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Breakfast of champions “In the early 1940s, while in high school, I was a cashier at the Atlas Supermarket in Indianapolis, Indiana,” says...

This Is What Food Shopping Has Looked Like Over the Past 100 Years

Woman at the Atlas Supermarket beside a sign

Breakfast of champions

“In the early 1940s, while in high school, I was a cashier at the Atlas Supermarket in Indianapolis, Indiana,” says Rosie Minatel Eagen (left) of Beech Grove, Indiana, “It was during World War II when lots of items were rationed, but not Wheaties. The woman in the center is Mr. Max Atlas, wife of the owner. The other girl is another cashier.” Speaking of rationing, here are 35 thrifty recipes grandma made during WWII

Child posing for photo with tower of Folger's Coffee

Coffee model

Mary Atha, of Battle Lake, Minnesota, was asked by a Folger’s Coffee salesman to pose with his display in a grocery store in Chariton, Iowa, in 1939. “The coffee was quite a bargain at two pounds for 57 cents. The store was a small neighborhood grocery with a meat counter at the back. I remember my folks ran up a monthly tab, as most people did back then.” Things have changed since then since today you don’t even have to leave home to rack up your grocery bill. Reclaim your pocketbook with these 11 ways to save on groceries.

National Tea Co. store in Chicago in the 1930s

Times have changed

This photo, shared by Alvira Nelson of Frankfort, Illinois, shows a National Tea Co. store in Chicago in the 1930s. Compare it to a modern grocery store where one aisle probably equals the entire inventory of a 1930s store. Take a look at these 56 vintage recipes from the 1930s you should try today.

Employees lined up in front of Kroger store in Holland, Michigan

Saving for school

“I earned 35 cents an hour when I worked at this Kroger store in Holland, Michigan,” says John Schuiling of Grand Haven, Michigan. “This put me through Hope College, where I graduated in 1931. I’m second from the left in the 1930 photograph. I worked from 4 to 6:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and 14 hours on Saturdays. I also worked each lunch hour during high school and college so the manager could run errands.” Although grocery shopping has changed, these are still the 13 things you should always buy from Kroger.

A&P stores in 1963

Stick-to-your-ribs prices

“That’s me (in the light-colored jacket) being congratulated upon winning a divisional contest within the A&P stores in 1963,” writes Peter Ferrara of Toms River, New Jersey. “My wife and I had dinner in New York, a night at the Waldorf-Astoria and an 8-day trip to Bermuda. If you look at the window signs, you’ll see some good 1963 meat prices.” Wow! Here are some tricks to making inexpensive cuts of meat taste expensive.

Employees posing for picture in a Woolworth's store in Chicago

First job

“When I was 16, back in 1942, I got my first job—as a cashier at Woolworth’s store in Chicago,” says Eleanor Soukup Bara of Palos Hills, Illinois. “In the picture, I’m in the back row behind the manager’s left shoulder.” These 10 celebrities all had their first job at this restaurant.

Rosedale Fenkell Market

Starting over

“Borrowing $700 from her father around 1936, after going through a divorce, my mother opened a grocery store in the Rosedale Park neighborhood of Detroit, Michigan. It was called the Rosedale Fenkell Market. That’s mom, above left, with her sister Olga Brunette. Mom got help from Olga, along with my younger brother, Nicky, and me, ages 10 and 12. With the four of us working, we built up the business and the store did well in the affluent area,” says Anne Stanbrook of San Clement, California. Their grocery store is not equal to a supermarket, because there is a difference between the two.

Priscilla, in 1947, sprinkling water on fruits and vegetables at a busy produce stand

Fresh is best

“That’s my future wife, Priscilla, in 1947, sprinkling water on fruits and vegetables at a busy produce stand she’s tending with a young co-worker in York, Pennsylvania,” says Harold Martin of Lititz, Pennsylvania. “Prices like those aren’t often seen today!” Costco is one store with good prices. Here’s what it looked like when it first opened.

Magazine ad about extreme couponer Ann Cox Williams

Coupon queen

“In the mid-1940s, Ann Cox Williams was the original extreme couponer. Through savvy shopping and adherence to a budget, the Atlanta housewife saved money and earned 15 minutes of fame in the process. After an Atlanta newspaper published a story about her, Life magazine ran a feature on Ann’s uncanny budgeting prowess in November 1947. She fed a family of four, plus a cat, on a mere $12.50 a week,” recalls her daughter Kappy Bowers of Lithonia, Georgia. It won’t be $12.50, but these are the best-value deals that you can get at Costco.

Baby in a giant box of Pep cereal in 1924

One peppy baby

Marcia Diez of Crystal River, Florida, was just a toddler when she climbed into this giant box of Pep cereal in 1924. Her father was a salesman who set up product displays in stores. Since you can’t grab a box of Pep anymore, try these healthy breakfast recipes instead.

Man standing outside a Sunnyside Farm Products in Affton

Pick a peck

“I was 15 when I got my first job in 1954 working at Sunnyside Farm Products in Affton, Missouri, near St. Louis. The farm stand’s owner, Ray Knierim, employed teenage clerks and paid them 50 cents an hour. We worked so many hours, I sometimes made as much as my mom, who worked at the local bank,” says Jim Eydmann of Granite City, Illinois.

Arrowsmith, Illinois, grocery

Step into the past

It’s 1950, and the Hastings are ready to serve you at their Arrowsmith, Illinois, grocery. “We sold everything,” writes former employee Dorothy Wagner. “Clothes, nails, meat, you name it.” These 18 rare vintage photos will transport you back to what life was like in the 1950s.

Purity Market, the first self-serve meat market in Fort Bragg, California

Self-service

“In 1955, I got hired to wrap meat at Purity Market, the first self-serve meat market in Fort Bragg, California (that’s me, second from left). The manager hired the first three girls who showed up for an interview—and I was the first one in line,” says Doloris Wilbur of Orting, Washington. This is what McDonald’s looked like when it first opened in 1955.

Gladys and Charles E. Rhodes, owned this grocery store on Watts Hill in Charleston, West Virginia, in the mid-1930s

Chevy delivery

“My parents, Gladys and Charles E. Rhodes, owned this grocery store on Watts Hill in Charleston, West Virginia, in the mid-1930s. People would call in orders and a crew would deliver them in Chevy panel trucks,” says Charles Rhodes of Placerville, California. Now, there are plenty of cheap ways to order groceries online without leaving your home.

Black and white photo of a grocery truck

Door-to-door service

“For years, the grocery truck belonging to my father, Lawrence Kremer, was a welcome weekly visitor to area farms in northeast Ohio. Farmers could sell their eggs and poultry and buy needed goods, all without having to leave home,” says Tom Kremer of Fort Recovery, Ohio.

Woman working in a grocery store in Detroit

Home and work

Selma McClellan, of Lowell, Michigan, shared this photo of her mother working in a grocery store in Detroit. They lived in a room behind the store that rented for $15 a month in the 1930s. Selma says the six years that her family lived in the store were the happiest times of her life. That’s a neat deal on rent! Today, food shoppers still fall for some of the same supermarket tricks that aren’t deals.

The post This Is What Food Shopping Has Looked Like Over the Past 100 Years appeared first on Taste of Home.



Reminisce Magazine Editors