View the catalog. - Friends of Historic Kingston

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View the catalog. - Friends of Historic Kingston
MOM & POP STORES
In Kingston, NY
A Retrospective
Friends of Historic Kingston
Introduction
MOM AND POP STORES: KINGSTON, NEW YORK
By Edwin M. Ford
Friends of Historic Kingston
When my family and friends reminisce about our younger years, the conversation inevitably turns to
“Mom and Pop” stores. They are part of everyone’s experience because no matter where you lived, there
was at least one in the neighborhood within walking distance of your home.My brothers and I used to walk
from Delta Place to Howe’s at 47 Linderman Avenue to pick up milk, bread and canned goods for my
mother.
The “Mom and Pop” store was usually one room located in a house, enclosed porch, garage or annex,
and the family lived upstairs. Some of the stores carried a variety of groceries, including meat, while others sold just ice cream, candy and baked goods. Trying to recall exactly where these stores were and who
operated them led me to begin researching “Mom and Pop” stores in Kingston. Since many “Mom and Pop”
stores sprang up during the Depression, I used 1931 as a starting date and began to compile information
found in the “streets section” of the Kingston City Directories. On a series of 3” x 5” index cards organized
by neighborhoods, I recorded each business and its various owners until the store finally closed its doors.
I was able to obtain images from decades-old MLS real estate listings and from photographs taken of
stores in Rondout before they were demolished during the urban renewal project in the late 1960s. When
images were not available, I took slides of many buildings myself. This research inspired the Friends of
Historic Kingston to present a full-scale exhibit, “Kingston’s Mom and Pop Stores,” in the museum gallery
for the 2007 season. The exhibit is highlighted by a collection of photographs taken by Santino Rovereto
in the 1980’s of “Mom and Pop” stores in Kingston. Our thanks to Ray Caddy for his graphic design and
production and to Pat Murphy for her text. Their invaluable skills in presenting this information made this
retrospective possible. We invite visitors to the exhibit to share their own memories of “Mom and Pop”
stores in Kingston by writing them down for future generations.
May, 2007
The Mom and Pop Store
Kingston, New York
Before the world became a global village in the late twentieth century, the American city was a tapestry
stitched together by neighborhoods whose “center of gravity” was the “Mom and Pop” store. Within these
interior versions of the village green, news of births, weddings, sicknesses and deaths in the neighborhood
was exchanged along with money.
Most were no bigger than today’s two-car garage, but they held at least one of everything found in supersize markets today. Floor-to-ceiling shelves and bins held everything you needed to make a complete meal,
clean the house, quench your thirst, and cure a headache, indigestion or a “sweet tooth.” Usually near the
neighborhood school, “Mom and Pop” stores were swarmed every afternoon with kids picking out penny
candies from a large glass case, buying bubble gum with baseball cards inside the pack, or digging in the
freezer for a Dixie cup with a movie star’s photo on the lid.
They were also home for Mom and Pop who lived in back or above, and worked seven days a week,
helped sometimes by their older children. Often only a curtain separated customers from Mom and Pop’s
living quarters so that the scent of pasta fagiole, pirougues or beef brisket simmering on the stove filtered
from the kitchen into the storefront, along with the foreign sounds of Italian, Polish, German or Yiddish.
Though “Mom and Pop” stores carried much the same merchandise, they were very different from one another, each imprinted with the distinct stamp of Mom and Pop’s personality.
As neighborhoods and their boundary lines dissolved into urban sprawl, “Mom and Pop” stores began
to disappear from the landscape. In their place sprouted “convenience stores,” one-stop shopping minus a
human face. The “Mom and Pop” store is symbolic of a time when you didn’t need a car to shop because
nearly everything you needed was just a short walk away. Customers had names, not just credit card numbers, and it was even safe to send a six-year-old down the street to buy a bag of sugar.
The Friends of Historic Kingston present this exhibit as a tribute to an American institution that once anchored every neighborhood and will forever occupy a place in the memories we cherish from childhood.
Patricia Murphy
Friends of Historic Kingston
ON PHOTOGRAPHING MOM AND POP STORES
By Santino Rovereto
My intent in photographing these “Mom and Pop” stores was to document a vanishing piece of local
history for future generations of Kingstonians that would not otherwise have the opportunity to experience
this unique social and economic aspect of Americana.
