manager told me I was making a huge mistake and that Woolworth is a great company. I went to work for a supermarket company for $5k more. Eighteen months later I ended back up at that Woolco store. But this time to inspect it as an acquisition. The only employee left was the manager sitting frustrated in the store alone selling off fixtures and equipment. He didn’t have anything nice to say about Woolworth now.

  • @BruceRTalbot
    @BruceRTalbot 4 года назад +51

    Today, Dollar General and Dollar Tree stores are filling the model that "the 5 and dime" used to occupy. Had Woolworth countered the K-Mart/Target Department Store trend with small, fast in & out, cheap prices, they could have cornered the current Dollar General/Dollar Tree market. In short, they lost their original vision.

    • @MikeBrown-ii3pt
      @MikeBrown-ii3pt 4 года назад +4

      We had both a Woolworth and a Kresgee in my home town. There was a Woolco in "the city" about 30 miles away. Kresgee spawned K-mart and we had a Super K here for about 15 years. It was a great store until the whole Sears/K-mart thing. It closed about 10 years ago.

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz 4 года назад +3

      Hindsight is ALWAYS 20/20....but, yes I do miss Woolworth's OR as we would always refer to as "the dime store"!

    • @joyanderson8646
      @joyanderson8646 4 года назад +3

      Bruce, I agree 😄

  • @missmodern
    @missmodern 4 года назад +20

    OMG! I'd forgotten about Woolco! I loved Woolworth.

  • @gambinotoo
    @gambinotoo 6 лет назад +36

    First time I heard Steppenwolf Magic Carpet Ride was while sitting in the Lunchunette ( right beside the record dept). It was like a door opened that day. LOL

    • @annapaulikonis2433
      @annapaulikonis2433 6 лет назад +2

      Takes you back, doesnt it?

    • @new-knowledge8040
      @new-knowledge8040 6 лет назад

      And then there was ruclips.net/video/KZJiGu6Gz8E/видео.html .

    • @bownimrod
      @bownimrod 6 лет назад +1

      My dad managed a Woolworth store in Farmington, New Mexico. When Three Dog Night's song (Jeremiah Was a Bullfrog) came out, he would play it all day long in the store. My dad told me that It was mostly the Navajo's that purchased the 45 or album.
      I bought my first album at Woolworth, (Grand Funk 1969 the red album). ruclips.net/video/gZM25ZG6ZZU/видео.html

    • @jefftanner3803
      @jefftanner3803 6 лет назад +1

      Actually, It was called "JOY to the World".

  • @williamdezynski7342
    @williamdezynski7342 4 года назад +8

    It was a treat to go there. Even the small mall outlets were good. They had everything including birds and goldfish!

  • @mamagoose4721
    @mamagoose4721 4 года назад +8

    In the 80's, my teenage years, I remember in downtown Cincinnati there was a large F. W. Woolworth's store on a major street, right across from other major department stores. While shopping downtown with my grandma at the time, she saw Woolworth's and got very excited. (She wasn't from Cincinnati). We went inside and she seemed so happy walking around. I hoped that none of my friends would see me because for teenagers at that time, Woolworth was seen as an old, out of style store where you didn't go to buy the latest fashion because they didn't have it. I would have been embarressed if one of my friends saw me in there. My grandma asked me more than once if she could buy something for me and I politely declined. As much as Ioved my grandma, I didn't want any Woolworth products, and certainly didn't want my friends to see me in or with them. Kind of sad, but you know how passionate teenagers are about being accepted. That's my experience with Woolworth.

  • @bayareaadventures4432
    @bayareaadventures4432 4 года назад +11

    My town had a Kenny’s Shoe Store and a Woolworth until the early 90’s. We would go eat all the time. The food was so good.

  • @wyldebyll3089
    @wyldebyll3089 4 года назад +42

    I miss the Woolworths and Woolcos, they're icons of my childhood.

