Department stores and our childhoods

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

Help Support :

Woolco...lol was my 2nd employer when I was a sweet 16. Not sure which was worse..them or Kmart, but I do remember that awful smell that hit you everytime you ventured into the front doors of either, popcorn mixed with ointment and lingerie.
 
Balkanized shopping in San Diego

San Diego during my childhood (late 50s/60s) was moving from the old downtown-based merchandising system to the mall system. The stores that sold the nicest clothing (e.g. Marston's) were downtown. As a very small child I remember going there with my mother, if not in Sunday best then in very nice clothes, and there was a tearoom on the top (sixth?) floor. I loved to ride escalators and this store had LOTS of escalators. Marston's however did not sell appliances, only clothing.

The Sears in San Diego was an early postwar building near the Hillcrest neighborhood. It was a free standing store, not a mall. Parking was so-so because when it was designed, many families did not own cars. People who owned Kenmores presumably bought them here, but since there were closer (and more convenient) sources for clothes, we rarely visited.

San Diego's first mall opened in 1962: Mission Valley Shopping Center. There was a May Co (no appliances) and Montgomery Ward (did have appliances), but we rarely went into Wards because there were better deals on more fashionable clothing at May Co. My parents would buy appliances from local appliance-only stores, not dept stores, so I rarely had the chance to spend time monkeying around in the appliance section (the TV section was where that happened). My parents had a matching pair of GE Filter Flo's---since they moved into their first house in 1958, I'm guessing they were 1958 models (and the 1958 washer depicted on this site matches my recollection of that washer perfectly).


I know that the washer was working when they moved from that house in 1971, but after that my appliance memory gets a little hazy and I don't know when or where the washer finally gave up the ghost. I had learned to do basic laundering as a teenager, and I remember my confusion the first time I had to wash a load of clothing on a different machine---I thought ALL washing machines had those wide white buttons (cycle selection) in front!!
 
Wow...TSS...on Linden Boulevard, ENY.....

That was my favorite, because that's where most of my toys came from....and yes, the PRETZELS!

Greasy grilled cheese, and hot dogs from Nedick's!!

Korvettes had the cheapest 45s and 8tracks...second always to Two Guys in NJ in price and selection.

A&S on Fulton Street had a subway station-in the basement!-and the most happening accordion elevator doors (still there, though store is now Macy's.....

Remember Key Food, A&P WEO "Where Economy Originates!, lol" on Flatbush, Trunz's by Avenue D, Scaturro's on Knickerbocker, and Bohack on Bedford and Clarkson, where the little old ladies ripped off steaks and tossed 'em into their false-bottomed shopping carts!

I remember B. Altman's on 34th Street for understated elegance, Gertz in Jamaica and Alexander's on Fordham Road for pandemonium, and whatever store anchored the Douglaston mall, for my first taste of Brady Bunch-style culture.

Thanks for the memories!!
 

Latest posts

Back
Top