These “Mom and Pops” derived their name from the fact that most of them were owned and operated by
husband and wife, or Mom and Pop as they were affectionately called. Mom and Pop usually lived over or
next to their store and were an intricate part of the neighborhood’s character. These stores stocked an
amazing variety of food and non-food items. They supplied the neighborhood with everything, including:
groceries, unique delicatessen specialties, toys, clothing and quite often also carried tools and hardware.
Almost every neighborhood in Kingston had one and each was unique in its own way, and yet they were all
similar in one respect…..they were usually run by Mom and Pop.
I am pleased to join with Friends of Historic Kingston in presenting this retrospective. The large format,
black and white images I have included in the show were taken 1981-1983 as a tribute to these great stores.
Santino Rovereto
Photographer
NICKEL AND DIMING
A Memory by Patricia Murphy
On a day when I had a nickel or dime in my pocket, at three o’clock, I rushed down the steps of St.
Mary’s School, across Broadway and up the steps to Flickie’s.
His proper name was Mr. Flick, but I didn’t know that until I was an adult. All the children who piled
into his store after school just called him “Flickie.” In my memory, he looked a lot like Santa Claus – whitehaired with metal-rimmed glasses behind which were a pair of twinkling eyes.
A marble-topped soda fountain stretched down the right side of the store, but I rarely saw Flickie make an
ice cream soda or sundae because both were beyond the budget of most of his after-school customers.
On the left side stood a large glass case filled with candies, each kind mounded in pyramids on plates
lined with white lace doilies. There were malted milk balls, pastel-colored peppermints, long-stemmed black
licorice pipes, stringy red licorice laces, jellied semi-circles that looked like sugar-coated lemon, lime and
orange slices, gum drops in stained glass colors, nonpareils, and a selection of chocolate candies with cream,
jelly or coconut fillings. Two popular though not particularly tasty items were false wax teeth with lips and
small wax bottles that you bit the top off to swill the half-ounce of sweet colored liquid inside.
Most candies cost a penny. It would take a long time to spend a nickel. because you wanted five different
kinds. Even though the store was packed with children, each waiting his or her turn, Flickie waited
patiently until you pointed and said, “I’ll take one of those.” He lifted each candy from the case, handling it
as though it were a jewel as he lowered it into a small brown paper bag just the right size for a child’s hand
to hold. He pressed a key down on the big brass cash register and a bell clanged as a five cent sign popped
up in the window. The transaction concluded, Flickie said, “Thank you.”
Flickie’s store no longer stands on the corner of Newkirk Avenue and Broadway. It was demolished in
the late 1960s when urban renewal mowed down every building on the east side of Rondout from one block
north of Flickie’s down the length of Broadway to the waterfront. Weeds have taken over the site.
The demise of Flickie’s meant more than the loss of a building. Concurrent with its disappearance from
the landscape came a demise in civility and pride in service. Today when I stand at a store counter facing a
clerk who tosses a sales slip at me while she chats with the clerk at the next counter, the man who reminded
me of Santa pops into my mind and I whisper to myself, “Thank you, Flickie.”
Park Grocery
496 Albany Avenue
1930
1943
1945
1948
1950
1952
1954
1956
Mrs. Herman B.Young
Vacant
Harry Offinger
Georgianna Sutherland, Deli
Harry Tempelaar, Deli
Harry Tempelaar, Grocer
Vacant
Park Grocery, Peter J. Lemister
Lipton’s Grocery
549 Albany Avenue
1941 Sidney Laurie, Grocer
1945 Julius Lipton, Grocer
1958 Langer Pharmacy,
Robert Langer
1971 Mountain Aquarium
& Pretty Pet Parlor,
Charles Golnek Jr.