  • @sgtjarhead99
    @sgtjarhead99 3 года назад +3

    Woolworth's was a very important part of my childhood. Shopped there all the time with my parents. In later years, even my wife worked there part time before we got married. Was such a shame when one day they just weren't there any more.

  • @stephenpowstinger733
    @stephenpowstinger733 4 года назад +9

    I loved Woolworth and I did some shopping at the short-lived Woolco here (I bought a barbecue grill there). They opened a shopping center here with a Woolworth, a W.T. Grant, a Rexall Drugs, etc. Sadly, about 1975, I think, the Woolworth manager was shot and killed in a holdup as he took the day’s proceeds to the bank across the street.

  • @glennstiller7616
    @glennstiller7616 6 лет назад +60

    Woolworth and it's related company, Woolco, were big in Canada. In fact, after the US stores closed, Canadian stores kept going until bought out by Wal-Mart 10 years later. Miss them. They were much better than Wal-Mart.

    • @lloydkline7245
      @lloydkline7245 6 лет назад

      Glenn Stiller really, Walmart purchased Woolworths in Canada

    • @gilbertconner6478
      @gilbertconner6478 6 лет назад +1

      Glenn Stiller the return of Woolworths and gold blatts.

    • @donaldbartram6315
      @donaldbartram6315 6 лет назад +6

      Anything is better than Walmart,, to bad we don't have a choice as to where we can shop anymore, only reason I go there is because there isn't another store. In my area, New Haven Ct, we had Bradlees, Caldor, Sabres, Barkers Grand Way, KIngs, Mammoth Mart Woolco, Grants, K Mart,, all so called Dept stores until The giant conglomerate of Wal Mart left Arkansas & ruined retail every where.

    • @calebmarshall7911
      @calebmarshall7911 6 лет назад +1

      There still open in Australia

    • @OffGridInvestor
      @OffGridInvestor 6 лет назад

      We have Woolworths here in Australia as THE major supermarket chain. I go to one in a not very big town but it has it's own underground carpark as well as an above ground one. They are everywhere here. I remember 2 half a kilometer apart...

  • @TheoPantazi
    @TheoPantazi 6 лет назад +143

    From a UK perspective Woolies was an institution, I/we couldn't imagine a world without a Woolies. I have very fond memories of the stores, used to go there on Saturdays, with my pocket money and, maybe, buy a single or 12inch record, some sweets and some toy or something! Ah those were the days. So when I heard the news about them closing for good, well, I was sad. We lost another great high street name, and sadly it won't be the last.

    • @stuartfonix2734
      @stuartfonix2734 6 лет назад +1

      So many great memories of woolies on a Saturday too. It's such a shame.

    • @dylandajhharwood5566
      @dylandajhharwood5566 6 лет назад +4

      Remember Kwik-Save? - They've recently re opened some stores and are making a small comeback.

    • @JL-sm6cg
      @JL-sm6cg 6 лет назад

      Do you guys have Walmart there?

    • @missjenkenz
      @missjenkenz 6 лет назад

      where are the kwik saves? i want 5p beans back in my life thank you .

    • @captainpesmo
      @captainpesmo 6 лет назад +6

      The Australian Woolworths is completely unrelated.

  • @FiveGuysFan0604
    @FiveGuysFan0604 3 года назад +3

    Woolworth transforming into Foot Locker blew my mind, I never knew that

  • @lindainglis8506
    @lindainglis8506 4 года назад +5

    Kressge’s was another mammoth company that disappeared. I remember the fragrant smell of polished wood, cosmetics, and popcorn. How I miss those times.

  • @cdsnider9496
    @cdsnider9496 6 лет назад +325

    Could you do a video on why wal-mart and target did so good and why k-mart, woolco, and others didn't?

    • @TheTurpin1234
      @TheTurpin1234 6 лет назад +35

      Also, Walmart demanded cheaper crappier goods from manufactures or refused to buy from them. Walmart sets their buying prices. Not the manufacturer.

