Welcome to thunderbirdnest.com! TBN is the web's best site for enthusiasts of 2002, 2003, 2004
and 2005 Ford Thunderbirds (retrobirds). Discussion forums, technical forums, production
data, photos, modifications, performance enhancements, accessories and more.
Much of the content on TBN can only be accessed by registered
users who are logged in. You must also be logged in to post. There is no cost to join; it's
all free! If you don't have an account
register for one and
join the Retro T-Bird fun today!
Kresge, McCrory's, Ben Franklin's, Woolworth, G.C. Murphy - used to be a bunch of 'em. Great places to shop and eat. A great place to change history, too. Smithsonian has part of the Woolworth's lunch counter that help usher in civil rights. Alll we have now are dollar stores. Not much to say there.
1962 was the year that the 5 and dime stores started a transition to big-box discount department stores. All in the same year:
Woolworth's opened Woolco
S.S. Kresge opened Kmart
Dayton's opened Target
Walton's opened Wal-Mart
When sales declined and they started closing stores, Woolworth's diversified into small mall specialty stores. The company still exists today as the Foot Locker Corporation and operate Foot Locker and Champs Sports stores.
There are still Woolworth's stores operating in Mexico that were bought out from the company by a Mexican investment group. Yes they have a lunch counter. No the food is not the same.
In California where I grew up we had Woolworth and Ben Franklins. I remember doing a lot of Christmas shopping at those two stores. My mother loved the Ben Hur perfume and that is what we bought for her. Oh my....did it smell, but Mom liked it.
Looking for a customized embroidery item for that someone special? Contact me for more information.
We had a Woolworth's in downtown Glendale when I was a boy...had an upstairs to it, too. Glendale also had a Sprouse Reitz 5 & 10 store. Used to walk downtown during the summer and wander the aisles of the Woolworth's. Miss that simplicity
We had Woolworth, Neisner's, SS Kresge and Ben Franklin stores. All "five & dime" stores. The Neisner's store in nearby Wyandotte, MI had the wooden floors that sloped and when they used the sweeping compound they smelled so unique and good. It also had a beauty shop on the mezzanine level and I had many a haircut there. Unfortunately the building burned, but that was long after the "dime store" went out of business.
In downtown Detroit, my Mom would take me shopping at SS Kresge and the real treat was eating lunch at the lunch counter and getting a 5 cent Coca Cola! Oh those were the days!
My Dad was a manager at McCrory's and W.T. Grants. I worked at W.T. Grants, too.
He owned company stock and had a pension with Grants.
He lost everything when his pension was raided during the bankrupcy by lawyers from creditors. Afterwards, the Feds passed a bill protecting pensions from those evil thieves.
Not times when they were going under; he never did recover what was lost.
Grandma would drive the Hudson Hornet with me, my brother and sister to the "five and dime" at Woolworths in Eastover Shopping Center on the Maryland / D.C. line during special occasions (Easter and Christmas). It had to be special, it took over 2 hours to get there. I remember the seasonal decorations, the lunch counter and helping load the car "without peeking" in the packages and bags.
Yes, I remember the Woolworth and Kresge stores well. The lunch counters were always staffed by 'Old Ladies' in uniforms, but that impression was probably 'age related' at the time.
Anyone remember one of the first in the Big Box stores TOWERS, with the slogan 'Your Fashion Center'
In West New York, NJ, we called them "five and tens".
As a little kid, I remember seeing a black and white TV with a tinted screen in front of it, and a claim of "first colored TV".
The store was on Bergenline Ave, and a trolley ran right outside.
At the intersection of two trolley lines further north, a small park was built.
That park grew to become the famous "Palisades Amusement Park".
2010 Explorer Limited Edition, tri color white, camel interior
2003 TBird black/saddle
1964 Ford Galaxie 500XL conv't turq/black
2004 Lincoln LS 8 Sport light tundra metallic/medium stone
In California where I grew up we had Woolworth and Ben Franklins. I remember doing a lot of Christmas shopping at those two stores. My mother loved the Ben Hur perfume and that is what we bought for her. Oh my....did it smell, but Mom liked it.
In New York we referred to all of them as the five and tens. Never got a
whiff of the Ben Hur perfume. I don't know how many of you remember oil
cloth but when you walked by that department an odor you will never forget.
This is so nostalgic. The Baltimore neighborhood I grew up in, as well as the downtown business district, had Woolworth, S.S. Kresege and GC Murphy stores. Barb worked in a Murphy's as a teenager. The lunch counters served vanilla phosphates, which they actually mixed using soda water and vanilla flavoring. Kind of the foreunner of creme/cream soda. Then there were real cherry cokes too: coca-cola syrup fountain mixed with cherry flavoring and soda water. And grilled cheese sandwiches and BLTs too. What memories. What do you think the kids of today will remember 40-50 years from now? McD's in Wal-Mart and cheap cookies in the Dollar Store? Maybe mall food (which isn't all bad). There is a Friendly's in our mall, so maybe that is as close as today's kids will get to what we remember.
sigpic
Skip
2002 Ford Thunderbird Premium, Torch Red with Full Accent Red Interior
2013 Ford Escape SEL (Ecoboost), Frosted Glass
2018 Ford F150 XLT Sport, Ruby Red Metallic
Comment