1974 Mountain Aquarium,
Lawrence & Marilyn Lutackas
B&F Super Market
32 Broadway
1937 The B&F Super Market,
Milton Friedman and
Benjamin Bronstein
1961
B&F Market,
James B. Roberts
1968
Demolished
Ellenbogen Confectionery
64 Broadway
1943 Louis M. Ellenbogen
1966 Urban Renewal Relocation
1969 Vacant
1977 Demolished
Cappy’s Market
96 Broadway
1948
1956
1966
1977
Casper Zelickman
Alice Zelickman
Vacant
Demolished
Maroon’s Confectionery
100 Broadway
1943 Maroon’s Confectionery,
Zachariah J. Maroon
1952 Maroon’s Confectionery,
Milady Maroon
1966 Vacant
Pop Corn Shop
108 Broadway
1938 Pop Corn Shop, Confectionery
Alice Bergman
1945 Pop Corn Shop
Herbert Ogden
1948 Pop Corn Shop
Carlo Amorosi
1956 Pop Corn Shop
Mrs. Uliana Amorosi
1966 Vacant-Demolished
Carputo’s Grocery
136 Broadway
1943 Mrs. Amelia Cioni, Grocery
1954 Mrs. Angelina M. Carputo
1967 Demolished
Van Bramers Market
190 Broadway
1939 John C. Flick, Confectionery
1950 Van’s Ice Cream Parlor,
Eugene F. Van Steenburg
1954 Michael Kalousdian, Grocer
1958 John Klarick
1960 Vacant
1963 Harold S. Van Bramer, Market
1967 Vacant
1970 Demolished
Abel’s Market
350 Broadway
1930
1939
1941
1945
1964
1974
The Great A&P Tea Company
Vacant
Jump’s Market, Harry Jump
Mehm’s Market, Frank Mehm
Abel’s Market, Ida Schleede
Abel’s Market, John Schleede
Wenzel’s
354 Broadway
1931 Wenzel’s Confectionary
William “Bill” Wenzel
1952 Wenzel’s Deli
1952 Wenzel’s Deli, Mrs Mary Dugan
1969 Wenzel’s Deli, Lawrence Dugan
1974 Siking Imports, Patricia Ma
1985 Heritage Liqours
Ambrose Luncheonette
364 Broadway
1931 Frank J. Ambrosio, Confectioner
1934 Ambrose Brothers,
Frank J., Constantine,
Michael, Joseph F.,
Salvatore & Emilio
1968 Ambrose Brothers
Constantine, Michael,
Salvatore and Emilio
1978 For Sale
Fred Scholl’ s Meats
374 Broadway
1939 Fred Scholl’s Meats
1954 Anna Scholl, Meats
1963 Vacant
1966 Demolished
Terminal Deli
442 Broadway
1916 Burton A. Turck, Conf.-Builder
1939 Ice Cream & Luncheonette
1943 Vacant
1948 Department of Commerce
1950 Terminal Deli, Karl Glotzl
1956 The Hosiery Shoppe,
Albert and Lea F. Katz
1960 Joe’s Giant Submarine Sandwich,
Shop, Dibella and Erlandson
1961 Beauty Box, Louise D’Keefe
1966 Le Coiffures Unl. Ronald Secreto
1970 Gi Gi Beauty Salon, L. Provenzano
1971 Vacant
1974 Carlo’s Pizzeria, C. Panzera
Messinger’s Market
458 Broadway
1930 Samuel J. Messinger, Meat
1936 Mary J. Messinger, Widow
1945 Messinger’s Market,
AlfredG. Messinger
1956 Terminal Deli, Karl Glotz
1971 Karl’s Deli, Karl Glotz
1974 Vacant
1977 Terminal Deli
Grunenwald’s Bakery
474 Broadway
1931 Gustave W. Teichler, Baker
1938 William Grunenwald
1950 Central Bakery, Wm. Grunenwald
1974 The Palace,
Joseph W. Rapp& Thomas Jamison
1977 Vacant
1985 Joe’s Luncheonette
D. Samuels & Sons
581/583 Broadway
1906 Business Established
1925 David Samuels, Produce
1952 D. Samuels & Sons
Sidney G. Samuels &
Eugene Tepper
1960 Vacant
1961 Van Tassel Wallpaper
& Paints
Charles W. Van Tassel
Beck’s Market
662 Broadway
1921 Brown’s Tire Company,
Harris Brown
1935 Brown’s Tire Company
1938 Beck’s Market,
Harry Beck, Meats
1969 Vacant– Retired
Hub Delicatessen
728 Broadway
1930 Hub Delicatessen, David Gruberg
1952 Hub Delicatessen, Martin “Bob” Gruberg