    • @masterimbecile
      @masterimbecile 6 лет назад +13

      He did a video on Kmart already.

    • @estep9050g
      @estep9050g 6 лет назад +43

      Wal-Mart has been spoken for by Luke Saylor, as for Target, it's successful because it keeps an image of a slightly more upscale giant retail store. The wealthier suburbanites go to target, the less-wealthy suburbanites go to Wal-Mart. But that's just an observation.

    • @chrisbaier6252
      @chrisbaier6252 6 лет назад +31

      Interesting that all 3 started the same year. Kmart and Target were based in the North. Walmart in the south. Kmart was everywhere (I lived in the NE and the SE and always saw Kmart, and Kmart was king in my city for years, (the only Kmart in town -- the weeks before Christmas, 12 cashiers had 10-deep customer lines all day--believe me, I worked there) until a Walmart moved into town in the 1990s. One reason I heard is that Kmart failed to update/computerize it's distribution system. That gave Walmart an advantage. Target has always seemed nicer and cleaner to me. Even new Walmart stores seem dull and dingy. I wonder if Target has positioned itself as slightly nicer/more modern, and Walmart as 'the cheapest'. Would be interesting to see a video on the parallel growth tracks/expansion of all 3.

    • @bubba99009
      @bubba99009 6 лет назад +19

      Target vs Wal-Mart boils down to a class thing. People who want to avoid associating with the lower classes don't go to Wal-Mart because there's plenty of them there. Everybody with an EBT card shops at Wal-Mart. K-Mart served the same class of customers for a long time and Wal-Mart just beat them at the game. Those who want to avoid that shop at Target and pay the price for that in terms of higher prices. That is their niche. I still go to Wal-Mart because Target is a ripoff and doesn't have as much selection and I can deal with the clientele if it means saving a few bucks.

  • @someonesomething9282
    @someonesomething9282 5 лет назад +6

    I discovered this channel a week or so ago and I can't stop watching it! Jam-up channel dude, you deserve more subs

  • @ozzietadziu
    @ozzietadziu 4 года назад +2

    I grew up in Buffalo, NY during and after WW II. There were Woolworth stores in every neighborhood. Dozens of them. Most of them were fairly small but seemed to have a wide variety of items. Fabrics and notions, casual clothing, kitchen appliances and gadgets. I even bough a canary in the pet department.

  • @patrickcrosby3824
    @patrickcrosby3824 6 лет назад +8

    When I was in high school in the mid 1960s I frequently visited the main branch of the Chicago Public Library then on Michigan Ave. and Randolph (that building is now a "cultural center"). On the way home I caught the Subway at State and Randolph, 2 blocks from State and Madison, then known as the world's busiest corner. But close to the corner of State and Randolph, 2 blocks North, was a gigantic Woolworth's. If I remember correctly, the store had a "side entrance" on Lake Street, Lake being the next street north after Randolph. In other words, this store was not quite, but almost a full city block in size. The space wasn't half taken up with aisles, as might happen today, either. This place was packed. It had everything, including parakeets and canaries. Also bird cages and food for the birds. Main thing I went in there for? The chocolate frosted pound cake for 67 cents/pound. Yes, they had a bakery in the store too, and the stuff was baked on location. Better than anything one could buy in my own neighborhood (where bakeries were common). As I recall, 3 pounds was about all I could carry--- in I don't recall what. Didn't have back packs yet in those days. Paper shopping bags I suppose. But I already had school books and library books to carry and I was a skinny kid. This one Woolworths store would be worth researching if you could find anything on it. No idea what is at the location now. But I know f nothing like it, with as much stuff, today.

