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News & Updates

These are the latest blog updates. Click on the title to read the full article.

More regular updates can be found on the Bluesky/a> and the Message Board.

Updates

It’s been a really long and unpleasant month, one where I was flooded with work, both from school and from clients. It’s much calmer now, and I have lots of plans for the summer, including the completion of the Winston-Salem section, the completely rewritten Safeway history, and just maybe a transition to a new PHP-based version of the site (which probably means nothing to most of you).

Keep your eyes on this space.

And since several of you have asked, no, I have not heard anything else from the jerk who threatened to sue me for, well, I’m not really sure exactly what. And I say “good riddance.” I’m not sure where he is, but I am pretty sure he knows where he can go.

A&P, 1121 Linwood, Kansas City

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A&P, 1121 Linwood, Kansas City MO, 1940. Unknown source.

I can’t remember wher I came up with this photo several years ago, but I’ve always loved it. It’s a beautiful store, with its glass brick, its neon, and the structural entrance to the parking lot. It’s a building I’d hoped to seek out next time I was in Kansas City.

Yesterday, while editing some video of my 1997 trip to KC, the image below jumped out at me, and I was almost sure that it was this same store. You can see the brick pattern across the front, the glass brick in the tower, and even th residue from where they tore down the parking entrance. A little research using Google Maps and based on some surrounding structures that were also visible on the tape confirmed it.

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Former A&P, 1121 Linwood, Kansas City MO, 1997.

Unfortunately, the same Google Maps research also revealed that this store is no longer standing. In fact, it looks like rather large chunks of the surrounding neighborhood are gone, including the multistory building to the right of the A&P in the 1940 photo. Looks like the years have not been kind to that area, as it seems to be all vacant lots now. I really regret never having gotten a better look at that building.

Moron of the Month

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Justesen’s, Selma CA. Postcard view.

I’ve had people point out factual errors and omissions on this site before, usually in a good-natured effort to contribute to the research I share freely with the world as a hobby. Once in a great while, some of the corrections are a little snarky or a little demanding. I cope.

But I’ve never before had someone threaten litigation against me because they objected to a sentence I wrote about a chain that ceased to exist several decades ago. Until this weekend, that is. Yes, it’s true. Someone actually threatened to file suit against me because of a perceived slight to his family name in my feature on Fresno chain grocers. It would be funny if it weren’t such a sad commentary on our culture.

By way of background, I do much of the research for my Places sections using city directories, which are almost universally more accurate and comprehensive than telephone directories. Per these listings, one of the smaller regional chains that served Fresno during the 1940s through 1960s saw an absolute drop in its store count within Fresno between 1940 and 1951 (there was a slight increase in 1944), and I noted this by saying the chain had “remained fairly stable with some relocations, but relatively little growth in numbers of stores.”

A descendent of the chain’s founding family emailed me Saturday, insisting that I remove the phrase and informing me that his family not only started “the first grocery chain west of the Mississippi” but that they had also owned thirty stores from Reedley to Bakersfield. I’m extremely skeptical about the former claim, but I don’t dispute the latter. The fact remains, though, that city directories show this chain had one less Fresno store in 1951 than it did in 1940. The number of stores the chain may have had in Reedley (or anywhere other than Fresno) is irrelevant.

You’d think I had denounced the chains’ founders as scalawags and scoundrels rather than reporting some largely inconsequential, documented information.

The individual who emailed me did point out one factual error about a subsequent chain, also managed by his family, which I corrected. In the interest of clarity, I also edited the page to mention specifically that my store counts were culled from city directories. I would have done this even if he hadn’t resorted to the pathetic (and rather silly) tactic of threatening a frivolous lawsuit that any judge would have laughed out of the courtroom.

My point here is not to discuss the history of this particular chain, but to comment on what a sad and depressing commentary this is on our society. This website is a hobby for me. It’s what I do for fun. I don’t make any profit here; any revenue from the ads is used for hosting the site and for research.

The fact that someone would threaten me in such a manner saddens me and angers me. What the hell is wrong with people like this that makes them believe that their only recourse when something upsets them is to threaten frivolous litigation? What gives these folks the idea that people will only listen to them if they scream “lawsuit” loudly enough? I don’t need this sort of aggravation; this is supposed to be fun.

I really feel sorry for this guy. It’s sort of pitiful when you think about it.

Full text of the message I received:

From: djustesen@roadrunner.com
Subject: Groceteria: Lawsuit (Justesen’s)
Date: April 19, 2008 11:54:01 AM EDT

Hello,

You made this statement below on your website

Justesen’s and Black’s remained fairly stable with some relocations, but realtively little growth in numbers of stores.

This is my great grandfather, grandfather and my dad’s grocery chain (Justesen’s)

First of all, it is the first grocery chain west of the Mississippi pal!!!

Anton, Chris, Tony, Buddy were all presidents of the Grocery Association (then CGA.

We owned (my family), 30 grocery stores from Reedley California to Bakersrfield, CA>

If you are going to mention Joe Alberston and Tony Justesen in the same article.
You better do your research.

I insist you take the phrase downn about Justesen’s.

Consider this a ceast and desist order.

Oh and by the way, the president of Food Banks in California was Anton Justesen and his son was the president of the major Grocery Trucking Association ever.

Do your homework before you diss my family’s name out there.