1981 Hub Delicatessen, Martin “Bob” Gruberg
Wagner & Besemer Deli
734 Broadway
1925 Louis Gunzelmann, Deli
1931 Asaph Wagner, Deli
1934 Wagner & Besemer Deli
1958 Wagner’s Deli, Richard Wagner
1963 Wagner’s Deli, Fred Warnitz
1974 Vacant
1977 Roberts Dance Studio,
William Keehan
1985 J&B Dance Center
Peterman’s Bakery
51 Cedar Street
1939 Peterman’s Bakery,
Samuel D. Peterman
1963 Tiano Deli,
James L. Tiano
1968 Kingston Circle Cab,
Paul D. Stauble
1974 Fatum’s Ambulance Service,
Wilbur B. Matthews
1977 Vacant
Grand Union Grocery
109 Cedar Street
1896 Joseph J. Albrecht, Grocer
1917 Jacob J. Myers
1921 Jacob J. Myers , Meats
1921 Charles J. Hotaling, Grocer
1925 John A. Boyce, Meats
1931 Grand Union Grocery Store
1938 Floyd S. Weeks
1941 Vacant
Myer’s Grocery
31 Clifton Avenue
1916 Mrs. Evelyn Myers, Grocer
1921 John F. Finn
1931 John F. Baker
1932 John D. Halstein
1934 Vacant
1950 Mrs. Margaret Campbell
1952 Ernest J. Amarello
1970 Vacant
Forst Market
178 Clifton Avenue
1924 Elbert D. Schoonmaker
1927 Samuel Bonanno
1931 Herbert Warkup
1936 Vacant
1941 Mrs. Anne M. Thibauth
1943 Vacant
1945 Lawrence Mullen
1950 Marion Mullen
1958 Wilhelm Bock
1964 Kurt Forst
1979 Forst Neighborhood Market
Zaccheo’s Grocery
25 Clinton Avenue
1911 Washington Rosa ,Grocer
1921 Borst Brothers
1931 Thomas DeFeo
1932 Philip Zaccheo
1961 Mrs. Marie R. Zaccheo
1963 C&R Grocery Store,
Charles E. Miller
1967 Vacant
1968 Provenzano Floor Covering,
John J. Provenzano
1972 Vacant
1979 Home Entertainment &
Audio Designs, Edward C. Kindl
Neighborhood Market
502 Delaware Avenue
1916 Anthony J. Gallagher, Grocer
1938 Vacant
1941 George Schmid
1945 Vacant
1946 Thaddeus Musialkiewicz,
Neighborhood Market
1950 Mayone’s Market, Frank Mayone
1956 Vacant
1958 Thomas E. Welch
1963 Vacant
Angelo L. Clausi, Grocer
484 Delaware Avenue
1931 Angelo L. Clausi, Grocer
1941 Frederick J. Walter
1943 Vacant
1948 Delaware Avenue Market ,
Frank Morello
1950 Vacant
1956 Mayone’s Market ,
Frank J. Mayone
1977-1980 Frank’s Market
J’s Deli
595 Delaware Avenue
1931 William Dundom
1934 Cornelius Dundom, Barber
1936 Frances C. Dundom, Grocer
1945 Vacant
1948 Palmer Broadhead, Grocer
1950 Edward T. Carson
1958 Harris’Market, Sol Harris
1967 Smith’s Market, Chas. Smith
1979 J’s Deli, John Smith
Carl’s Fish Market
7 Down’s Street
1950 Christopher M. Rienzo
1956 Carl’s Fish Market,
Carl L. Rohde
1970 Carl’s Fish Market,
Mrs. Ann Rohde
1971 Papa Joe’s Spaghetti House,
Anthony Amato
1974 Papa Joe’s Spaghetti House,
Joseph P. Woods Jr.
1979 Vacant
Roosa’s Grocery
118 Down’s Street
1931 Jay A. Noxon, Grocer
1932 E. Roosa & Son’s,
Herman & Alton Roosa
1943 Vacant
1948 Elwyn Roosa, Grocer
1950 George E. Clark, Grocer
1954 David Adler, Grocer
1971 Eugene C. Chuang, Grocer
1974 Easton Grocery,
Eugene & Dorothy Chuang
Mollenhauer’s Market
220 Downs Street
1948- John F. Howe
1952- Mollenhauer’s Market,
Mrs. Emily Mollenhauer
1956- Mary Caban
1965 - Caban’s Cash Market,
Mary Caban
1979/80- Vacant
Schulze Market
251 East Chester Street
1931 Henry W. Schulze
1964 Edna M. Schulze
1966 Vacant
1967 Dealers Service Center,
Henry W. Schulze Jr.
1971 Vacant
Planthaber’s Market
30 East Strand
1941 Planthaber’s Market
George A. Planthaber Jr.