  • @JennieWrenStar
    @JennieWrenStar 6 лет назад +29

    Please, please make a similar video from the British Point of View, i.e.The Woolworths I grew up with at the end of the 60s & most of the 70’s. I grew up in a provincial coastal town, Woolworths was the place to go to for most things. Children spent their pocket money there, When you were very young it was exciting, bright and colourful. When decimalisation came in 1971 they had the prices in both old and new money! This was how exciting life was then. We had nothing except comics once you had read them, you had to wait a week for the next one.
    I remember it better from my teenage years. It was where you bought cards and gifts not just cheap stuff some of it (kept behind the counter or behind glass) was relatively expensive. Almost everything was under one roof, a stationers, a sweet shop, a toy shop, they even sold records, which were quite expensive then, I think as a family we had two classical LPs and 4 or 5 singles at home. All this was wonderful for a child and (depending upon whom you hung around with.) most teenagers were a lot more naive/innocent in those days.
    As soon as you were allowed to go into town on the bus by yourself, you would say "meet you outside Woolworths" especially in the cold winter months!. Though if you hovered too long without buying anything, you got 'chucked out' by the doorman who kept his beady eye on all 'unaccompanied minors'.
    It didn’t get called Woolies until the TV ads of the 80s. We always called it Woolworths.
    From the 1980s onwards we moved to a relatively big city. I can’t even remember where the Woolworths was here. As you say there was so much competition by department stores then, especially in the big cities. Occasionally I went back to visit family, we were so sad when 'our' Woolworths began it’s 'closing down sale'. The late 70s early 80s was a horrible time for provincial shops. It began the rise of the ubiquitous charity shops.

    • @johnwarburton5483
      @johnwarburton5483 6 лет назад +1

      I heard a rumor that Woolies was going to reopen in the UK ?

    • @sameyers2670
      @sameyers2670 6 лет назад

      I second this

    • @paulbroderick8438
      @paulbroderick8438 6 лет назад +1

      I remember the old Woolworths in Coventry many decades ago, 1950's to be exact. my school pals would often use their 'dinner money'
      to buy things from the store which carried just about every item to tempt school children back then. The comics I used to buy were Beano and Dandy. Greetings from a Brit residing in the USA.

    • @Cheesyonmytoasty
      @Cheesyonmytoasty 6 лет назад

      Couldn't of said it better. Seems like wilko have kinda the same feel

    • @martin2419
      @martin2419 6 лет назад

      going into town on the bus by yourself, seemed like quite a big deal at the time. as did filling your pockets with pick and mix then running away. my mum would have killed me...

  • @whalesong999
    @whalesong999 6 лет назад +13

    It is complicated. I sensed a kind of staleness in their stores as time went on and I think that feeling sort of dried up my will to go in them. I was taken to shop as a child in Woolworth's and it seemed like a paradise with the toys placed where I could see and select what I wanted. I also remember the creaking of the wooden slat floors in those entirely mid city buildings. I suppose these days, the dollar stores are the newest incarnation of a more unique sales approach but I sense there is a much more expanded field of suppliers and transport than there was even 20 years ago.

    • @UteraWoman
      @UteraWoman 6 лет назад +2

      Bigger stores with more selection. People had cars to drive to these stores. These stores were newer.

  • @Melissa0774
    @Melissa0774 4 года назад +6

    You should do a video on the old mall store, Natural Wonders, that went out of business, I think, about 20 years ago. It was a really popular gift store in malls all over the U.S. They sold all kinds of science related toys and gadgets. No mall visit was ever complete without a visit to that store. They had all their merchandise out on display and there were always tons of people in there playing with the stuff. The store always had such a cool atmosphere. It was almost like visiting a fun interactive science museum or something. I think there problem was that a lot of people liked to go to the store to look at the stuff and enjoy the atmosphere, but not enough people actually bought anything.

  • @PinkPoodleCrafts
    @PinkPoodleCrafts 6 лет назад +51

    I worked at one of the last remaining woolworths in red bank, nj back in 1995... its closed now obviously but i have amazing memories from my time there, the lunch counter and the people i worked with. It was one of the most fun jobs i ever had.

    • @RustyX2010
      @RustyX2010 5 лет назад

      Did Kevin Smith ever visit?