It started with my dream
I woke up from a dream a couple days ago and remembered very little of it. But in part of the dream I ended up in an old discount department store, Zayre, that was popular in my childhood. I haven’t thought of the store in many, many years so it’s strange it would appear in my dream. I’m not even sure that really was the store in my dream. But the sign on the store was like the old neon Zayre signs in the 60’s and 70’s. So maybe something about the sign on the store triggered my memory of the store’s existence. I couldn’t really remember when Zayre disappeared from the landscape of my life so I went searching online as one does. I found out all I wanted to know and more. (This is the first website I found. There are several photos of old Zayre stores in the middle of the page with signs as in my dream.)  I discovered heaps of websites dedicated to old chain stores, be they department stores or grocery stores. And on the blogrolls of some of the websites were links to other similarly nostalgic websites. I’ve found it quite fascinating taking this stroll into the past because I read about many other stores that I’d also just as easily forgotten.
For example, what I consdered the local Target where I grew up actually started out as a Richway. And I knew it as Richway far more years than as a Target so it’s kind of interesting that I didn’t think about the fact it had been Richway most of my growing up years. I’d even forgotten that Richway was a discount offshoot of Rich’s department store in Atlanta. And apparently that store has now been taken over by Macy’s if I remember what I read correctly. Then there is the Treasure Island department/grocery hypermarket where my family shopped when we lived in Georgia. I think I only ever went to the one store but I have fond memories of ice cream treats from the front of that store. I was fairly certain it had closed down at some point but I also learned that the original Home Depots were housed in old Treasure Island stores not far from the one where we shopped. That’s where I learned that Eckerd drugs no longer exists because apparently Treasury drugs, which was part of the Treasure Island/Treasury chain, either bought it out or vice versa. And CVS eventually bought out the entire conglomerate. This kind of clears up my curiosity that there only seemed to be two standalone drug store chains while I was in Texas. I have strong memories of the Eckerd’s chain through most of my life before moving to Australia. I still have a box of Christmas ornaments that my family bought there thirty-five years ago. It was a ncie set of ornaments although most have broken over the years.
There were many more tidbits of information I learned while trawling through various websites. I ran across one on dead malls which I had run across once before. On that previous  occasion I discovered that Carolina Circle Mall in Greensboro, NC had closed many years ago. It’s not so much I had any particular attachment to the mall but it was one of the shopping centers I used to visit during my college and early work years so it was truly weird to think it had gone. I eventually even found a link to a website dedicated to that old mall started by a teenager who is now probably about twenty years old.  I read about the old Eastland Mall in Charlotte, which was the local hangout during my teenage years. It closed just a few weeks ago after many years of decline. I must admit that left me feeling very sad since I spent a lot of time there during my teenage years. I was aware of the mall closing because of a fan page created for it on Facebook. Otherwise I might very well have learned of its demise from the dead malls website. And today I found a website dedicated to Charlotte (NC) eateries that are no longer around. That made me sad, too, because I recognised many of them. And I’d even eaten at some of them.
It’s made me rather sad for the loss of such a diverse range of retail outlets as once existed. I know change is a fact of life. But it really seems as though the limit has nearly been reached for the smaller and/or weaker fish being swallowed up by the big fish so I wonder what happens next in the overall picture.
3 Comments
Valerie
I remember Eckerd drugstores. They weren’t local to where I lived, but the were very common in Florida around where my grandmother lived, and they seemed pretty good, as drugstores go. Around here there was a chain that felt similar, called Perry Drugs, but that got swallowed up by Rite-Aid — a chain that always seems to go out of its way to make me feel like I’m nothing more than a “revenue source,” whose well-being they totally don’t care about. I really dislike that place and go out of my way to avoid shopping there.
We fill my family’s prescriptions at a tiny family-run drugstore — which sounds like a good thing, but honestly I don’t see a lot to recommend it over a chain. They combined with another family-owned drugstore a year or two ago, and ever since then they don’t remember our names. They’re not especially friendly or knowledgeable. Or speedy. So I’m not feeling entirely sure what the point of shopping there is. Well, I guess my money stays more local if I spend it there, and I’m told that’s a good thing. But mostly I just don’t see the point.
purple
It’s a shame your drugstore doesn’t seem to be making any effort to keep you as customers with all the big drugstores around.
I remember Rite-Aid having a location just off my college campus but I don’t think they were particularly common in our area. I think I did see mention of them while reading about Eckerd’s but I never saw one in Texas.
Marie
Oh, I was so sad when Eckerd’s was bought out. However, Rite-Aid does all right. Speaking of drugstores, I still have a few strings of Christmas lights that I bought at that same Rite-Aid in college.
The two favorite drugstores of my childhood have passed away completely. Small non-chain stores with candy, comic books and record singles in front, and a pharmacy, medical goods and even a lunch counter in back!
It makes me sad when certain stores with a lot of good history pass away or get bought out. I’m still annoyed that the local family-owned hardware store within walking distance did not have its lease renewed. That’s been almost ten years. I still feel disoriented to realize again that the fabric and notions brand PieceGoods was bought out (years ago). In my childhood, it was the store we went to for *every* sewing project ever. My mother sewed a lot. I think I still have some old bags and receipts knocking around in my sewing stash. I still experience that feeling of: Whhhyyy???!