1950 Vacant
1967 No record
1968 Demolished
Adin’s Market
57 East Strand
1941 Mrs. Pearl Adin, Produce
1952 Adin’s Market
Lawrence and Pearl Adin, Grocers
1960 Kay’s Dress Company
Mrs. Kathryn Staccio
1962 Vacant
1967 Demolished
Fertel’s Meat Market
22 East Union Street
1927 Jacob Siller, Meats
1941 Casper Zelickman, Meats
1948 Benjamin Fertel
1965 Vacant
1968 Demolished
Ceballos Confectionery
210 East Union Street
1939 Ceballos Confectionery
Mrs. Maria Cebellos
& James Costello
1950 Ceballos & Costello Conf.
1960 Vacant
Clancy Confectionery
190 First Avenue
1927 Thomas Clancy
Confectionery
1936 Frederick Mills, Grocer
1939 Clarence Buckman
1941 Mrs. Catherine Turck
Bob’s Grocery
176 Flatbush Avenue
1954 Bob’s Grocery
Mrs. Bobby G. Cannaliato
1974 Vacant-Retired
George Boice, Confectionery
186 Foxhall Avenue
1923 Charles Maisenhelder, Conf
1927 Vincent Renzo, Shoe Repair
1931 Cramer Brothers, Barbers
1932 Frederick Schryver
1934 John D. Halstein
1938 Oral Deitz
1939 Virginia Boice
1941 George Boice, Conf.
Edwin J. DuBois, Grocer
202 Foxhall Avenue
1911 George H. Lutz, Grocer
1925 Edwin J. DuBois, Meat
1945 Vacant
1948 Edwin J. DuBois, Grocer
1966 Vacant
Rose’s Market
72 Franklin Street
1916 Adam D. Rose
1954 Vacant
1956 Adin’s Food Center
Gilbert, Lawrence & Pearl Adin
1969 K & S Electric Shop
Vincent F. Stock
Mellow’s Confectionery
89 Franklin Street
1917 Festus Cook, Confectionery
1931 Nicholas Pulos, Confectionery
1938 S. Earl Mellow, Conf.
1954 Robert L. Miller, Grocer
1958 Martin’s Market,
Francis J. Martin
1966 Martin’s Market,
Julius Schutte
1969 Shutte’s Market
1977 Mower’s Market,
Gerald Mower
Amato’s Grocery
47 German Street
1931 Christian H. Ortlieb, Conf.
1931 Mrs. Margaret C. Ortlieb, Conf.
1936 Santo F. Amato, Grocer
1980 Mrs. Mary Amato
Perry’s Grocery
43 Gill Street
1938 Louis M. Perry, Grocer
1969 Vacant
1974 Mrs. Ruth Brown, Conf.
1979 Brown’s Market
Weishaupt’s Market
229 Greenkill Avenue
1939 Weishaupt’s Market,
Matthew A. Weishaupt
1969 Weishaupt’s Market,
John A., Robert & William
Weishaupt & Robert Stenson
1974 Weishaupt’s Market,
John A., Robert & William
Weishaupt
Dietz Grocery
448 Hasbrouck Avenue
1931 George Compton, Confectionery
1932 Mrs. Julian M. Compton
1950 Herman Dietz
1967 Vacant
The Mohican Company
57 John Street
1930 The Mohican Company
1941 The Mohican Company,
Emzie Trowbridge, Mgr.
1956 The Mohican Company,
Vincent P. Bruck, Mgr.
1961 The Mohican Company,
Edward & Vincent Bruck, Mgrs.
1968 The Mohican Company,
Thomas Whittaker & Robert Callan
1969 The Mohican Market,
Robert Callan, Mgr.
1971 The Mohican Company,
Paul Mula , Mgr.
1977 Mohican Market,
Chris Gallo, Mgr.