If I do not hear from you within 10 days….

I will be forced to file suit.

But if you really are interested in the grocery business from a chain perspective, your whole 1940 statement is incorrect.

Think about it.and I quote from you:

However, Black’s would not last until the 1960s, nor would Justesen’s. The larger stores of each chain would eventually become part of a new chain, Food Bank, which made its first appearance in the early 1950s.

And my response:

In the interest of accuracy, I have clarified the statement you mentioned on the Fresno page of Groceteria.com to state that my comment on the number of Black’s and Justesen’s locations in Fresno is based on listings in the Fresno city directories of the period, which show the following numbers:

Number of Justesen’s stores in Fresno in 1940: 5
Number of Justesen’s stores in Fresno in 1951: 4
Number of Black’s stores in Fresno in 1940: 6
Number of Black’s stores in Fresno in 1951: 4

In addition, I have noted that the Food Bank chain was also connected with the Justesen family.

You may view the revised page here:

<http://groceteria.com/fresno/>

Thank you for pointing out the error about Food Bank and the need for clarification on the earlier point. I appreciate notification of any factual errors or omissions for which you can offer documented proof.

I maintain this website as a means of sharing my hobby with the world. It is free, I do not make a profit from it, and I do not charge people for enjoying and using my work, which I complete with my own limited funds for my own amusement. I offer the site freely, with no warranties expressed nor implied. I am not a professional. Most of my readers appreciate the site, take it for what it is worth, and contribute as they can.

I assure you that I meant no disrespect to your family. I’m sure that they were very good and hardworking men who deserve my respect, and they have it. Men from that era were members of a generation that fought its battles honorably, rather than by threatening to sue anyone who managed to upset them.

Again, this is my hobby. It is not my career. I have made these clarifications on the site in the interest of historical accuracy. I would have done so even if you had not resorted to the reprehensible tactic of threatening frivolous litigation that you most certainly realize lacks both basis and merit. It’s a sad and depressing commentary on our society that so many people believe others will only listen to them if they scream “lawsuit” loudly enough. Thanks for helping to further undermine my already shaky faith in the concept of human decency.

I do not appreciate your threats, and I frankly don’t ever want to hear from you again. I’m sure the feeling is probably mutual, so I hope that we can consider this matter settled and therefore can avoid any further contact.

David Gwynn
Groceteria.com

Harris Teeter Ads, 1968

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So is that vaguely phallic or what?

The ad is from 1968, again courtesy Pat Richardson (whose site you really should visit). These are actually fairly sophisticated image ads for a smallish regional chain in late 1960s North Carolina, although some might question the “Chinese lady” image of the second ad.

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I’ve been incredibly busy with school and work the past few weeks, so the updates have been slow. But it seems I won’t be taking any classes this summer, so that should be good news for the site, if not for my anticipated graduation date.

Dominick’s, 3333 Central, Evanston IL

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Dominick’s, 3333 Central Street, Evanston IL. From Progressive Grocer’s Outstanding New Super Markets, 1969.

This groovy Dominick’s (just look at that streetlight) was featured as one of Progressive Grocer’s best new supermarkets of 1969 in a great book I found at the UNC library last week. I’ll be adding lots more stuff from this book (as well as interior photos from this store) soon. For those who care about such things, this location is now a CVS Pharmacy, and Google’s Street View gives a pretty good current photo from almost the same angle, with a little manipulation:

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The book also features interiors and exteriors from the Century City Mayfair Market in Los Angeles, the Glendale CA Crawford’s Market, a Loray store in San Leandro CA, a Fazio’s in Ohio, a Straub’s in St. Louis, and a Lund’s in Minnesota, among others. More to come.

I also came across Shopping at Giant Foods: Chinese American Supermarkets in Northern California, which gives a great history of chains in the Sacramento and Stockton areas, including Farmers, Centromart, Jumbo, and more. I’ll be adding some of that information to the appropriate sections soon as well.

Winn-Dixie, Amity Gardens, Charlotte NC

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Winn-Dixie, 3830 East Independence Boulevard, Charlotte. Photo courtesy Pat Richardson.

The Winn-Dixie at Charlotte‘s Amity Gardens Shopping Center opened in November of 1958, right in the middle of the most thriving retail strip in the city. The center also included Woolworth’s and a Barclay Cafeteria. By 1961, it also included Charlotte’s first (and only) branch of Clark’s, an early “supercenter” with both general merchandise and groceries.

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Amity Gardens Shopping Center, 2007.

By the 1980s, the center was already in significant decline, and the conversion of Independence Boulevard into a freeway sealed the fate not only of Amity Gardens, but of the entire retail strip from downtown to Albemarle Road. The old center is still standing today, more or less completely abandoned. Plans to demolish it and construct a Wal-Mart Supercenter are on hold. The years have not been kind to this once booming area.

More:

Winston-Salem Posted

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Former A&P, 1530 West First Street, Winston-Salem NC.

As a very odd means of celebrating my fourth wedding anniversary, I’m finally posting the first pages of my new Winston-Salem section. This one’s important, because it’s where I live now. When it’s done — within the next week, if all goes well — it will also mark the completion of the Triad Trilogy that also features my hometown of Greensboro and nearby High Point.

Enjoy. More soon.

And yes, I know how redundant “Triad Trilogy” sounds, thanks.