Schneller’s Market
63 John Street
1931 Nicholas Boolukos, Conf.
1931 Samuel Weisman, Fruit
1936 John Street Fruit Market,
Leo Larios
1966 Schneller’s,
Robert Schneller
1974 Schneller’s Upstairs Restaurant
1985 Schneller’s Meat Market
1988 Schneller’s Meat Market
John F. Howe, Grocer
47 Linderman Avenue
1924 John F. Howe, Grocer
1948 William F. Teske
1952 Closed as a Grocery
Bennett’s Busy Corner
60 North Front Street
1931 Bennett’s Busy Corner,
Clifford T. Bennett
1943 Harry Shwartz, Used Clothing
1954 Irving Szhwartz, Used Clothing
1956 The Cotton Corner,
Sol & Gertrude Heller
1963 Vacant
McCuen’s Market
69 O’Neil Street
1910 James H. Duffy, Grocer
1916 Issac Magley
1921 James H. Duffy
1930 Laura M. McCuen, Grocer
1934 Arthur J. McCuen
1938 Arthur L. Williams
1956 Vacant
1958 The Orchid Shoppe,
Marie Price and Irene Motrie
1964 Vacant
1967 William and Bert Haver, Furniture
1970 Vacant
Welch’s Grocery
12 Pine Street
1916 Louis Keeler
1923 Isadore Haginsky
1925 Isadore Haginsky
1925 Morris W. Friedman
1938 Rose Friedman
1941 Vacant
1948 Thomas E. Welch, Delicatessen
1954 Florida
1954 Samuel Berlin
1962 Vacant
1963 Welch’s Grocery, Thomas Welch
1968 Barringer’s Grocery Store
1974 Al’s Deli, Albert A. Peruso
Doyle’s Deli
61 Pine Grove Avenue
1923
1931
1936
1939
1941
1945
1968
Martin F. Ryan, Confectioner
Emma F. Heidcamp, Grocer
Sidney Laurie
William J. Bunce
Adolph H. Wolfersheim
Thomas J. Doyle
Vacant
Merritt’s Meats
14 St. James Street
1931
1934
1936
1939
1941
1950
1954
1956
1958
1980
1988
Frank Merritt, Meat
John L. Shurter
Emma C. Crum, Grocer
Louis Gunzlemann, Grocer
Francis C. Dederick, Antiques
Hamburger Paradise,
Louis Provenzano
The Dairy Bar, Samuel Drake
Stewart Ice Cream, Inc.
Charles V. Dake pres.
Veteran Shoe Repair,
Antonia P. Valle
Vacant
Dolls in Wonderland
Gregory’s Delicatessen
83 St. James St.
1916 Abram Hendricks & Hazzard Swart
1918 Hazzard Swart
1931 Borst Grocery Co., Elmer Ward
1934 Edward N. & Reidar Longacre
1945 Joseph Lupo
1948 Irving Rose
1950 Arthur H. Bittner
1956 Salvatore J. Gallo
1964 St. James Grocery, Raymond Gossoo
1972 Gregory Pappas
1977 Robert Marnell & Sons
1980 Family’s Take Out Deli
Wallis Confectionery
405 S. Manor Avenue
1950 Harry Wallis Confectionery
1960 Stanley M. Shaw, Grocer
1963 William Cohen, Grocer
1974 Syl&Bill Grocery,
Sylvia and William Cohen
1977 Propp’s Grocery,
Madeline Propp
1980 DV’S Deli
2006 John’s Deli and Grocery
Quigley’s Market
374 South Wall Street
1941 James E. Quigley
1979 Vacant –Retired
2006 Boulevard Liqour
Cione’s Market
20 Sycamore Street
1923 Vincenzo Miuccio, Grocer
1927 Mrs. Amelia Cione
1931 Mrs. Amelia Cione, Grocer
1936 Peter Esposito
1938 Mrs. Mary Cecelia
1939 Vacant
Hugger’s Market
52 Third Avenue
1958 Fidel Hugger, Grocer
1968 Vacant-Retired
Terri’ s Grocery
121 Wall Street
1916
1934
1935
1938
1939
1963
2003
John J. Dunlap, Blacksmith
Vacant
John W. Haley, Blacksmith
Vacant
Robert B. Van Gaasbeek, Grocer
Terri’s Grocery, Terri Legreghi
Peter’s Deli and Grocery
Teetsel’s Grocery
337 Washington Avenue
1925 Frank Bernard, Confectioner
1934 Harry Teetsel, Grocer
1977 Ethelinde Teetsel
1985 Stevens Restaurant
Bill’s Grocery
207 West Chestnut Street
1923 James Dickson
1936 Richard C. and Martha Dickson
1938 John R. Bittner
1941 George A. Tierney
1948 Michael Kalusdian
1952 Bill’s Grocery, William Cohen
1963 Bill’s Grocery, Jack M. Farber
1967 Norm’s Grocery, Norman Desch
1968 Vacant
West Pierpont Street Market
77 West Pierpont Street
1931
1934
1936
1948
1950
1958
1964
1965
1974
John Gitty,Grocer
Julia Getty
William F. Walter
Herman Roeber
Mrs. Lucy Guinta
Michael Kalousdian, Grocer
Vacant
Joseph Giunta
Patrick Fusaro, Grocer